Archive for April, 2009

How our library can win its medals

Chatting with Debby Preiser, the events lady at Oak Park Public Library, yesterday, I got a glowing account of a recent session with Iraq and Viet Nam war vets, all but one of whom (five in all) regretted their and our participation in those wars.  Interesting, she said with a smile, and I smiled back.  She had glimmed my No Obama ‘08 cap (my Rohrshach test of tolerance levels) before recounting the vets’ session, held I assume in the library’s Veterans Room.

I felt somewhat buffeted by the account, but Debby is a sales person, and selling gets that way sometimes.  In any case, it put me in mind of a trend I have been noticing and storing in the back of my crowded, cluttered mind, that our library serves its supposed constituency a steady diet of progressive (let no man say liberal) programs. 

In this case, the vets endorsed an anti-war position, and that could have been merely the luck of the draw, reflecting Oak Park and literary Chicago’s widespread firmly held convictions.  A similar program in Mississippi or Oklahoma would have produced a different response, I imagine.

Nonetheless, assuming it was accidental in this case — pure chance, let us say — we cannot help notice that library programs tilt heavily to the left.  That’s us in Oak Park, yes, but we are also literate, urbane, highly educated, and keenly interested in intelligent, even intellectual debate and discussion, are we not?  Including conservative ideas in a debate atmosphere. 

Why not a debate, to give an example, between an Al Gore acolyte (Al would be great, but he declines debate) and a nay-sayer, each of some professional heft and platform style.  Sounds like money to me, and not available from the Great ATM in Washington probably, but who knows?  Stranger expenditures have happened and will happen, now that happy-go–lucky times are here again.  Meanwhile, our library movers and shakers might give it a thought.  After all, why be left all the time?

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Quiet, village government at work

Oak Park village president David Pope is moving on two commission-chair appointments, of seven waiting to be made, village clerk Sandra Sokol told one of the commissions last night, 4/1. 

He’s very thorough about it, said Sokol, who noted that the issue, or at least commissions in general, had come up the night before in a candidate-forum debate.  Indeed, opposition candidates in the April 7 election have accused incumbents of downgrading the commission structure.  Commissions and boards are volunteer groupings of citizens whose job is largely to advise the village board.

Last night’s meeting was of the Community Involvement Commitee (CIC), which recruits and recommends members for the 25 other commissions and boards, including the Zoning Board of Appeals, which is more than advisory but has statutory authority.  Each commission has an appointed village board liaison.  Sokol, who is retiring as clerk after 16 years, is laison to the CIC. 

Four citizens came before the CIC last night as prospects for appointment to a commission:

* a historic-preservation professional, with a view to joining the village’s Historic Preservation Commission

* a lawyer willing to take on the time-consuming and sometimes-hot-seat zoning-board or Plan Commission duties

* a building-rehab contractor who has served on other commissions and for whom CIC members seemed to prefer the Community Design Commission

* a woman in her early 20s, raised in Oak Park (she named the junior high), who had got off class in her master’s program early so as to make the meeting.  She mentioned two commissions, Community Relations and Housing Programs Advisory.

The members, eager to find younger citizens willing to serve, were especially glad to see this woman.

All four, none older than in his or her 40s, were typical in my experience of watching CIC prospect sessions, being earnest, willing, and apparently quite competent.

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