PRE-FILED TESTIMONY OF ALAN
MAMMOSER
INTRODUCTION
My name is Alan Mammoser. I was employed at the Southeast Environmental
Task
Force
(“SETF”) for 2-1/2 years, most recently as the Executive
Director of the SETF.
Prior to
attaining this title in 2006, Ijoined the SETF
in
October, 2005
as a project manager
for the
Calumet Area Vision project. As Executive Director,
I led the organization’s work
in three
programs: pollution prevention,
open space planning, and environmental
education.
Prior to working
at the SETF, I worked for six years as
an associate planner at the
Northeastern Illinois Planning
Commission. During my time at
the Northeastern Illinois
Planning Commission I participated in various regional planning
projects including
the
Common
Ground Regional Framework Plan, and the East Will
County Council of Mayors.
In the
Common
Regional
Ground Regional Framework
Plan, I implemented a
participatory regional
planning process
to identify goals, strategies
and regional spatial framework
of centers and
corridors. For the East Will County Council
of Mayors, I advised five municipalities
adjacent
to
a proposed suburban airport to help them create a special
area-wide authority
for
intergovernmental land use planning.
Further, I performed regional
research
which resulted
in
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1
the
reports
Employment Subcenter
Identification
Project,
Final
Summary
Report
(August, 2002)
and The Transit —
Land
Use Link:
A Density
Study in Suburbia
(June, 2002).
In
1999,
I
was
awarded the Nicolas
V. Trkla Scholarship
by the Urban Land
institute for
outstanding
academic
accomplishment
in the
field
of urban planning.
I also
received an
American Fellowship
in 2004
which
is a
presidential
initiative
for the Americas
by the
U.S. State
Department. As part
of the fellowship,
I worked
three
months
in the regional
planning agency
Emplasa
in São Paulo, Brazil.
Finally,
I
was
awarded a
journalism fellowship
in 2005
by the
German Marshall
Fund of the
United States for research
and
writing
about trans-Atlantic
environmental issues,
specifically
pertaining
to local food systems.
I
have
Bachelor of Arts
in History from
the University of
California
at
Los Angeles.
I
have
a
Masters
Degree
in Urban Planning
and Policy and
a Masters in History
from the
University of
Illinois
at Chicago.
SOUTHEAST
ENVIRONMENTAL
TASK FORCE
The SETF
represents
the Illinois Calumet
Region, which includes
the southeast
side
of
Chicago
and adjacent south
suburbs. We were
founded in 1989 as
an arm of Illinois
State
Representative
Clem Balanoffs
Office and were
incorporated
in 1994. We operate
as mostly
a
volunteer organization.
Our Board of
Director’s is completely
voluntary
and is comprised
of
public officials,
engineers, professors,
teachers, clergy
and bankers. Our
accomplishments
include:
stopping various landfill
expansions
and waste
facility proposals;
promoting restoration
of
degraded
wetlands; promoting
sustainable Brownfield
redevelopment;
and driving pollution
reduction
investments in industries
adjacent
to communities and
waterways.
We serve students,
educators, adults
and families
through our Environmental
Education
program. The goal of
the Environmental Education
program
is to create environmentally
aware
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communities
in
southeast
Chicago;
communities
that
contribute
to the
area’s
redevelopment
and
respond
to
environmental
threats.
To
create
such
communities,
we work
to
foster
a love
for the
environment
among
residents.
We
educate
them
on
issues
that
affect
quality
of
life
in
their
neighborhoods
and
in
the
remarkable
natural
areas
of
the
Calumet
region.
Programs
that we
set
up
include:
environmental
education
workshops
on an
issue
in the
Calumet
Region;
presentations
of
the
history
and
environmental
issues
in
the Calumet
region,
presentations
on
how
a
particular
community
or
school
can
get
involved,
Toxics
Treasures
Tours
for
students
and
adult
groups;
and
evening
environmental
education
workshops
for
adults.
Our
mission
is
to
empower
residents
and
students
in the
southeast
side
and
the south
suburbs
of
Chicago
to
improve
their
local
environment;
promote
pollution
prevention
and
progressive
practices
in
the
Calumet
region
facilities;
and
promote
preservation,
restoration,
and
enhancement
of the
region’s
natural
areas,
and
sustainable
development
of the
region’s
industrial
lands.
Our
vision
is
that one
day
educated
and
empowered
residents
are
able
to
contribute
to
sustainable
growth
and
respond
to
all
environmental
threats;
all
businesses
are
utilizing
the
most
energy
efficient
processes,
generating the
least
possible
pollution
and
waste,
and
hiring
local
residents;
and
all open
spaces
and
vacant
lands
are
restored
to create
a
community
vitality,
industry,
-
making
the
Calumet
region
of
Greater
Chicago
a model
for
the
nation
and
the
world
to
emulate.
In
2005,
we
were
one
of
13
citizens,
cities,
or
groups
to
receive
Lt. Governor
Pat
Quinn’s
Environmental Hero
Award.
The
award
was
given
to
SETF
primarily
based
on our
work
to
win
the
20 year
landfill
moratorium
for
Chicago—effectively
preventing
two
multimillion
ton
landfill
expansions
in the
southeast
and
far
south
sides.
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CALUMET AREA
The Calumet River connects
the southeast side
to
the
south and west suburbs of Chicago
via the Little
Calumet
and the
Calumet-Sag
Channel,
and to downtown Chicago via
Lake
Michigan. The Calumet River System includes
the
Calumet River,
Little Calumet River,
the
Grand Calumet River, and the Calumet-Sag Channel. Historically, the Calumet River System
is
known for industrial and shipping use. The region has experienced some of the heaviest
concentrations of industry in the Midwest. As a result, the area has lost thousands of acres
of
lakes and wetlands that were filled in
with
construction
waste, steel mile
slag,
municipal
garbage,
and hazardous waste.
Currently, the Calumet
Region
in the
City of
Chicago contains approximately 4,800
acres
of open lands,
including
700
acres
of Lake Calumet itself;
approximately 20 miles
of waterways
including
the Calumet, Little, and Grand Calumet Rivers; Wolf
Lake; and, various smaller
lakes
and
ponds.
The region also holds about 2,000 acres of
abandoned industrial lands which is
60%
of Chicago’s vacant industrial
property.
CALUMET AREA VISION PLAN
The Calumet Area Land Use Plan
was created by the City of Chicago Department of
Planning and Development and
Department of Enviromnent, three
non-government
organizations
- the Southeast Chicago Development Commission,
Openlands
Project, and
the
Calumet
Area Industrial
Commission - and focus group participants
including
our
founder,
Marian Byrnes. The plan
was created as an effort to increase
the environmental and economic
vitality of the
Calumet Area. The plan
was created by collecting all the existing maps and
information about the area.
The plan focuses on the creation of
public access through
small open
spaces to the
rivers.
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In response
to the City’s
Calumet
Area
Land Use
Plan,
we gathered
partners
to form
the
Lake
Calumet
Vision
Committee
in
March,
2003 to
create a Lake
Calumet
Vision Document
detailing
the desired
uses for the
waters
and
shores
of the lake.
Member
organizations
to date
include:
Openlands
Project,
Sierra
Club-Illinois
Chapter,
Bird Conservation
Network,
Historic
Pullman
Foundation,
Vet’s
Park Improvement
Assn., Lake
Michigan
Federation,
Friends
of the
Parks,
Pullman
Civic
Organization,
Peace
Pipe
Prairie
Project
and Calumet
Ecological
Park
Assn.
Further, in
November
2003 a process
to
identify
possible
public
open spaces
in
the
corridor
began.
Sites
were
selected
based
on
the
following
factors:
no hindrances
to
industrial
traffic,
proximity
to neighborhoods,
consideration
for
public
safety,
historical
significance,
current
uses
by
the
community,
security
of
neighboring
properties.
On
May 23,
2007 our Board
members
adopted
the Calumet
Area
Vision
Plan. Prior
to
the creation
of the
Calumet
Area Vision
Plan,
I
created
a map
of the
area
that
encompasses
the
Calumet
River,
Cal-Sag
River
and
the Little
Calumet
River.
This
map
was used
to
create the
Calumet
Area
Vision Plan.
The plan
is
shown
through
a map
that
highlights
18 specific
points
called “Places
and
Connections”
which
unifies
the area
through
a
regional
system
of
greenways
and bike
trails. The
Map includes
a variety
of
open
spaces including
the
Big Marsh,
covering
hundreds
of acres
to
half-acre
market
gardens
on south Chicago
lots.
The Calumet
Area
Vision
Plan
envisions
the
Calumet
River
System
as
the
centerpiece
of
a
whole
system
of open
spaces,
greenways,
bike
paths, and
a slew
of
recreational
opportunities,
mainly
boating
and fishing.
We
want
to
give
people
access
to open
spaces
while
supporting
the birds,
animals,
fish, and
native
plant species
that
thrive
in the
Calumet
region.
Our ultimate
goal
is
to
create
neighborhoods
and
industrial
areas that
coexist
with
natural
areas.
5
Currently,
we are
focused
on the Burnham Greenway
— the
“gap”,
the
Western Shore
of
Lake
Calumet, and the
Calumet-Sag
Trial. First,
the Burnham
Greenway
stretches
from the
heart of south suburban
communities to
Southeast
Side
neighborhoods linking
people
to
Chicago’s
Lakefront Trail. Currently,
a 5-mile
gap interrupts its
course through Hegewisch
and
Burnham.
We are
working to
close the
gap
which requires two bridges
and
new
paths
along
right-of-ways.
Second, the Western
Shore of Lake
Calumet is
a natural lake that was
once considered
a
natural paradise
by
indigenous
peoples,
pioneers
and early residents
of Chicago.
Today
though
the
lake provides harbor facilities
for the Illinois
International
Port District much
of it
remains
open,
unused and surrounded
by
a razor wire
fence. We along
with various partners
in the
Lake
Calumet
Vision Committee
are working
to
have
the area
become
part of the Forest
Preserve
District
of Cook
County.
Finally, the Calumet-Sag
Trial
will unite
the
Calumet
area with the Illinois
&
Michigan
National Heritage
Corridor. The
trial
will follow the
Grand Calumet
and Little
Calurnet
Rivers through
the communities of
Burnham, Calumet
City, Riverdale and
Dolton,
and
then
continue along the
Cal-Sag Channel
to the
National Heritage
Corridor.
The multiuse trail
will
spur
community
and economic
development
through
recreation
and tourism.
l±icreasing green space
is known to improve
people’s perceptions
of their neighborhoods,
reduce
crime, and prompt
further voluntary community
greening
efforts. Since tourism
is
a
$22
billion
industry
in Illinois,
a strong case can
be
made for
preserving
the areas surrounding
the
Calumet
River System. The
area has the potential
to become
attractive to tourists,
boaters,
and
fishermen. Further,
investing in open
spaces and historic
structures along
the river could
also
6
boost industrial
redevelopment.
Business
are
more
likely
to locate
a
new facility
in a
community
that is economically,
socially,
and
culturally
vital.
The
Southeast
Environmental
Task
Force
(SETF)
will
implement
its Calumet
Area
Vision
project
during
2008-09.
The
project
builds
upon
our
twenty
years of
work in the
Lake
Calumet
region
by
strengthening
each of our
three current
programs:
pollution
prevention,
open
space
planning
and
environmental
education.
DISINFECTION
OF THE
CALUMET
AREA
RIVERS
I believe
that the
Illinois Environmental
Protection
Agency’s
proposed
regulation,
specifically
the heightened
standard
for disinfecting
the waters
in the
Calumet
River
System,
is
a
key component
to the
success of
the Calumet
Area
Vision
Plan and
the
environmental
and
economic
vitality
of
the Calumet
River
System.
Without disinfection
of
the
Calumet River
System,
the collective
impact
of
the other
efforts
to improve
the area
will
greatly
decrease.
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