Articles like the one above are easily the worst thing about St. Louis - and I'm talking about the article itself, not what it discusses.
I couldn't disagree more. St. Louis has some serious problems and while its annoying that articles like this are written every day, the best way to see these stories disappear is to just fix the issues.
Articles like the one above are easily the worst thing about St. Louis - and I'm talking about the article itself, not what it discusses.
I couldn't disagree more. St. Louis has some serious problems and while its annoying that articles like this are written every day, the best way to see these stories disappear is to just fix the issues.
These stories would not disappear if the problem were “fixed.” Sh*t talking St Louis is a pastime for St Louisans
The article clearly focuses on the negatives and portrays downtown as almost hopeless, when there are so many great things happening there, too.
Articles like this are a dime a dozen in St. Louis, and they do far more to hurt than help. It's just more click bait for dismissive suburban and exurban residents who never visit the city, anyway.
If St. Louisans focused on the positives half as much as they did the negatives, this city might actually be growing.
KansasCitian wrote:The article clearly focuses on the negatives and portrays downtown as almost hopeless, when there are so many great things happening there, too.
Articles like this are a dime a dozen in St. Louis, and they do far more to hurt than help. It's just more click bait for dismissive suburban and exurban residents who never visit the city, anyway.
If St. Louisans focused on the positives half as much as they did the negatives, this city might actually be growing.
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Agree! But as a transplant for work sometimes I asked myself if I did the right investment. I all for lets change the city for good! But leadership needs to step in. I think policing and dealing with the homeless should be worked on ASAP. What’s your opinion?
Downtown has some very serious issues right now that will take a long time to recover from. Hoping these articles go away without fixing the problem will only delay the recovery.
KansasCitian wrote:I think St. Louis should be aggressively investing in downtown in such a way that it promotes further development.
We need the 7th St steetscape improvements throughout the entire neighborhood, for instance. Downtown needs a lot of street calming.
I'm all for safety improvements, too - however that looks.
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I got to walk on 7th street can’t remember lol… But I’m with you with street calming, I think something as simple as speed bumps can fix a lot of the issues. Do you know if there a group of movement that brings all these ideas to the city or mayor directly?
^ Yep, speed bumps will slow anything down. Still have nightmares of driving through a few Mexican villages where they take speed bumps to the extreme and wondering if i was going to be stuck leaving my father in law's car high and dry
dredger wrote:^ Yep, speed bumps will slow anything down. Still have nightmares of driving through a few Mexican villages where they take speed bumps to the extreme and wondering if i was going to be stuck leaving my father in law's car high and dry
Lol… You should drive in Puerto Ricos “vadenes” they’re the opposite of speed bumbs and you almost will leave your muffler in one of those!! But On a serious note speed bumps are needed. Even in DT Chicago you have them.
In an ideal would downtown would be mostly converted back to two way traffic, filled with separated bike lanes, traffic calming intersections, raised crosswalks, and strategic rising bollards to convert certain streets to part time pedestrian zones.
Unfortunately we don't have the money to do all of that in the near term. What we do have money for right now is speed bumps. If we put our mind to it we could add 100 speed bumps in and around downtown before winter. This is such a no brainer to me.
GoHarvOrGoHome wrote:In an ideal would downtown would be mostly converted back to two way traffic, filled with separated bike lanes, traffic calming intersections, raised crosswalks, and strategic rising bollards to convert certain streets to part time pedestrian zones.
Unfortunately we don't have the money to do all of that in the near term. What we do have money for right now is speed bumps. If we put our mind to it we could add 100 speed bumps in and around downtown before winter. This is such a no brainer to me.
i Second your opinion! I keep asking the same question over and over… Who do we talk to to present these ideas? Is there a Downtown group or group of residents to present this to the mayor and city? How can we push these viable ideas?
GoHarvOrGoHome wrote:In an ideal would downtown would be mostly converted back to two way traffic, filled with separated bike lanes, traffic calming intersections, raised crosswalks, and strategic rising bollards to convert certain streets to part time pedestrian zones.
Unfortunately we don't have the money to do all of that in the near term. What we do have money for right now is speed bumps. If we put our mind to it we could add 100 speed bumps in and around downtown before winter. This is such a no brainer to me.
i Second your opinion! I keep asking the same question over and over… Who do we talk to to present these ideas? Is there a Downtown group or group of residents to present this to the mayor and city? How can we push these viable ideas?
My guess would be to reach out to the different Aldermen in the Downtown area (Page, Ingrassia, Coatar, and Davis) as well as the Downtown CID. And then maybe in the same emails, CC people at the Streets Department and Scott Ogilvie. With all of these people, I'm sure someone will share the same concerns you have and will want to do something, just money is the issue here. It's worth a shot though.
We've been wanting speed bumps on 4th and Broadway South of the Poplar Street bridge and those conversations seemed to have stopped. Same with some curb bump-outs. Hopefully the discussions return once we get our projects closer to completion.
GoHarvOrGoHome wrote:In an ideal would downtown would be mostly converted back to two way traffic, filled with separated bike lanes, traffic calming intersections, raised crosswalks, and strategic rising bollards to convert certain streets to part time pedestrian zones.
Unfortunately we don't have the money to do all of that in the near term. What we do have money for right now is speed bumps. If we put our mind to it we could add 100 speed bumps in and around downtown before winter. This is such a no brainer to me.
i Second your opinion! I keep asking the same question over and over… Who do we talk to to present these ideas? Is there a Downtown group or group of residents to present this to the mayor and city? How can we push these viable ideas?
My guess would be to reach out to the different Aldermen in the Downtown area (Page, Ingrassia, Coatar, and Davis) as well as the Downtown CID. And then maybe in the same emails, CC people at the Streets Department and Scott Ogilvie. With all of these people, I'm sure someone will share the same concerns you have and will want to do something, just money is the issue here. It's worth a shot though.
I’m going to try! I’m a transplant so I really want a return on my investment later on when I return home. Lol…
In an ideal would downtown would be mostly converted back to two way traffic, filled with separated bike lanes, traffic calming intersections, raised crosswalks, and strategic rising bollards to convert certain streets to part time pedestrian zones.
Unfortunately we don't have the money to do all of that in the near term. What we do have money for right now is speed bumps. If we put our mind to it we could add 100 speed bumps in and around downtown before winter. This is such a no brainer to me.
If you factor in the federal pandemic windfall, then they absolutely have the money. Problem is the people who control how the money is spent have a very long track record of doing it poorly.
KansasCitian wrote:The article clearly focuses on the negatives and portrays downtown as almost hopeless, when there are so many great things happening there, too.
Articles like this are a dime a dozen in St. Louis, and they do far more to hurt than help. It's just more click bait for dismissive suburban and exurban residents who never visit the city, anyway.
If St. Louisans focused on the positives half as much as they did the negatives, this city might actually be growing.
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Agree! But as a transplant for work sometimes I asked myself if I did the right investment. I all for lets change the city for good! But leadership needs to step in. I think policing and dealing with the homeless should be worked on ASAP. What’s your opinion?
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"Policing and dealing with the homeless"
Do you mean policing the homeless? Or policing, as a separate issue, and 'dealing' with the homeless as another?
KansasCitian wrote:The article clearly focuses on the negatives and portrays downtown as almost hopeless, when there are so many great things happening there, too.
Articles like this are a dime a dozen in St. Louis, and they do far more to hurt than help. It's just more click bait for dismissive suburban and exurban residents who never visit the city, anyway.
If St. Louisans focused on the positives half as much as they did the negatives, this city might actually be growing.
Sent from my SM-A716U using Tapatalk
Agree! But as a transplant for work sometimes I asked myself if I did the right investment. I all for lets change the city for good! But leadership needs to step in. I think policing and dealing with the homeless should be worked on ASAP. What’s your opinion?
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"Policing and dealing with the homeless"
Do you mean policing the homeless? Or policing, as a separate issue, and 'dealing' with the homeless as another?
I don’t blame them but the Alderman needs to make his case and do something to keep them! I do believe that businesses that have a history of problems the city should remove their alcohol licenses. I think that the problem is that this new administration was not ready for this role… I haven’t found a written plan and they seem as they’re improvising for everything.
I voted for Jack and I think he’s been an good alder for the 7th ward expect for the downtown portion of 7th ward. He does a lot of finger pointing at the Jones admin but I don’t recall him being opposed to the barriers last summer when the Krewson admin installed them, I think he may have even supported the idea. Jack is also an absentee alderman when it comes to downtown, and I get it his voters live in soulard. This is also a reason that with next ward boundary adjustment that greater downtown should be 1 ward instead of split into 4.
And finally as a downtown resident who is on the downtown streets at all times of day and night, I don’t know what you want me to say but the reality is that it’s safe here. Idiots getting into an argument and settling it with guns isn’t a downtown issue, it happens everywhere and it happens much less frequently in downtown but of course all the news stations do a big circle jerk around it. Downtown had about 340 crimes against a person in 2019 or less then one each day and each day for 150,000-175,000 people pass through downtown between residents, workers, tourists, conventions, ballgames, concerts ect, so you have a 1 in 175,000 chance of being a victim of a crime against a person, covid has killed 1 of every 500 Americans.
Is there a Downtown group or group of residents to present this to the mayor and city?
I've not heard much from the St. Louis Downtown Neighborhood Association lately but still might be worth a try: http://www.saintlouisdna.org/
They’ve hosted 2 forums with the mayor, one few weeks ago and are having regular monthly public meetings. The meetings with the mayor are on their FB page for viewing
Is there a Downtown group or group of residents to present this to the mayor and city?
I've not heard much from the St. Louis Downtown Neighborhood Association lately but still might be worth a try: http://www.saintlouisdna.org/
They’ve hosted 2 forums with the mayor, one few weeks ago and are having regular monthly public meetings. The meetings with the mayor are on their FB page for viewing
Agree! But as a transplant for work sometimes I asked myself if I did the right investment. I all for lets change the city for good! But leadership needs to step in. I think policing and dealing with the homeless should be worked on ASAP. What’s your opinion?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
"Policing and dealing with the homeless"
Do you mean policing the homeless? Or policing, as a separate issue, and 'dealing' with the homeless as another?
How about policing with the homeless?!? Two birds, one stone...