Submitted by freshponder on 23 March, 2007 - 6:33am.
As you may already be aware, Fresh Pond plans to institute a pilot
Medallion Program to limit the number of off-leash dogs. You may not know
that the ordinance to enable this has not yet passed, and will go before
the city council on Monday, April 9.
We are including below an excellent letter from member Monica Strauss
about this issue. She has carefully researched this issue, speaking with
representatives from Fresh Pond, the Water Department, the City Manager's
office, City Council, dog owners, environmental experts, etc. Please read
her letter and follow up with your own letter to the City Manager by April
5 per her suggestion. Please also attend the council meeting on April 9,
and sign up by 5:30 to speak about your feelings on the issue.
All the best,
CDOG
Dear CDOG members and friends,
I've been thinking alot about the proposal of the Fresh Pond
Advisory
Board to amend chapter 6 of the City Ordinances, Rules for Off
Leash
Areas, specifically c.04.040 and c.04.045, and would like to
share the
following thoughts with you.
1. The primary issue troubling me is that:
All dogs, even those who bear medallions, are to be prohibited
from
accessing all "mowed grassy areas" at Fresh Pond.
For the reasons I discuss below, I propose that supervised
dogs
should be allowed on mowed grassy areas of Fresh Pond.
Sam Corda, Managing Director of the Cambridge Water
Department
informed me on 3/8/07 that the rationale behind the
proposed
amendments to the city ordinance and the establishment of the
Fresh
Pond dog Medallion program is to protect the public drinking
water for
the next 100 years from possible contamination due to dogs.
He
explained that there is currently no hazardous contamination and
the
Water Board has no quantitative evidence of any contamination
from
dogs at Fresh Pond. I further queried him regarding erosion of
the
surrounding area from dogs; he said there is no quantitative data
on
erosion from dogs or from the sledders and other human
users.
Regarding incidents involving dogs and Mr. Corda said that they
may
happen occasionally, but no more so than incidents involving
other
Fresh Pond users such as bicyclists and runners for which he also
has
no quantitative data. Further, Mr. Corda verified that the
Walter
J. Sullivan Water Treatment Facility purifies the water in Fresh
Pond
before it is piped out as the public water supply and the Facility
is
more than sufficient to purify out the biological contaminants in
this
"raw" (unpurified) water. Please note, what animal waste
contamination
is currently found in Fresh Pond raw water is almost
entirely
introduced at the upstream sources of our raw water: the Hobbs
Brook
(in Waltham) and Stony Brook (in Weston) Reservoirs. More than
any
animal and human waste problems, the Hobbs Brook and Stony
Brook
Reservoirs have potentially hazardous contamination from
plant
fertilizers, traffic and salt, and development related pollution
that
enter through "tributaries and storm drains associated with
State
Routes 128 and 2, secondary roads, and commercial and
industrial
parking areas" (From Fact Sheet FS-056-02, U.S. Geological
Survey
prepared in cooperation with the City of Cambridge, MA
Water
Department, Storms, Streams, and Reservoirs-- Assessing Water
Quality
in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, Drinking-Water Source Area.
See
also, Smith, K.P., 2005, Hydrologic, water-quality,
bed-sediment,
soil-chemistry, and statistical summaries of data for the
Cambridge,
Massachusetts, drinking-water source area, water year
2004:
U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1383, 110 p.).
Contamination makes no sense as a rationale for prohibiting dogs
from
the "mowed grassy areas" that are further from the reservoir at
Fresh
Pond than the asphalt path where dogs are allowed. Concern
about
owners and dog-walkers cleaning up after their dogs can be
handled in
much more effective ways than prohibiting dogs from
accessing the
grassy areas, which have become most of the reservation
in recent
years as the mowed grassy areas have proliferated. There are
already penalties for owners and/or dog-walkers not
cleaning up after
their dogs. Educational outreach accompanying the
medallion program is
a better way to ensure that dog owners clean up
after their dogs. It
would seem more logical and straightforward to
require dog owners and
dog-walkers to read an explanation of the
importance to the water
supply of cleaning up after their dogs and to
include this information
in the statement they are required to
sign as part of the Medallion
Program.
2. In addition I am troubled that:
the City of Cambridge is creating an unfortunate precedent
by
prohibiting dogs and their owners who are not Cambridge
residents
from enjoying the privileges of excercising their
dogs at the
reservation off-leash. Residents of Belmont who
live next to Fresh Pond
will no longer be able to walk their
dogs off-leash there.
For the reasons I discuss below, I propose that supervised
dogs
owned by non-Cambridge residents should be allowed off-leash
at
Fresh Pond subject to suitable education, perhaps auxilliary to
the
Medallion program.
Cambridge is an urban environment and its residents will be
deprived
of access to more extensive parks and conservation areas that
exist
outside of Cambridge when nearby suburban and rural towns
including
Belmont, Lincoln and Concord are tempted to respond in kind
to the
prohibition imposed on them by Cambridge. Rather than
imposing
exclusivity, those in the Cambridge community and any others
wishing
to partake of the benefits of the Fresh Pond Reservation would
be
better served by organizing the type of educational outreach
described
above for non-Cambridge people. Educational programs of this
sort are
already being used in other parts of the country to protect
sensitive
bodies of water from non-resident animal and human pollution.
For example, a
similar educational program is used at Hanauma Bay in
Oahu, Hawaii to
maintain the purity of water in a bay known for
tropical fish and
their reef habitat that were becoming endangered by
contamination from
swimmers and other human visitors from around the
world.
What You Can Do:
I urge each of you to communicate to the Cambridge City
Council
members individually your opposition to the prohibition of
supervised
dogs (Cambridge and non-Cambridge) from the mowed grassy
areas at
Fresh Pond (See contact list belowy). Further I urge you to
ask
them to question the lack of quantitative evidence of
water
contamination from dogs or of soil erosion from dogs. I urge you
to
advocate that alternatives exist to prohibition that would be
more
effective for eliminating contamination from dogs (as opposed to
from
wildlife, salt, building development, or pollution) such as
educating
the dog owners/walkers as to the environmental hazards
of
contamination, especially to their drinking water and requiring
signed
agreements to respect the concerns of the City for the integrity
of
the water supply, and to supervise and clean up after their
dogs.
Further I urge you to impress on the City Council the benefits
of
having dogs at Fresh Pond, for example having responsible dog
owners
and supervised dogs around Fresh Pond discourages crime and
improves
the safety of the area for others. Lastly, I urge you to
impress on
them that many Cambridge residents. both dog owners and non
dog-owners
get pleasure from being around dogs. Please voice your views
through
all of the following channels, most importantly (A) Attending
the
hearing on April 9 and (B) Contributing a your comments in a letter
to
the Communication List on the City Council Agenda:
A. Attend the hearing on April 9, 2007. Make sure to sign
the
attendance sheet between 5PM and 6PM (Please contact the
City
Clerk's office at 617-349-4260 for other options to sign up
to
speak.)
B. Submit your comments to the City Clerk "to be filed with
the
Communication List of the committee report for the City
Council
Agenda on Municipal Ordinances". To be added to the
Agenda, the
comments must be submitted as a signed, written
letter to be received
by April 5 at 5PM, and
addressed to:
The City Council c/o City
Clerk
City Hall, 795 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
Please feel free to use or modify the following sample
letter:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
[Date]
Dear Mr. Healey,
I am sending this letter to be filed with the Communication List
of
the committee report for the City Council Agenda on
Municipal
Ordinances.
I oppose the prohibition of supervised dogs (Cambridge
and
non-Cambridge) from the mowed grassy areas at Fresh Pond. Further
I
ask you to question the lack of quantitative evidence of
water
contamination from dogs or of soil erosion from dogs.
Alternatives
exist to prohibition that would be more effective for
eliminating
contamination from dogs (as opposed to proven contamination
from
wildlife, salt, building development, or pollution). Better
options
would be: educating dog owners/walkers as to the environmental
hazards
of contamination to their drinking water and requiring
signed
agreements to respect the integrity of the water supply,
including
supervision and cleaning up after their dogs. I believe in
the
benefits of having dogs at Fresh Pond, for example having
responsible
dog owners and supervised dogs around Fresh Pond
discourages crime and
improves the safety of the area for others. I am
one of the many
Cambridge residents, dog owners and non dog-owners
alike, who get
pleasure from being around dogs.
I urge you to reconsider the prohibition of dogs from mowed
grassy
areas at Fresh Pond and the institution of the Medallion
Program.
Thank you.
[Your name and address
here]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
If you have time after A and B (above), other channels with
indirect
impact are:
C. Email individual members of the City Council at their
personal
email addresses (see contact list below).
D. Make your opinions known on the Cambridge Chronical
Blog,
http://blogs.townonline.com/cambridge/?p=3361
E. Join the Cambridge Dog Owners' Group (http://cambridgedog.org/)
Please note that (A) speaking at the hearing on April 9 and
(B)
submitting a signed letter filed with the Communications List of
the
City Council agenda are the only formal ways to register your
opinion.
If you care about continued access of dogs to Fresh Pond, it
is
critical that you attend the meeting and sign in: The City
Council
will be most influenced by signed attendance at this meeting.
The
meeting will be held on April 9 at 5:30PM in the Sullivan
Chamber,
City Hall, 795 Massachusetts Avenue.
I've heard from City Councillors that if we work together and can
show
a strong opposition we have a good chance.
Regards,
Monica Strauss
Contact Information for Members of the Cambridge City Council
Brian Murphy (Working Group on Dog Parks,
Chair)
(bmurphy@cambridgema.gov)
22 Mount Auburn
Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
492-7426 (H)
349-4280 (W)
Craig A. Kelley (Working Group on Dog Parks, Co-Chair, Ordinance
Subcommittee)
(ckelley@cambridgema.gov )
6 St.Gerard
Terrace
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 354-8353 (H)
(617) 349-4280
(W)
Michael A. Sullivan (Co-Chair, Ordinance
Subommittee)
(msullivan@cambridgema.gov)
42 Huron
Avenue,
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 547-0777 (H)
617-349-4280
(W)
Henrietta
Davis
(hdavis@cambridgema.gov)
www.henriettadavis.org
120
Chestnut Street,
Cambridge, MA 02139
(617) 547-0877 (H)
(617)
349-4280 (W)
Anthony D. Galluccio
(agalluccio@cambridgema.gov)
27 Sunset
Road,
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 868-4393 (H)
(617) 349-4280
(W)
E. Denise Simmons
(dsimmons@cambridgema.gov)
195 Brookline
Street
Cambridge, MA 02139
491-7435 (W)
349-4280 (W)
Marjorie C. Decker
(mdecker@cambridgema.gov)
61 Walden
Street,
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 349-4280 (W)
Vice Mayor: Timothy J. Toomey, Jr.
(TimToomey@aol.com)
88 Sixth
Street
Cambridge, MA 02141
(617) 576-6483 (H)
(617) 349-4280
(W)
Mayor: Kenneth E. Reeves
(kreeves@cambridgema.gov)
340 Harvard
Street
Cambridge, MA 02139
(617) 661-1635 (H)
(617) 349-4321
(W)