Thursday, March 13, 2008

The Blue Line with the Occassional Eye Candy Bites the Dust

Many conspiracies come to mind on this one. Here's two.

1) Are Cicero/Lavillita/Pilsen being punished for their reticence to vote Obama?
2) Is this a way to depress Hispanic participation for OHare and Medical center employment- note that E-W service on Roosevelt and Harrison and Green Line will be improved.
3) If you have any other theories, be my guest. One could make the case that employment for residents in these areas tends to occur all across the region and not concentrated in a few employment centers.

The saying used to go - if you live on the north side you protested at the Merchandise Mart and if you lived on the south side, you just bought a car.

And one more thing, were Barack Obama, Ron Huberman and Dan Seals separated at birth?

For the official article, go to http://www.suntimes.com/news/transportation/840300,CST-NWS-blueline13.article

Blue line branch to close
CERMAK BRANCH TO CLOSE Part of CTA's experiment on W. Side
March 13, 2008
BY
MARY WISNIEWSKI Transportation Reporter mwisniewski@suntimes.com
The CTA will cut the 54th/Cermak branch of the Blue Line, which runs west to Cicero, citing low ridership.
The elimination of the Blue Line branch, which goes into effect April 27, is part of a six-month experiment to reallocate West Side service. Extra service will be added to the Green Line and the other two branches of the Blue Line -- the east-west Forest Park branch and the O'Hare line going northwest. More West Side bus service is also planned.

The CTA will cut the 54th/Cermak branch of the Blue Line, which runs west to Cicero, citing low ridership in April. (John J. Kim/Sun-Times)

Pink Line trains will cover most of the affected 54th/Cermak route and will take West Side riders to and from downtown.
But riders who use the 54th/Cermak Blue Line to go to the University of Illinois at Chicago campus will have to either switch to the Forest Park branch or get off at Polk on the Pink Line and take the No. 7 Harrison bus.
Also affected will be Cicero and West Side residents who take the Blue Line to jobs at O'Hare -- they'll have to take the Forest Park branch or transfer to an O'Hare-bound train downtown.
"This is a service enhancement to the West Side," said CTA President Ron Huberman after the board approved the change Wednesday. He said Pink Line trains have "plenty of room" for Blue Line riders.
The 54th/Cermak Blue Line trains currently run every 30 minutes during rush hour and have six to eight people per car, Huberman said. At the end of six months, the CTA will decide whether to make the changes permanent.
Jaime Alamillo, 20, and his sister Emma, 22, who were waiting for a bus by the 54th/Cermak station in Cicero, said they won't be affected much by the change -- they'll just take the Pink Line downtown. But it will be tough on their father, Juan Alamillo, who works near O'Hare International Airport.
"He's going to be pretty upset," said Jaime Alamillo.
The Pink Line started rolling in June 2006. Blue Line trains from 54th/Cermak enter the Loop underground after joining the Forest Park branch near Racine. The Pink Line goes north along elevated tracks to Lake before going downtown.
Huberman said ridership on West Side bus and rail routes had grown since 2006. In October, 2007, rail ridership on the West Side was up 5.7 percent compared with the same month in the previous year. Overall, the rest of the system saw a 2.4 percent decrease.
The CTA also plans to improve 13 bus routes. The improvements include extending evening service on the No. 7 Harrison and No. 65 Grand and making service more frequent on the No. 12 Roosevelt.
Six Hyde Park routes subsidized by the University of Chicago will be made permanent, including a route from the university to Lake View.

Monday, March 10, 2008

The Ewing-Pulaski Factor

On the 2nd anniversary of one of the most well executed semi-spontaneous marches in U.S. history, I had to also remember some of the negative implications of that show of force. No longer could Chicago's Mexican American community play the semi-model minority. We would be a "problem", though not like those communities in the southwest and in California. The negative lights now shine, the media drums out its obligatory "chamaco"-esque school kid pictures whenever a story was done about school issues.


Sometimes I wish for an earlier time when we seamlessly transitioned into former white ethnic strongholds and then would leave them for greener pastures as blacks eventually moved in. That was the old order of things. There would be a kind of 5 to 15 year window where a neighborhood would be majority or plularity Mexican but not infested with gangs, overcrowded homes, language issues, or leftist polical stridency.



Two streets in Chicago represent the falling of this old ideal and the realities of the new age- Ewing Avenue and (south) Pulaski Road. The residential areas on either side of these streets were the destination spot for people seeking the escape from Bush (the neighborhood) and LaVillita. Though many people would eventually head to Indiana and Plainfield, many more recent immigrants took their place, in effect delaying and diverting the eventual turnover to black that would typically be expected- South Chicago east of Yates avenue illustrates this white-mexican-black transition over time from 1970 to the present day, as does the southeastern sections (e of Kedzie, s of 59th or so) of Chicago Lawn. That community is omniprescent and I feel more of a true core of Mexican-American/Hispanic/Latino political pull than those more glamorous and publicized areas on the near west and northwest sides, which I shall not name here. Here is where the HDO fermented into fine wine.

Most of all it was about attitude, an attitude I did not have the luxury of displaying seeing as I lived on the wrong side of the Chicago Skyway. Minority yes, but thankfully and resolutely better than black. But with decent clothes, a nasal Chicago accent and a full head of hair. Sometimes with a three-quarter leather but more than likely with something from a Dockers ad.

We weren't "oppressed" and are often told by California types that "Chicago is a suburb". Thank god!


Well that part of the world made itself heard loud and clear through its non-voting for Obama in the February 5 2008 Illinois primary election. Juan Rangel has somewhat of a pulse on this absence of coalition and dare I say the emergence of a swing voting Ewing Pulaski factor that, yes, will not turn the tide for Yon Makain, but may make Illinois a state with a less comfortable margin for Obama. Here is the Rangel column as seen in the Commentary page of Monday's March 10, 2008s Chicago Tribune:


http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-oped0310latinomar10,0,2200829.story