October 2013 - Hyde Park Civic Association
Transcription
October 2013 - Hyde Park Civic Association
O presideNt’s letter ctober traditionally features some of our nicest weather and most interesting events, and this year is no exception. The month kicks off Oct. 1 with National Night Out in Lamar Park. Now marking its 30th anniversary, this annual event celebrates the partnership between communities and law enforcement to help keep neighborhoods safe. Local businesses and churches are contributing food, drink and more for the event. They’re listed elsewhere in a full-page AD that features a map showing the location of Lamar Park on Hyde Park Boulevard between Commonwealth and Waugh. Bring a lawn chair if you want to sit and share free food, drink and fun with your neighbors starting at 6 PM Tuesday, Oct. 1. GREEK FESTIVAL OCT. 3-6 A few days later, the annual Greek Festival returns to Annuciation Greek Orthodox Church on Yoakum Boulevard. In addition to benefitting the church, part of the proceeds from the festival have been donated to various charities such as Children’s Assessment Center, S.E.A.R.C.H., Houston Area Women’s Center, Covenant House, Texas Emergency Aid Coalition (EAC), and the Star of Hope Mission. If you’re not craving souvlaki, baklava, etc., be aware of potential traffic congestion near the church and adjust your driving pattern. The festival schedule is available at greekfestival.org. In the mood for a different cuisine and culture? Check out Festa Italiana Oct. 10-13 at the University of St. Thomas (houstonitalianfestival.com) or the TurkishFest Oct. 12-13 (turkishfesthouston.com) on Jones Plaza downtown. Or visit the Bayou City Art Festival, the Texas Renaissance Festival or any of the other fun activities in the busy month of October. MONTROSE CRAWL OCT. 26 On Saturday, Oct. 26, strangely dressed people will wander the streets — and no, it’s not just another typical night in Montrose. This time it’s the 7th Annual Montrose Crawl, billed as “Houston’s biggest and best Halloween event.” Costumed participants will hit 11 restaurants and bars between Dunlavy and Montrose on Westheimer. Prizes will be awarded for best costume at each stop. A portion of the drink sales will be donated to the Houston Area Women’s Center. For details, visit montrosecrawl.com. PICNIC IN CHERRYHURST PARK Autumn officially started Sept. 22, but Houston summers typically last through Halloween. So we’re ending our summer of fun by co-sponsoring a picnic in Cherryhurst Park with the Cherryhurst Civic Association from 11 AM until 2 PM Saturday, Nov. 2. The park is located a couple blocks west of us on a lot bounded by Cherryhurst, Windsor, Missouri and Ridgewood. Bring a picnic lunch for yourself and a dessert to share on a table set up inside the Cherryhurst Community Center. Tennis courts are available, and bring Frisbees and other “fun on the lawn” games, including chess and checkers. More information, including a map, is available elsewhere in this edition. Our annual election is Monday, Nov. 4. If you want to serve on the board or volunteer in any capacity, email [email protected] or call me at 713-522-7050. Our year ends with our annual Christmas Party Dec. 2 at Riva’s. I hope to see you in Lamar Park the evening of Oct. 1 for National Night Out. George Sroka, President National Night Out in Lamar Park Tuesday Oct 1 • 6:00 PM Hyde Park Blvd. between Waugh and Commonwealth Picnic in Cherryhurst Park Sat. Nov. 2 • 11 AM – 2 PM Annual Election Mon. Nov. 4 • 7 PM @ Rudyard’s board coNtacts presideNt George Sroka [email protected] Vice presideNt Macy Bodenhamer [email protected] SECRETARY Janet Nichols [email protected] TREASURER Bill Curry [email protected] other coNtacts deed restrictioNs Shane Wilson deed [email protected] MeMbership Susan Ellis [email protected] CITIZEN PATROL Cynthia Greenwood [email protected] NEWSLETTER Paul Civiletto [email protected] NeWsletter adVertisiNg Carlos Fernandez [email protected] LAMAR PARK Rodney Morris and Dean Emmons [email protected] hpu civic association, po box 66422, houston, tX 77266-6422 www.hydeparkunited.org Neighborhood Block Captains Bomar Greg Jeu & Jim Hurst 281-541-6756 California / Westheimer Cecilia Kammer 832-788-1586 Commonwealth Liz Hudson & Carol Brownstein 713-527-9852 Mark McCreary 713-338-1929 Fairview Irene Dahlgren 713-299-5190 Sandie Zilker 713-906-7123 Hyde Park / Hyde Park Apts. Linda Carter 713-524-2952 Alex Aranda 713-533-9474 Hyde Park Crescent Susan Ellis 713-528-8289 Carlos Fernandez 713-520-7017 Hyde Park Townhomes Daniel Posada 713-454-7834 Indiana / Yupon Alice McCarthy 713-521-5807 Jackson Brandon Bartee 832-866-1426 Maryland Cathy Hanchett 713.542.4921 Michigan Tom Whitworth 713-523-8035 Missouri Jeanne Wallace 713-528-0834 Montrose Syndee Sharrar 281 216 0953 Peden Lori Corwin 832-582-6520 Vermont Sharon Lord 713-522-9427 Waugh Will Martin 405-361-2523 Welch Scott and Lina Rigrod 713-528-2791 Cliff Jones 713-524-3055 West Drew Mike McKann 713-526-6777 West Gray / Hazel Sherry Waddell 713-252-3968 Willard Camille Bogel 832-794-2577 Yoakum/Van Buren Macy Bodenhamer 713-201-5810 Block captains: Notify [email protected] of any changes in contact information. 2 September Meeting Minutes Hyde Park Civic Association President George Sroka called the meeting to order at 7 PM September 9th at Rudyards, with 20 members and guests present. The August meeting minutes were approved, then business proceeded with ballots being handed out to all members in attendance to vote on passage of the newly revised and updated HPU bylaws. Many thanks are due to Vice President Macy Bodenhamer, who headed the review committee, and to Lawyer Talia Jarvis, who provided many hours of work in drafting the final product. The new document was resoundingly approved and is now in effect. Guest Speaker Police Officer Pate attended the meeting to report on HPU neighborhood safety. Pate had been invited after residents commented on Hyde Park’s Facebook page about the arrival of a registered sexual offender at 1705 Maryland, two buildings west of Windsor near an elementary school. Officer Pate explained that offenders must register with their probation officers and, if they don’t, their crimes become felonies. (President’s Note: Pate checked after the meeting on exact nature of the registered offender’s conviction and probation. He said his location and distance from the school fall within legal limits in this particular case.) Six such offenders have been reported in our area. To meet some of Houston’s Police Officers, attend our annual National Night Out celebration in Lamar Park on Tuesday, Oct. 1. PROGRAM Senior Community Liaison Sharon Moses from Houston’s Solid Waste Management spoke about recycling and presented illustrations to identify what items can be recycled. The program was lively and interesting, as she made clear what can be recycled in which bins. Some residents have 96-gallon wheeled recycling carts, which can take glass containers, paper, metal and plastic. Others have the 18-gallon bins, which are limited to paper, metal and plastic only. Moses said the city is funding many more large carts with 70,000 to be rolled out in the near future. During the last roll-out, 35,000 were provided, and the upcoming expansion will replace many 18-gallon bins with 96-gallon carts. The city hopes to be complete with recycling expansion in 2016. What items can be recycled? (1) Clean, dry boxes (paper board), for example store-bought pizza boxes from the frozen food section, but not the delivery pizza boxes, which still have remnants of cheese and oil. The oil contaminates the whole recycling batch. (2) Plastic which has been rinsed if it contained food. (3) Glass, but not in the 18-gallon bins. Either use the 96-gallon recycle cart or take your glass to a recycling center such as the one at 5900 Westpark near the Southwest Freeway between Chimney Rock and Fountainview. (4) Big blocks of Styrofoam like those used to pack computers and other large electronics can be recycled at the Westpark Cycling Center. Moses presented The Citizens Guide to City of Houston Solid Waste Management Department Services newsletter, The Trash Facts. For more information, or if you have questions, call 311 or visit www.houstonsolidwaste.org . ANNOUNCEMENTS • Volunteers are needed for National Night Out on Tuesday, Oct. 1. Email [email protected] or call Macy at 713-201-5810. • National Night Out starts at 6 PM Tuesday, Oct. 1. Our party in Lamar Park includes free food and drink, plus the chance to meet and talk with Houston police. Bring a lawn chair. • Our Chapter 42 Workshop is scheduled for Sunday, September 22 at 2 PM at Rudyard’s with Shane Wilson and guest speakers from the East Montrose and Cherryhurst civic associations. • Community-wide in Cherryhurst Park will be held Saturday, November 2, from 11 AM – 2 PM (Details are featured elsewhere in this newsletter.) The September HPU Meeting was adjourned at 7:55 PM. 2013 caleNdar General meetings held upstairs at Rudyard’s at 7 pm Oct. 1 National Night Out in Lamar Park Nov. 2 Picnic in Cherryhurst Park Nov. 4 General Meeting / Election Dec. 2 Annual Holiday Party General meetings held on the first Monday of the month except when they conflict with holidays. hpu citiZeN patrol report: aug 1-31 Number of known incidents reported to police: 4 Number of arrests: 0 Hours patrolled on foot: 194.75 Hours patrolled by car: 64 Number of trained citizen patrollers: 28 NeWsletter deadliNe Deadline for the November 2013 newsletter is October 15. Inquiries: [email protected] Advertising: [email protected] TRASH PICKUP Monday is our regular garbage collection day. Please do not put out your trash/recycling bins before 6 PM Sunday. When our collection day falls on a Monday holiday, garbage and recyclables are picked up the following day. RECYCLING PICKUP As of July 29, 2013, most of Hyde Park switched to single stream recycling (large green bins on wheels.) However, those south of Fairview and west of Waugh will continue with dual stream (small recycling bins, no glass allowed). Recylables are picked up every other Monday. However ... pickup dates differ for single and dual stream recycling Single stream (large bin with wheels) recycling pickup dates: october 7, 21; November 4, 18 Dual stream (small bin, no glass) recycling pickup dates: october 14, 28; November 11, 25 heaVY/JuNk Waste aNd tree Waste october 2 – heavy/Junk • Nov. 6 – tree Waste 3 4 Your Realtor & Neighbor for 23 Years. A perennial name among the Houston Business Journal’s annual list of Top 25 Agents, Mike Spear is a recognized leader in residential real estate sales. Mike’s enthusiasm, dedication and consummate market knowledge make him the Realtor of choice for his many clients who do not hesitate to recommend his services to family and friends. For any of your real estate needs, call me! MIKE SPEAR REALTOR ASSOCIATE Circle of Excellence 713.204.7653 [email protected] www.MikeSpear.com WELCOME HOME w w w. M A R T H AT U R N E R . c o m Support Our Advertisers 5 6 Lyric Chamber Theater has Hyde Park Connection California native and Hyde Park resident Kelli Estes is the Executive Director of Lone Star Lyric (LSL), the only professional summer chamber lyric theater in Texas. Estes came to Houston during the 1990s for graduate school at the University of Houston’s Moores School of Music and stayed for an additional three years teaching voice and gigging around as a featured soloist with several local symphony and theatre groups. She returned to Houston in 2012 – after more than a decade performing in New York and the northeast – to expand Lone Star Lyric’s season, producing and directing the Lyric Cabaret (Oct-May), a monthly cabaret series featuring the Great American Songbook. Lyric Cabaret has expanded the series this year to include 20 shows. Each are presented in a New York cabaret style with a jazz piano and percussion plus four fantastic entertainers. The once-monthly performances are held at Ovations Night Club in Rice Village. The October cabaret show is called, “Till Death Do Us Part” – a fun take for Halloween. Performances will be held on Friday, October 25 at 8 PM and 10 PM and Sunday, October 27 at 5 PM. Estes is on the adjunct faculty of Wharton County Junior College, has a private voice studio, is a frequent clinician for masterclasses, workshops and is a guest judge for universities, the American Festival for the Arts, Greater Houston NATS competition and Houston Grand Opera’s High School Voice Studio. She enjoys playing volleyball and taking humbling daily jogs with her dog, Leelee. For more information about Lone Star Lyric or to attend a cabaret rehearsal at Estes’ Hyde Park home, please visit their website at www.lonestarlyric.org. Houston’s Biggest and Best Halloween event 7th Annual Montrose Crawl Saturday, October 26th! First get your costume on, then get your drink on as the Crawl hits 11 restaurants and bars between Dunlavy and Montrose on Westheimer, including Brasil, Poison Girl, Pistolero’s, Boondocks, Etro Lounge, Catbirds, Royal Oak, Slick Willie’s, El Real Tex-Mex, Mo Mong, and Hay Merchant. There will be no covers and no tickets, plus drink and food specials all night long. And prizes will be awarded for the best outfits at each stop, so get into the spirit before you get into the spirits. A portion of drink sales during the Crawl will be donated to the Houston Area Women’s Center, one of Montrose’s most important aid organizations. The 7th Annual Montrose Crawl is brought to you by Free Press Houston, Houston’s leading independent newspaper, Santo, our official beer, Izkali, our official tequila, Sailor Jerry, our official rum, Reyka, our official vodka, Cindie’s, our official costume store, and The Houston Wave, which is how we like to roll. Visit montrosecrawl.com for more details. The Houston Region is the kind of place where big ideas typically become larger-than-life realities. Throw any challenge our way and we meet it head on. But are we really ready for anything? No one likes to think about disasters, but they happen here just like in every other part of the world. The question is: are you prepared to survive them? For more information: www.avondaleassociation.org 7 Your new newsletter editor Hi! My name is paul civiletto and I am the new editor of “Hyde Park United” newsletter. I’ve lived in the Hyde Park neighborhood for over five years, enjoying its many amenities and its proximity to my job as a graphic designer with a financial services company. Originally from San Antonio, I’ve lived in Houston since 1988, moving here after graduating from Texas A&M. Please contact me at [email protected] to submit items for consideration for publishing in Hyde Park United. Thanks! kevin calfee from the City of Houston Planning and Development Department explains how the city defines blocks using a map of our neighborhood. Calfee spoke at a civic association-sponsored workshop Sept. 22 at Rudyard’s on Chapter 42, a subsection of a city ordinance that enables residents to preserve and protect the character of their neighborhoods. Chapter 42 empowers residents to petition the city to establish Minimum Lot Size (MLS) and Minimum Building Line (MBL) restrictions. MLS prevents the subdividing of lots to build multifamily dwellings. MBL establishes a minimum distance from the street for new construction so it matches existing houses. Residents from the Cherryhurst Civic Association also attended the meeting to share their experience with the Chapter 42 application process. Look for more details on this workshop and Chapter 42 in the next edition of the newsletter. support our advertisers 8 We are proud to be a part of Hyde Park! blacksmith BREAKFAST LUNCH COFFEE TEA Underbelly: 713.528.9800 • www.underbellyhouston.com Hay Merchant: 713.528.9005 • www.haymerchant.com Blacksmith: 832.360.7470 9 The Sidewalk Straddler Parking becomes more vexing as growth continues in inner loop neighborhoods It’s your driveway, right? So that sidewalk that goes across it is your piece of the sidewalk, right? So you park in your own driveway, right? And if you happen to block the sidewalk, your piece of the sidewalk, that’s your business, right? Well, yes . . . and no. Parking continues to be a vexing subject in most neighborhoods as population density increases, garage and driveway sizes shrink, business activity increases, and the need to put a vehicle somewhere becomes little by little harder to address. Let’s cover the simple part first. Pinched for space or not, a property owner or occupant cannot block public access to the sidewalk that cuts across the driveway into the property. Not legally, at least. For a while there was a question being asked, and not just in our neighborhood, about exactly what HPD was going to do about the sidewalk straddlers. Mostly, we (you and I) don’t like to deal with them. It seems a little petty, and certainly more than a little petty to turn to someone as you walk out into the street, around their car blocking the sidewalk, and complain, or – good grief – threaten to have the owner ticketed. Who wants to do that? Still, when we talk to each other, and boy oh boy when we talk to HPD, we don’t seem to mind talking about it at all. For many of us, it really does not affect us. Car on the sidewalk? Go around. Out into the street? So what? But it’s not “so what” for all of us. Consider that parent with one baby in the stroller and another young one walking in front. Going around is a bit tougher with that stroller, and navigating that kid safely around behind and maybe into the street – not fun. Not safe. Consider those who have chronic pain or actual disabilities that make walking difficult and possibly very slow. How trivial is that detour to him or her? How about that “chairdestrian” – the man or woman in a wheelchair? Now you have not just diversion and inconvenience and a little concern. Now you have issues of center of gravity. Some driveway entries are steep. Done poorly, an attempt in a wheelchair can dump the occupant out. None would do that to themselves knowingly, but if the rider misjudges and tries an impossible descent or ascent, it could be much worse than just inconvenient. There are many possibilities that create not just a nuisance but danger, and so, HPD cannot simply ignore the sidewalk straddle. On the other hand, there are only so many hours in the IMPORTANT NUMBERS 9-1-1 for Emergencies Only HPD dispatch line 713-884-3131 to report suspected criminal activity 3-1-1 City Help & Info OR http://www.houston311.org/ ROAR Hotline (improper dumping): 713-525-2728 10 day, and in some settings it can be seen that even when the sidewalk is straddled there is still a way around, maybe up into the driveway rather than down and around. As a result, here is what passes for a compromise: the law is the law. If you call HPD, someone will come and do something – a warning, if that’s appropriate, a ticket, or some towing. It is the law. Other than that, in the absence of any other cause for engaging, they will not very likely stop to ticket, much less tow, a straddling vehicle. If there is room to go up and around (into the driveway) or down and around (towards the street), without hazard and without complication or trespass, they are not likely to take action without a complaint called in, and even then may choose to warn rather than ticket. Make no mistake, though, if someone is chronic about offending, if neighbors complain, or if the blockage is severe, HPD can and will ticket straddling vehicles. Make sure it’s not your vehicle, though. Pull on up if you can, into the garage if you must, or park on the curb. It seems a small thing, but it is the neighborly thing to do. Submitted by Rick Wannall. T he Houston Parks Board has added a drop-down box identifying “Lamar Park” on their web site, allowing contibutors to make tax-deductible donations. Although major fundraising isn’t scheduled to start for another month, individuals can donate by. Contribute to renovating the Lamar Park Fountain 1. Visiting houstonparksboard.org 2. Clicking light orange “Donate” button on the top right of the page, 3. Clicking “Pay by Credit Card” link, 4. Clicking “Donation For” drop-down box and Lamar Park will appear. Tax-deductible donations are only a few clicks away! Join the Hyde Park United Civic Association or renew your membership Fill out this Membership Form, check “New Member” or “Renewal,” then mail the application with your $30 check to: HYDE PARK UNITED CIVIC ASSN, PO BOX 66422, HOUSTON TX 77266-6422. Date: Lamar Park Check one: ❏ New Member ❏ Renewal $ ☞ for these local projects ☞ Enforcement Fund $30 $ Name: Address: Primary Telephone: Secondary Phone: Email Address: Interests/Concerns (check all that apply): ❏ Membership ❏ Lamar Park ❏ Social ❏ Newsletter ❏ Citizens on Patrol ❏ Block Captains ❏ National Night Out ❏ Other ________________________________________________________________ Thank you for joining, and helping us all build a “Sense of Community.” You can also join online using PayPal at www.hydeparkunited.org. 11 •Copying: Full Color & B/W Copies, Presentations, Proposals•Bindery: Booklets, Binders w/ Printed Tabs, Coil/Comb Bindings •Digital & Offset Printing: Letterhead, Envelopes, BC, Forms•Finishing: Folding. Laminations, Numbering, Typesetting Service •Blueprints-Oversized Copies •Banners & Signs•Promotional Items•Personalized Needs•Wedding Invitations, Holiday Cards We also offer self service copiers, computer rental, fax services, CD scans, and packing and shipping services. National Night Out Lamar Park 6 PM October 2013 Fax: 713.521.0124 • [email protected] 713.526.2273 1405 Waugh Drive, Houston, Texas 77019
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