It's time to stand up for Kletzsch Park. Again.
County officials will present their latest 'improvement' plan to excavate, chainsaw, pave over and otherwise 'improve' scenic Kletzsch Park along the Milwaukee River bank west of the well-known dam remnant at a public meeting Tuesday beginning at 5:00 p.m. at Glen Hills Middle School, 2600 W. Mill Rd., Glendale.
Conservationists, historic preservationists and anyone with a smidgen of common sense won't warm up to what the County has in mind.
What began as a plan to repair the dam
and add a fish migration viewing stand has morphed into an unjustifiably extensive reconstruction that would cut down these and other pre-statehood oak trees
and disturb an ancient Indian Prairie and graves noted by Increase Lapham, the legendary 19th-century naturalist and surveyor who recorded the area's unique features in 1850, two years after statehood.
Opponents are suggesting some options upriver which would not undermine the integrity of the riverbank, damage the character of the park or tamper with sacred lands.
A core question comes to mind - - and it's the same one that underlies the possible contamination of the Menominee River and its sacred lands for a mining company, or the proposed sacrifice of a nature preserve and rare, historic land and water in Sheboygan for a luxury golf course, and in so many other battles for Wisconsin clean air, fresh water and precious lands:
Why such a lack of humility on the part of the decision-makers who would let such irreplaceable features be so abused?
County officials will present their latest 'improvement' plan to excavate, chainsaw, pave over and otherwise 'improve' scenic Kletzsch Park along the Milwaukee River bank west of the well-known dam remnant at a public meeting Tuesday beginning at 5:00 p.m. at Glen Hills Middle School, 2600 W. Mill Rd., Glendale.
Conservationists, historic preservationists and anyone with a smidgen of common sense won't warm up to what the County has in mind.
What began as a plan to repair the dam
and add a fish migration viewing stand has morphed into an unjustifiably extensive reconstruction that would cut down these and other pre-statehood oak trees
and disturb an ancient Indian Prairie and graves noted by Increase Lapham, the legendary 19th-century naturalist and surveyor who recorded the area's unique features in 1850, two years after statehood.
Opponents are suggesting some options upriver which would not undermine the integrity of the riverbank, damage the character of the park or tamper with sacred lands.
A core question comes to mind - - and it's the same one that underlies the possible contamination of the Menominee River and its sacred lands for a mining company, or the proposed sacrifice of a nature preserve and rare, historic land and water in Sheboygan for a luxury golf course, and in so many other battles for Wisconsin clean air, fresh water and precious lands:
Why such a lack of humility on the part of the decision-makers who would let such irreplaceable features be so abused?



