HOUSTON
CHRONICLE ARCHIVES
Paper:
Houston Chronicle
Date: SUN 08/03/03
Section: A
Page: 37 MetFront
Edition: 4 STAR
New arena may leave homeless out
in the cold /
Park's refurbishing will bring an end to enclave
By BILL MURPHY
Staff
Construction workers outside the new downtown arena work to
finish the gargantuan project. Somewhere inside, jackhammers
forcefully pound away.
On La Branch nearby, cars whiz past. Everyone seems headed
somewhere with a purpose. Blocks away, thousands of people in
office towers are working.
But at Root Memorial Square, across the street from the arena,
a half-dozen figures are sprawled on cardboard, asleep, and a
half-dozen others sit idly.
Root has long been an enclave where the homeless gather beneath
live oaks to pass the day, wash laundry and borrow cigarettes from
one another.
That's about to change.
In September, construction crews are scheduled to give the
square-block park a $2.3 million makeover. City officials hope it
is transformed into Houston's version of New York City's Rucker
Park, a famed venue for top-shelf street basketball.
City and arena officials avoid saying so, but they don't want
people headed to events to be afraid to walk through the park
because the homeless are there.
"We're hesitant to say that, because it sounds so
callous," said Tim McDougall, Rockets' vice president of
marketing. "This is a new arena. It was made so families can
come out and see the circus. It's a family venue. Nobody in the
organization wants to see (homeless people) put out with no place
to go."
The refurbishment will add a basketball court with tiered
seating, gardens, sculpture and new sidewalks. Live oaks and other
trees that grace the park will be saved, except for several that
are dying.
The park could eventually expand. Houston Rockets officials
have said they will lead a drive to raise money to buy a parking
lot on the block north of Root and give the land to the city, said
Dawn Ullrich, head of the city's convention and entertainment
department, which manages Root Memorial Square.
Arena street-level windows will allow passers-by on La Branch
to watch Rockets' practices, unless curtains are drawn. The
Rockets may run clinics in the park, McDougall said.
"It's kind of a Field of Dreams thing, having it in the
shadow of the arena," he said. "(Rockets star) Steve
(Francis) talked of stopping by and seeing what was going on in
the park."
There is now little about the park that could be called a field
of dreams.
On a recent sweltering day, most of those at the park were
sleeping or reclining on benches or cardboard laid on the grass.
Shopping carts, filled with belongings, were parked nearby.
Not all were idle. Hazel Algalala, 54, an immigrant from
Trinidad, stood by the drinking fountain, laboriously filling an
empty detergent container with water. She poured it into a
5-gallon plastic bucket and hauled it back to her spot.
"When I don't have the detergent, I have the bar of
soap," she said, swiping the green bar over a sock.
Others had finished their laundry. A man had strung a line
between branches of a live oak and hung shirts and pants, while
another slept as his laundry dried on the park's border hedges.
Algalala and others in the park said police prevent them from
staying there at night.
Office workers from buildings several blocks from the park
don't stroll up for picnic lunches.
"It's like it's completely occupied. You kind of feel like
you're walking into someone else's home or property," said
Pat Whitten-Lege, a Midtown resident who sometimes bicycles past
the park.
Several homeless men said it is fair for the city and the
Rockets to want the park to be used by more than just the
homeless.
"The homeless don't have no place here," said Lee
Edwards, 60, who said he has been homeless for seven years.
"People going to games, the homeless trying to sleep - that
ain't going to work."
The number of homeless soars to as many as 150 on Sundays, when
the Rev. Alex Morrison, who runs Houston Christway Ministry,
preaches there from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and hands out food.
Morrison has sought another park for his ministry while Root is
being refurbished. His first choice was Elizabeth Baldwin Park on
Elgin in Midtown.
The Midtown Civic Club and the Downtown and Midtown Residents
Association lobbied the City Council to block Morrison's request.
More than 100 residents turned out at a recent neighborhood
meeting on the issue.
In the past five years, condo lofts, many selling in the
$200,000-$300,000 range, have been built around Midtown, including
around Baldwin Park.
"This park was all trashed out four years ago before (the
condo owners) arrived," said Christina Hsu, who lives in a
condo near the park. "There was trash and syringes, a lot of
criminal activity."
Residents, including many of the new city dwellers, now help
look after Baldwin, bring their children to the playground and jog
on a path that winds under live oaks.
"We don't think they should take an inner-city park that
has become the center of a neighborhood and turn it into another
Root park," said Whitten-Lege, who lives across from Baldwin.
"I have seen 10 or 20 or 30 people sleeping in (Root)
park," she said. "If they came down here in those kinds
of numbers, I don't think anyone would want to take their children
here. I don't think people who used the park would feel secure and
safe."
After the outcry, Morrison, who has ministered at Root for
seven years, agreed to look for another site. Allen's Landing, a
park on Buffalo Bayou under the Main Street Bridge, was his second
choice, said Richard Cantu, director of the mayor's Citizens'
Assistance Office.
The University of Houston-Downtown and the Bayou Preservation
Association got wind of Morrison's coming and made it clear they
oppose the idea.
"It's kind of a `not in my back yard' deal," Cantu
said. "They want to help the homeless, but just not anywhere
near them."
Morrison said he is willing to leave Root for good if he finds
a suitable site elsewhere. But, he added, "If (the homeless)
congregate there, I will go there. The Lord has sent me to
minister to these people nobody cares about."
City officials are taking a wait-and-see approach concerning
how to deal with the homeless after Root park is refurbished,
likely after the Super Bowl at Reliant Stadium on Feb. 1.
It could be a nonissue by then because the homeless may move on
if other people begin using the park in great enough numbers, said
Pete Radiwick, spokesman for the city's convention and
entertainment facilities department, which manages the park.
A park attendant will hand out basketballs and enforce
regulations, which may ban laundry-hanging. The city also is
looking into whether Morrison needs a permit to minister and hand
out sandwiches in the park.
Cantu has talked with SEARCH and Bread of Life about allowing
Morrison to perform his ministry at their facilities. SEARCH
provides services in Midtown to help the homeless return to
productive lives. Bread of Life , a nonprofit near downtown,
provides social services for families struggling with poverty,
homelessness, drug abuse, HIV and AIDS.
"We're between a rock and a hard place," Cantu said.
"We have economic development and revitalization, and people
want to see new facilities. Homeless people just don't factor into
the equation.
"Because of that, it comes across to people as
unsympathetic and cold-blooded - a wish to shift them to another
location, where they will be out of sight, out of mind."
District I Councilwoman Carol Alvarado, who represents the
arena and Baldwin Park areas, said she hopes Morrison links his
ministry with a group that provides more services to the homeless.
"I don't think providing one meal is really productive in
trying to address the homeless problem," she said. "I
would rather see the homeless getting services they need: alcohol
and drug rehabilitation (and) mental health counseling."
...
ROOT MEMORIAL SQUARE
Created 1922, after relatives of Houston banker Alexander Root
donated the site of the family home to the city. Once had a
bandshell.
Refurbished 1987, after remaining in disuse since the early
1970s.
Cost of current refurbishment $2.3 million.