Dear
Council,
First &
foremost, I wanted to express my family’s gratitude and appreciation to you for
your service. Serving at the local level
is the most demanding, raw, and unfiltered level of service available in this
great country of ours. It's you, your loved ones, your friends, your neighbors
and your community as your stakeholders.
It's like an
extended Thanksgiving get together: You've got your know it all Aunt who has
all the easy answers, your drunkard distant step grandfather who believes the
world revolves around him and his personal entitlements, to hell with the rest
of the family, your over bearing mother, and of course your siblings that have
their own very strong and always right personal opinions on every topic of
discussion.
In a
nutshell, it's a tough crowd to feed and peacefully coexist. You're
tasked with keeping and moving the family together in the most thoughtful,
forthright and best manner you can, no easy job.
As far as
Dunwoody Village Parkway is concerned, let me lend you this family member’s
opinion: When Dunwoody Village parkway
was cut, the thought was that all Dunwoody major roads would soon be four lane, it
was "forward thinking" at the time.
Chamblee
Dunwoody Road, Roberts Drive, Peeler, Tilly Mill, North Peachtree, Spalding
Drive, Dunwoody Club Drive, Cotillion, Shallowford, Peachford, Mount Vernon
all are major Dunwoody roadways and are
only two lanes.
In fact,
most of us love our two lane roads here in Dunwoody. In the 70's, a group of
citizens fought like hell to prevent Ashford Dunwoody Road from becoming 4
lanes, they fought to have bike lanes and sidewalks instead. They lost, and Central
Perimeter exploded. The irony is that many of these same protesters now
vehemently oppose Dunwoody Village parkway becoming two lanes, a walkable / bikeable
area.
Dunwoody
Village Parkway is not Ashford Dunwoody Road and Dunwoody Village is not
Perimeter Mall. I imagine Dunwoody Village is called a Village and not a mall
because it is surrounded on and abutted by all sides by thousands of homes. In
those homes are kids and adults, many wanting to get out, walk, and bike around
“the village.”
To what
extent and what ultimate form the remake of Dunwoody Village Parkway takes
shape, if any, is in your hands, that's why you were elected, that's why you
make the big bucks.
I firmly believe
one thing is for sure, Dunwoody Village Parkway, in its current form, is
unacceptable now and for future generations.
I wish you
all the best.
Founding
Mayor
Ken Wright
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