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Hope you like this.  Does it furnish any ideas?  I was thinking of rehabbing that 
awful park in front of the Firehouse Market.

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Headline:  Seattle's new ruff! ruff! urban park
Byline:  Dean Paton Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
Date: 03/10/2004

(SEATTLE)This tiny park was meant to be an urban oasis where downtown residents 
could relax amid public sculpture or shoot a few baskets. Instead, it 
became the turf of drug dealers and prostitutes.

But now it's really gone to the dogs. And it seems in less than a week, 
two of those problems have been solved.

Six blocks north of Seattle's retail core, where just last week johns 
and streetwalkers lingered, and where addicts copped crack, visitors 
now get nuzzled by Mocha the Pit Bull or drooled on by Baker the 
Rhodesian Ridgeback. There's a different kind of regular now, of 
course, canines who'll do anything for a Milk Bone.

On Sunday, the city turned this third of an acre over to its canine 
residents, proclaiming Belltown's Regrade Park an off-leash play pen 
for dogs. Bipeds in the neighborhood say it already has made a 
night-and-day difference.

"What would you rather have in your neighborhood - a dog park or a 
basketball court used by drug dealers?" asks Courtney Nash, whose 
companion Baker, is busy making friends with Mocha and Dingo, a black 
mutt who returns slavishly to his owner every few minutes for a 
back-scratching fix.

"I used to be waiting to go to work at eight o'clock in the morning, 
right over there, and you'd see drug dealers here. There was 
prostitution," Ms. Nash explains. "You just knew this wasn't a great 
place."

Now at least a dozen dogs of all shapes and sizes scamper and sniff, 
ranging far from their owners only to sprint back, sit obediently, and 
wait for the hand to appear from the treat pocket. Besides dogs and 
owners, the only people inside the park's 5-foot-high black cyclone 
fence are two people reading books and eating lunch. Drug dealing? 
Here? Forget it.

Regrade Park is Seattle's ninth off-leash area, and while it might seem 
a benign area for commonsense public policy, dog parks here have been 
debated contentiously for 10 years.

Barbara Clemons, legislative aide to City Council President Jan Drago, 
answers her telephone with "Dogs Are Us," then recounts a battle that 
began in 1994, when the city added a pair of zealous animal control 
officers to enforce leash laws.

"These two officers learned very quickly where the dog groupie parks 
were," she remembers, "so they'd go back and cite the same owners again 
and again - on the same day."

Dog owners were incensed. City Council officials were inundated with 
complaints. Several council members maintain that of all the pressing 
issues - taxes, transportation, the homeless - none drew anywhere near 
the letters and phone calls as the debate over the standing of dogs in 
the city.

When Ms. Drago's committee held hearings, 600 people turned out to 
testify. The solution - the idea of these off-leash parks - polarized 
citizens into pro-dog and anti-dog factions. Environmental purists 
often lead the opposition to the off-leash areas, citing concerns for 
waterfowl and public safety.

"Some of the testimony was poignant," Ms. Clemons remembers. "We had 
people say, 'I don't have any children. I won't have any children. My 
dog is my child. I need a place to let her run.'

"We had what I call the fascists on both sides of the issue," Clemons 
says. "We had people who thought dogs should be able to run free 
anywhere in the city and we had people who thought there shouldn't be 
any dogs in Seattle, period."

In the end, they discovered the issue wasn't about dogs, it was about 
people.

Indeed, off-leash parks have fostered impromptu dog clubs where the 
socializing seems as important for the humans as it is for the canines. 
"You'll find all these people out there at 6 a.m. drinking their lattes 
together - and the only reason they've come to know each other is their 
dogs," Clemons says.

Transforming Regrade Park into a dog park was a grass-roots effort, 
spearheaded by Citizens for Off-Leash Areas, a group with its own 
website. Giving the scruffy park to the dogs for good isn't a sure 
thing, yet. A final decision will be made after an 18-month trial 
period.

The dogs, of course, are blissfully unaware of the politics that swirl 
around their new place to frolic and test social boundaries, leash 
free. During one of his first trips to Regrade Park, Dingo 
metamorphoses into a four-legged Lothario and tries to "romance" a 
small Pomeranian, who protests with a "no means no" kind of bark.

"Dingo!" shouts Lou-Ellen Peffer, the amorous mutt's owner. "Quit being 
a dog, come here!" Dingo glances over his shoulder, and then trots 
obediently to Ms. Peffer.

"Oh, you're such a go-o-od dog," she coos as he drops to his haunches 
to receive a treat. It disappears in a gulp.

"Before this park opened," Ms. Peffer says, "I had to drive 20 minutes, 
to Gold Gardens, to let Dingo off his leash. Now it's a three-block 
walk."

Nash, whose dog, Baker, is one of more than 100,000 canines said to 
live in this city of 563,000 humans, agrees. "There's nothing better 
than a bunch of people with dogs to turn things around."





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