Title
REQUEST TO INITIATE 45-DAY NOTICE PERIOD
TO RENAME COLUMBIA BEACH PARK IN HONOR OF HELEN DORIA
Body
To the Honorable Board of Commissioners of the Chicago Park District
I. Recommendation
It is recommended that an order be entered authorizing the General Superintendent or his designee to initiate a 45-day notice period to solicit public input to rename Columbia Beach Park in honor of Helen Doria
Proposed Park or Feature Columbia Beach Park
Location: 1041 W. Columbia Ave.
Community Area: #1- Rogers Park
Ward #49
Proposed Name: Helen Doria Beach Park
II. Explanation
The Chicago Park District naming and renaming procedures allow for the naming of features in parks, including playgrounds and buildings. Local residents and civic groups have requested that the Chicago Park District Board of Commissioners rename Columbia Beach Park in honor of Helen Doria. This proposal has support of 49th Ward Alderman Joe Moore; Congressman Jan Schakowsky; Cook County Clerk David Orr, Chicago Public Schools CEO (and former CPD General Superintendent) Forrest Claypool; the Rogers Park Neighbors and the Loyola Park Advisory Council.
Helen Doria (1951 - 2012) was a dynamic cultural leader who spent decades enriching Chicago with strong cultural programs that unified individuals, groups, and neighborhoods throughout the city. The oldest of eight children, Helen was born in Chicago and grew up on the Southwest Side. After receiving a bachelor's degree in political science and history from Mundelein College in Chicago in 1973, she began her professional career as a grass root activist in the Rogers Park neighborhood. While working as an aide to then 49th Ward Alderman David Orr, she worked with the Chicago Park District to acquire the Berger Park mansions and develop the site as a Cultural Center Park. She went on to work for the City of Chicago’s Department of Special Events and Department of Cultural Affairs, spearheading such initiatives as the Sister City’s program. She then joined the staff of the Chicago Park District and brought new life to the district’s cultural programming. Her rich cultural art legacy includes establishing the arts partners in residency program in park field houses, creating mini-festivals that introduced thousands of Chicagoans to the varied cultures in their own neighborhoods, and bringing excellent arts programming such as theater, music, dance, and visual arts to park patrons throughout the city.
In 2004, Helen Doria became the first Executive Director of Millennium Park and is widely recognized for making the new park an exciting and democratic space for all Chicagoans with a broad array of activities and offerings as well as an attractive destination place for tourists and visitors. She was instrumental in initiating the Made in Chicago: World Class Concert Series that continues to thrive in Millennium Park. From 2008 to the end of her life, Helen served as a consultant on arts, culture and public spaces, taking a lead role in development of the 606 and working with businesses, not-for-profit organizations and governmental agencies to make the arts an accessible part of urban life. Even through her final illness, she served as an active member of the Board of Directors of the Young Women’s Leadership Charter School, working to share her hopes for Chicago with a new generation of creative activists. She received many honors during her life and since her death including the creation of the Helen Doria Arts in the Park Award from the Illinois Association of Park Districts. Helen was a creative, talented leader who believed that arts and culture are a basic human right. She inspired many people in and beyond Chicago, and her legacy will endure. Because of the many years in which she lived and worked on the North Side of Chicago, renaming Columbia Beach Park in her honor is especially appropriate.
The Chicago Park District has received a letter of objection to the proposed naming of Columbia Beach Park in honor of Helen Doria. The objector is a West Columbia Ave. resident, who previously requested naming the park for a family member. District staff determined that the proposed individual did not meet the naming criteria set forth in Chapter VII, Section E of the Code of the Chicago Park District. Subsequently, the family installed an honorary bench and received an honorary street name for the proposed individual from the City of Chicago.
III. Park Naming Procedures
Chapter VII, Section E of the Code of the Chicago Park District, (the Naming Ordinance), which governs the naming and renaming of parks and park features, states that if a proposed name honors a person, the (i) person shall have been deceased for a least one (1) year prior to consideration; and (ii) the person shall have demonstrated a continued commitment and made an extraordinary contribution to civic betterment, locally, nationally or internationally.
Pursuant to the Naming Ordinance, this request to rename and name parks have been forwarded to the Secretary of the Chicago Park District, who shall (i ) file a copy of this request with the Board of Commissioners (or appropriate Committee); and (ii) initiate a notice period of at least 45 days to provide notice and solicit public input. Such notice shall be posted at the respective subject park field house (or for any park without a field house, at the nearest field house) and it shall be sent to advisory councils located within a one (1) mile radius of the subject park. At the conclusion of the notice period, the General Superintendent or his designee may in his discretion recommend to the Board that it approve the requested renames and names.