Hey friends on wheels,
I'm a part of a volunteer cultural committee putting on a big concert and rally for Chuy Garcia next Sunday, March 29, at Alhambra Palace downtown Chicago. I am still in need of a few additional volunteers:
Setup
Cleanup
Poster and postcard distribution this week
One more SECURITY volunteer (experience and formidable presence helpful)
Please email me at poptart@gmail.com if you are interested in supporting this candidate and this event next week. It's going to be incredibly diverse, energizing, and fun!
Thanks!
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The way I see it, two related things are at play with the red-light cameras:
1) These camera contracts are the subject of more than a decade of Machine scandal, denial, and poor oversight, and Garcia is wanting to end suspicious city ties once and for all. Going back to a drawing board on how these can improve safety would not be a bad thing, IMO.
2) The Tribune polled Chicagoans at the end of January about the cameras and 3 out of 4 residents wanted them completely abolished. That's a fairly strong message to any challenger. Rethinking and re-presenting some form of them is likely in the future, no matter who wins, but to just keep ramming these down our throats without measuring, overseeing responsibly, and sharing impact has been going on too long and the number of the cameras has increased tremendously under Emanuel.
Unless there's another poll I'm unaware of, your stats are incorrect. The January Tribune poll found that only 49% of Chicagoans wanted the cameras completely abolished. Another 25% wanted them reduced.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/watchdog/redlight/ct-chicago-red...
I voted for one of the candidates who didn't make it to the runoff.
In other words, I chose not to vote for Rahm OR Chuy in the past, and now I'm stuck with a binary choice.
From earlier in this thread:
"I've talked to Chuy supporters and read his materials, but nothing has given me a reason to vote for him (as opposed to voting against Rahm)."
I guess that's not going to change before I vote.
I haven't made a decision about either candidate. I feel like I'm holding out for more information and I feel they both have their pros and cons. I'm so happy Sarah posted this invitation to help the candidate on Chainlink because we do all care so deeply. I will say this... as I am reading the debate that's been going back and forth, I feel like we will not get an ideal candidate in either potential/current mayor with regards with bike advocacy. I think that's going to be the case 99% of the time. Which is why I support organizations like Active Trans, this is also why http://chi.streetsblog.org/ is so important, and why we, as cyclists need to work with our community by considering ourselves ambassadors and help others just getting started as cyclists. No matter how the election turns out, I imagine we will all still need to play an active role in the future of cycling in Chicago. So I'm going to ask all of you a question: How do you think we, as Chainlinkers, can make a difference in changing perception and making improvements? I love the idea of the campaign that humanizes cyclists.
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