Showing posts with label Rats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rats. Show all posts

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Carroll Gardeners Less Than Enthused By Preliminary Redesign For Carroll Park in Carroll Gardens.

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CB6 Parks Committee Chair Glenn Kelly
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Councilmember Brad Lander at last night'ts meeting
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Brooklyn Parks Commissioner Marty Maher

 
Proposed vision plan for Carroll Park
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Leroy Branch, long time member of the Brooklyn Youth Organization.
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Long time Carroll Gardener Anthony Pugliese
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Rats in Carroll Park in broad daylight yesterday. September19, 2019
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At last night's Community Board 6's Parks Committee at PS58, the New York Parks Department gave a presentation of a conceptual plan for a redesign for Carroll Park in Carroll Gardens. The plan, which the Department stressed was very preliminary, was based on ideas and comments collected from local residents at a public visioning session back in February 2019.

Carroll Park was last renovated in 1994.  Normally, City parks get renovated every 30 years, depending on their use and their condition. We have all noticed that Carroll Park's play equipment, safety surface, sprinkler area and bathrooms in the park are desperately in need of some updating. 

There is currently no money set aside in the budget for a total renovation of Carroll Park and any such renovation is still five to ten years, if not further down the road. However, Councilmember Brad Lander was able to come up with a grant of $25,000 with which design firm Starr Whitehouse was engaged to begin the process by creating a renovation proposal based on community outreach.

Councilmember Lander and Brooklyn Parks Commissioner Marty Maher, who both attended last night's meeting, were clear that nothing was set in stone, that this will be a 'long, long process' and that the plan for the park will be evolving with more feedback from local residents.
The idea is to think about what the next phase of this much loved neighborhood park will be, so that the community can be part of the planning.

At the February visioning meeting, Carroll Gardeners had asked for the old trees and open planting areas to be preserved. They had also asked for a turf area and an flexible open recreational area for bike riding, scooting, baseball/softball. and soccer.
There were also calls for expanded play areas and a dedicated performance space for special events in the park such as Smith Street Stage's Shakespeare in Carroll Park performances.

One thing Brooklyn Park's Commissioner Maher wanted the community to keep in mind was that since the last renovation, many regulations have changed within his department.  Much of the recreational and sports features in our park are now out of compliance and need much more space around them to meet current safety codes.  In addition, no new equipment that needs to be anchored into the ground can be installed under the canopy of a tree since it could damage the tree's roots.
Given these new regulations and the fact that Carroll Park has many enormous old trees, the options of where to put play equipment and what features can be incorporated in a new design are limited.

The presented proposal shifts the play equipment and water features to the ball field at Court Street and adds a turf area plus additional seating.  Swings might take the place of the current 'big kids area' along President Street, and adult fitness area could be installed in the current 'toddler area.'

In addition, the park house would be renovated, and the bathrooms made handicapped accessible. The area in front of the house would be set aside as a 'civic space' and for special events.

The central portion of the park where the World War 1 Memorial is located would stay pretty much the same as would the seating area along Smith Street.

By moving the children's play area to the ball field, there would be an increase from 9,000 square feet currently to almost 15,000 square feet of space, the park would lose the basketball hoops and the baseball/softball field in that section.

It was the loss of the open ball field and its baseball and basketball features that prompted a big outcry from those in attendance.  "You are talking about taking away the one thing that works best for the park," one local resident said. Another resident mentioned that open space is at a premium in the city and that Carroll Park's ball field  accommodates an amazing range of activities at all times of the day.

Leroy Branch, who represented the Brooklyn Youth Organization, which runs a baseball program in the park for kids aged 3 to 11, mentioned that his organization has been displaced several times from  parks in its 25 year history. BYO would strongly oppose losing the ballfield in Carroll Park without the guarantee of finding a similar field in another nearby park.

Long time Carroll Gardens resident Anthony Pugliese was concerned that the redesign was mostly accommodating younger children, but neglected the needs of adolescents."At one point, kids leave their parents and are alone in the park." He mentioned that when he raised his kids years ago, the community had the use of PS58 and PS32's schoolyards, where teens could skateboard and play basketball.  Those yards are now closed after school and on week-ends.

As was made abundantly clear last year, the renovation will not happen for 'many, many years.'
The community should continue to be involved in planning for a next renovation.  
Perhaps the best way to do so is to join Friends of Carroll Park, the all volunteer group that has acted as a steward for the park for the past twenty five years.
The group organizes events, takes care of the plantings and addresses concerns with the Parks Department. One of the current concerns are rats in the park.
The photo below was taken by someone who visited Carroll Park with a young child yesterday afternoon. It shows six rats in broad daylight lapping up some milk right across the street of PS 58.
That is frankly disgusting and a health hazard.

So lets not only look at Carroll Parks future, but let us address this issue by all calling 311 and/or Councilman Brad Lander's office at 718-499-1090.

The entire Parks Department presentation can be accessed here.
https://wetransfer.com/downloads/e1ee5f55685888a7b370efecd35aa3ad20190919171910/1d55fcf5691a0bb15067ac6bffa2294120190919171911/eb5caf




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Thursday, September 09, 2010

"Minty Fresh" Solution To New York City Rat Problem?

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Could mint-scented trash bags be a secret weapon in the fight against New York City's creepy rodent problem? This solution seems entirely too easy, but hey, where rats are concerned, the city needs all the help it can get.

I saw this Mint-X truck making a delivery to an office building in Downtown Office and checked their web site to find out more. Mint-X claims that their trash bags "smell great to humans and terrible to rats." They also claim that they are "100% safe effective after 7 days of continued use." Plus they are apparently EPA approved.


As everyone knows, New York City is crawling with rats. The creepy rodents are simply everywhere. And the problem seems to have gotten worse. Here in Carroll Gardens, we have not been spared. Take a walk down Smith Street or Court Street at dawn, and you will see rats dart from one side of the street to the other, from one heap of trash bags left outside by restaurants to the other. Since the Mint-X bags are meant to be used by themselves, without a trash bin, they sound ideal for New York City's eateries.

So, dear reader, what do you think? Is this an elegant solution to our dirty little rat problem or is the claim too good to be true?


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Saturday, September 12, 2009

They Are Back!!!! Rats Invade Carroll Park... Again!


photo credit: Suzanne DeChillo/ The New York Times
on "The First (And Hopefully Last) rat Festival" In Carroll Park 2005






You know you have an infestation, when you see rats running around in the middle of the day. Unfortunately, that is exactly what is happening in Carroll Park right now. The Park workers are reporting that rodents have been sighted not only in the flowerbeds and in the open areas, but droppings were also found in the park house. This is not the first time that our park has been over-run by rats.

Back in the summer and fall of 2005, the Committee To Improve Carroll Park, of which I am a member, notified the Parks Department that we had a real rodent problem.

Though the department tried hard to bait and get the problem under control, it was apparent to the Committee, that an inter-departmental effort was needed. (After all, the subway runs under the Smith Street side of the park) However, trying to get the other agencies, like the Sanitation Department and the MTA, to co-operate was hard.

In an effort to draw attention to the problem, the C.I.C.P. organized a "First (and hopefully last) Rat Festival" on the same day other parks around the city were hosting their official "It's My Park Day!" The event included relay rat races, the adopt-a rat program, eatable gummy rats were handed out as prizes and a giant inflatable rat, generously lent by a labor union, stood guard in front of the Park House.)



On First (And Hopefully Last) Rat Festival day, Carroll Park 2005

That got results! The event's press coverage got the city administration's attention and the necessary help to combat the rats. The problem seemed under control, until now that is..
C.I.C.P. is determined to attack the problem head-on and not to wait till it 'multiplies.' The committee is reaching out to the Park's Department, will hang up fliers informing the general public, as well as encouraging people to clean up after themselves and asking them to refrain from feeding birds and squirrels.

But we all need to help!


***If you have seen rats in other parts of the neighborhood, please leave a comment. It will help the city to bait more efficiently.***

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