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File #: 23-1134-1213    Name: Initiate 45-day Notice to Name The Montrose Dunes Expansion Area as The Monty and Rose Wildlife Habitat
Type: Action Item Status: Passed
File created: 11/20/2023 In control: Board of Commissioners
On agenda: 12/13/2023 Final action: 12/13/2023
Title: REQUEST TO INITIATE 45-DAY NOTICE PERIOD TO NAME THE MONTROSE DUNES EXPANSION AREA IN LINCOLN PARK AS THE MONTY AND ROSE WILDLIFE HABITAT
Sponsors: Planning and Construction
Indexes: Park Renaming-Phase I, 45 Day Notice Period
Title

REQUEST TO INITIATE 45-DAY NOTICE PERIOD TO NAME THE MONTROSE DUNES EXPANSION AREA IN LINCOLN PARK AS THE MONTY AND ROSE WILDLIFE HABITAT

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 name the Montrose Dunes Expansion Area as the Monty and Rose Wildlife Habitat.

Proposed Park or feature: Montrose Dunes Expansion Area in Lincoln Park

Location: near the eastern edge of Montrose Beach

Community Area: Lincoln Park

Ward: 46

Proposed Name: Monty and Rose Wildlife Habitat


II. Explanation

The Chicago Park District naming and renaming procedures allow for the naming of features in parks, including playgrounds and buildings. Tamima Itani, Lead Volunteer Coordinator for the Chicago Piping Plovers, requested that the Chicago Park District Board of Commissioners name the Montrose Dunes Expansion Area in Lincoln Park as the Monty and Rose Wildlife Habitat. This proposal has the support of the Chicago Audubon Society, the Illinois Ornithological Society, the Chicago Ornithological Society, and the community.

Montrose Beach Dunes was originally formed by landfill and has since been shaped by natural processes. In 2001, the Chicago Park District stopped grooming the area to encourage dune formation. As a result, the site now contains beach, foredune, and globally rare panne habitat, which support numerous state threatened or endangered plant species. In 2005, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources added Montrose Beach Dunes to the statewide list of high-quality natural areas known as the Illinois Natural Areas Inventory (INAI). In 2021, the area was expanded with an additional 3.1 acres, which support valued wildlife, plants and the interests of nature enthusiasts. The additional acreage comprises an open sand area that shorebirds, including ...

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