Greenway board pressing nonprofits to finish projects
By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff | September 7, 2006
The nonprofit institutions designated to build cultural facilities on the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway in downtown Boston soon will be required to show progress by a newly emboldened board that monitors the project.
The increased pressure from the Greenway Conservancy is a bit of muscle-flexing by a civic board that as yet has little direct authority over development of the project, but that for months has been trying to find footing as the future steward of Boston's most promising new downtown parks.
And the conservancy's initiative to spur on long-delayed civic facilities such as a history museum, arts center, youth facility -- even a glass-enclosed winter garden -- comes as the Greenway's manager, the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, signaled a willingness to share decision-making.
The conservancy's board chairman, Peter Meade, yesterday said he had met with most of the institutions and neighborhood groups involved and told them the board wants the projects -- all long-delayed as the Big Dig's completion date was pushed back years -- to move along quickly.
``We need to set some standards, benchmarks, and timetables that are clear and understood by everyone," Meade said.
He was referring to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, the YMCA of Greater Boston, the New Center for Arts and Culture, and the Boston Museum Project. All four have had plans to build on portions of the Greenway, and all are in different stages of planning, decision-making, or difficulty. Some are probably years from starting construction.
The YMCA's president, John M. Ferrell, yesterday said that he agreed with Meade's insistence his organization's project be required to meet various milestones. Anne D. Emerson, president of the museum project, said Meade informed her of the timetables issues, but she did not comment further. Officials at the other institutions could not be reached.
Meade suggested the conservancy will develop timetables for the individual projects this year.
``I totally agree with him," Mayor Thomas M. Menino said. ``We've gone through the misery of the Big Dig. Now it's time for the city to enjoy the benefits of the Greenway."
For years the Turnpike Authority, which managed the Big Dig project, maintained tight control over development of the parks and intermittent development blocks that will sprout up in the space where the elevated Central Artery once stood. But following the July 10 death of a motorist in a tunnel under collapsing ceiling panels, Governor Mitt Romney pledged a new era at the authority, and pushed out the chairman, Matthew J. Amorello, and installed his transportation secretary, John Cogliano. At the first board meeting held without Amorello, on Aug. 16, the Turnpike Authority asked the conservancy to assess the status of each block on the Greenway.
Meade said a preliminary report will be filed late next week, and a final report in October.
Meade said he did not know when the Greenway would be completed, but he said it will not be done until the cultural institutions are finished. ``Just having the park pieces done does not in our eyes mean completion of the Greenway," he said.
Thomas C. Palmer Jr. can be reached at
tpalmer@globe.com.
? Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
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