The Downtown Boston Neighborhood Association blasted out an open letter it and other members of the coalition sent last Thursday to Mayor Michelle Wu, ahead of a vote the Boston Planning and Development Agency Board is set to take this week on the proposed zoning regulations.
“PLAN: Downtown was meant to reimagine the heart of Boston,” the coalition wrote in the letter. “Instead, your proposed plan reveals a striking lack of creativity, perspective and vision, and will not work. … Boston would be better off without this destructive plan.”
The BPDA board is set to vote Thursday on the downtown zoning plan, after opting against taking action at its July meeting. The delay, according to downtown resident Tony Ursillo, was designed to give the city and coalition more time to come to an agreement on the proposed zoning.
[...]
Ursillo has said the proposed changes would end up producing the “Manhattanization” of downtown Boston, an assertion the city’s planning chief Kairos Shen pushed back on when speaking with the Herald in June, saying such a notion is “simply inaccurate.”
On Friday, Shen described the latest criticism to the downtown zoning plan as an “overreaction,” and said the city has adequately addressed all of the issues raised by the coalition since meetings between the two sides began last January. He told the Herald the city is prepared to move forward with a planning board vote on Thursday.
More like 60 days it would seem.It needs a few thousand more days in the oven.
Lord have mercy!More like 60 days it would seem.
It's practically light speed by the standards of normal political process.Lord have mercy!
The BPDA board voted 4-1 to approve the plan — Landsmark was the sole objection — and 5-0 to send it on to the Zoning Commission, where it will get a full public hearing.
The commission next meets Oct. 22.
Whenever I see journalists botch an article about a subject I understand well, I begin to ask myself what they're getting wrong in the 90% of the other articles I read.The sensationalist headlines are flowing right in. I wouldn't advise clicking to give them more ad revenue.
‘Generational impact’: Historic decision clears way for 70-story skyscrapers in Downtown Boston
Excellent journalism here.. The average reader doesn't know the details within PLAN Downtown, and they won't know any additional info from this article, only other people's thoughts on it, 90% of them negative.
It's astonishing to me, the extent to which journalism has devolved into simply repeating a bunch of uninformed opinions, as though that constitutes some sort of meaningful research and analysis.Excellent journalism here.. The average reader doesn't know the details within PLAN Downtown, and they won't know any additional info from this article, only other people's thoughts on it, 90% of them negative.
The sensationalist headlines are flowing right in. I wouldn't advise clicking to give them more ad revenue.
‘Generational impact’: Historic decision clears way for 70-story skyscrapers in Downtown Boston
Excellent journalism here.. The average reader doesn't know the details within PLAN Downtown, and they won't know any additional info from this article, only other people's thoughts on it, 90% of them negative.
Yea this is going to have such a minimal effect its worth asking if it was even worth the effort in the first place.
The major opponents of PLAN: Downtown have set up a website to facilitate one-click mass letter writing in opposition of the proposed plan.
The text of the email is there, so I've conveniently made my own adjustments if anyone wants to send in a few messages before the meeting tomorrow morning at 9AM:
__________________
TO:
zoningcommission@boston.gov
jeffrey.hampton@boston.gov
aaron.michlewitz@mahouse.gov
ed.flynn@boston.gov
erin.murphy@boston.gov
gabriela.coletta@boston.gov
henry.santana@boston.gov
jay.livingstone@mahouse.gov
julia.mejia@boston.gov
lydia.edwards@masenate.gov
Nick.Collins@masenate.gov
ruthzee.louijeune@boston.gov
sharon.durkan@boston.gov
info@BOSdowntown.org
info@friendsofthepublicgarden.org
info@nabbonline.org
info@bhcivic.org
info@thefreedomtrail.org
info@revolutionaryspaces.org
SUBJECT: Please vote YES on PLAN: Downtown Zoning
Dear Zoning Commissioners,
I am writing to ask you to vote YES on the PLAN: Downtown zoning amendment at the Zoning Commission meeting on October 22nd. The city has completed a rigorous process preparing and adjusting PLAN: Downtown and it is ready for approval. Objections to a reasonable zoning amendment for the one area of Eastern Massachusetts that is well-suited for tall buildings have been considered and further objections are unwarranted.
Downtown Boston should have clear zoning that allows buildings up to 500 feet in height or more, by right, in between Washington and Tremont Streets (Ladder Blocks) and between Stuart and Boylston Streets (Park Plaza). If approved, these new buildings will create a reasonable gradient of heights from the tallest part of our skyline to historic areas such as Back Bay, Bay Village, and Chinatown, where taller building is inappropriate.
By voting YES, you are avoiding unnecessary delays that will only exacerbate the housing crisis and slow the construction of badly needed new housing. The current affordability requirements ensure that housing units or dollars will be allocated to badly needed lower income and missing middle housing; voting NO and delaying rezoning will grind this progress to a halt and prevent anything positive from happening, which seems to be the goals of the main opponents. Voting YES is what our city deserves, and with your vote, it can be achieved.
Thank you in advance for considering these points with independence and professional discretion.
Sincerely,
[Enter Name]
[Enter Address]