Chicago Sun-Times

Obama Center advocates distort arguments vs. building in Jackson Park

- Charles A. Birnbaum, president & CEO, The Cultural Landscape Foundation, Washington, D.C.

Two recent letters — “Don’t let a small group of naysayers kill the Obama Presidenti­al Center” (Oct. 10) and “No more Obama Center naysaying” (Oct. 12) — make false statements about those opposed to the confiscati­on of public parkland in Jackson Park for the Obama Presidenti­al Center (OPC). Despite what the author of the first letter wrote, park advocates are not trying to “kill” the OPC. In fact, park advocates have been supportive of siting the OPC on Chicago’s South Side; however, there is opposition to the confiscati­on of public parkland, especially since other viable options exist.

The author of the second letter takes aim at specific people and organizati­ons, including me and The Cultural Landscape Foundation. The writer claims I am “cynical” for opposing the confiscati­on of public parkland while being “silent about the 2 million-plus acres of public land that the Trump administra­tion

has revoked from protected status.” That’s 100 percent wrong. In the Foundation’s 2017 annual Landslide report, “Open Season on Open Space,” on nationally significan­t threatened landscapes, we included Jackson Park and the Antiquitie­s Act, which protects the “2 million-plus acres of public land” about which we have allegedly been silent, along with other sites nationwide. In fact, it was the threat to public lands protected by the Antiquitie­s Act that yielded the theme “Open Season on Open Space.”

Rather than distorting the positions of park advocates, perhaps it’s time to ask OPC/Obama Foundation representa­tives why public parkland must be confiscate­d for the OPC. This controvers­y exists because a decision was made not to use vacant or cityowned land and not to use land owned by

the University of Chicago, which orchestrat­ed the winning bid to host the OPC. As Lynn Sweet reported in “Columbia University pushes for Obama library in Harlem” (Jan. 26, 2015), Columbia University’s proposed bid called for using 17 acres of university­owned land. They didn’t demand 20 acres of Central Park.

For all the talk of transparen­cy, OPC/ Obama Foundation representa­tives have consistent­ly dodged the essential question of why parkland must be confiscate­d with an all-too-familiar combinatio­n of gladhandin­g and gas-lighting. The South Side can be the location for the OPC, and public parkland doesn’t have to be confiscate­d in the process.

 ?? OBAMA FOUNDATION ?? Artist’s rendering of the Obama Presidenti­al Center.
OBAMA FOUNDATION Artist’s rendering of the Obama Presidenti­al Center.

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