On February 23 The Coalition To Preserve McIntire Park filed a federal lawsuit against the use of federal money for the Interchange. We are at a critical juncture in the fight to Save McIntire Park. Your help will go towards the legal costs for this effort.
PLEASE CLICK HERE TO HELP FINANCIALLY
On 28 May, 1942 the Charlottesville City Council passed the following resolution:
How have we forgotten what Paul Goodloe McIntire has meant and does mean to this day to the city and citizens of Charlottesville?
Found by Daniel Bluestone
THIS SITE WILL EXPLORE THE REASONS PRO AND CON FOR THE SITING OF THE MEADOWCREEK PARKWAY IN McINTIRE PARK.
TO JOIN THE FIGHT TO KEEP THE PARKWAY OUT OF McINTIRE PARK CONTACT BOB FENWICK, EMAIL bfenwick@mindspring.com
VISIT www.SaveMcIntire.com AS WELL!
So, you don't believe there are foxes in McIntire Park? Click on this link to see one! The winning entry to name the fox is 'McIntire'.

This children's story is one of our fund raisers.
A terrific video documentary of the McIntire Golf Course can be seen on the following UTube link. McIntire Calm
WE NEED THE HELP OF THE CITIZENS OF C'VILLE!
Click here for video from The Sierra Club
How to contribute to our cause? Click on next line.
Click here for letter from John Cruickshank, Sierra Club
Click for picture of proposed 250 ByPass / Meadowcreek Parkway Interchange
This is the Meadowcreek Bypass Interchange from the city's bypass website www.250Interchange.org. You are looking south with the Rescue Squad on the left and Covenant School on the right. The parkway is running bottom to top and the bypass from left to right.
Click here for background on Meadowcreek Parkway
The plan for the road through McIntire Park and the interchange dates from approximately 50 years ago. After World War 2 and the Korean War the United States embarked on a substantial road building program which resulted in the Interstate Highway System and major road improvements throughout the country. These improvements helped boost commerce and national security. 40 years ago, as Charlottesville's hub was deteriorating and businesses relocated to the county, city and county planners decided a parkway was needed to provide a quick way to go from one side of the city to the other and to entice people to come downtown and a parkway was the way to do that. The population of Charlottesville at that time was less than 38,800. 40 years later the downtown hub is in the words of city planners and political leaders 'booming'. This has been accomplished despite the absence of a parkway through McIntire Park and into the heart of Charlottesville proper. The proponents say the parkway is necessary for the economic health of the downtown mall and surrounding area. But the proponents in their zeal to improve conditions downtown are taking the wrong tact. For the sake of argument if there is an adverse effect on downtown Charlottesville from no parkway this pales in comparison to the deleterious effect the City Council and the City Planning Commission have on the Downtown Mall with their meddling and micromanaging of the merchants and residents. The City Council members, the City Manager and the members of the City Planning Commission are not the experts on retailing, marketing, advertising, etc. they think they are. The men and women who operate the businesses are and they should be the driving force behind changes and improvements downtown not the other way around. But they also should not be the ones making the decision on whether or not a parkway should cut through McIntire Park and lose a substantial portion of the best free and open park in Central Virginia. That is for the citizens across our community to decide. They don't need a parkway to fill the Downtown Mall on a Friday night or Saturday. That is being done now without a parkway. And if you don't believe this just go to the Downtown Mall to 'Fridays After Five' or a Saturday or Sunday concert at the Pavilion.
Also in the intervening years the city has matured and its population has peaked (despite adding some additional citizens through annexation) and is now decreasing. So now is the time to slam the parkway through McIntire Park? Now is the time to take more than 22 acres of parkland and to leave slivers of land on the east side of the parkway? Would you like your children to play alongside the parkway in land that is officially designated as parkland? Is this an area for a walk in the morning or evening or lunch time with cars whizzing past?
Letter from Professor A E Dick Howard, University of Virginia School of Law, to the mayor of Charlottesville opposing the Meadowcreek Parkway:
A.E. Dick Howard, Charlottesville resident, White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at University of Virginia School of Law
I have lived in downtown Charlottesville (at 627 Park Street) since 1965. I was among a generation of local people who, believing in the prospects for and future of downtown Charlottesville, resolved to work for the revival of this part of the city at a time when many people had little hope for its future. Intervening years have justified my vision. Downtown Charlottesville has become, in the intervening years, a genuine community-- family friendly, highly livable, a place in which local citizens can take pride.
The proposed Meadowcreek Parkway will deal a blow to this revival. Designed to divert traffic from US29, it will drive a stake through the heart of the city. It will benefit county developers and business interests at the expense of those of us who live in the city. Once upon a time, there was a regional transportation plan, in which the county would bear its share of regional traffic needs. That plan is now in tatters. The Western Bypass will not be built. The North Grounds Connector is but a truncated part of what had been proposed. There is no reason to believe that the county will ever build an Eastern Connector (despite the fact that such a large part of traffic on the 250 Bypass goes between Pantops on the east and US29 on the north). What we are left with is the proposed Meadowcreek Parkway -- a plan to solve county traffic problems at the immediate and direct expense of city residents.
Meadowcreek Parkway, if built, will extract a high price from Charlottesville and its citizens, especially those who live downtown.
1. The Parkway will erode the quality of McIntire Park and have a direct impact on historical resources, such as the Rock Hill gardens (which, as Daniel Bluestone has eloquently argued, could be a major local resource). Traffic flowing through the park will turn the pleasurable sylvan and bucolic experience of walkers and others who use the park into something more nearly like being near an expressway.
2. Overall traffic volume through the downtown area will increase.Vast numbers of these cars will be headed, not downtown, but from one part to the county to another. Developers with an interest in projects such as Biscuit Run will be the direct beneficiaries of the parkway. The notion that somehow the parkway is needed for the benefit of the Downtown Mall is nonsensical, as anyone who has watched the Downtown Mall thrive will attest.
3. Traffic from the parkway, arriving at McIntire Road, will spill into side streets, directly impacting the quality of life in downtown Charlottesville. Residential streets will become conduits for cut-through traffic.
4. The increased traffic, especially on McIntire Road, will tend to create blight, beginning with houses on that road (they will become rental properties), and spreading more generally. This will depress property values and the city's tax base.
5. With the parkway's construction, pressure will mount to make the parkway four lanes rather than two. There will be further pressure to add traffic lanes to McIntire Road. This will destroy the recently created Schenck's Branch Park. Then, inevitably, there will bepressure to widen Ridge Street, destroying that historic district. This unhappy step will recall the destruction of Vinegar Hill and the displacement of its citizens -- a lesson which should not be not be repeated at the expense of those who live along Ridge Street. Ultimately, building the parkway will be a major step toward creating a means for traffic to get from US29 on the north to Interstate 64 on the south -- again channeling through traffic into the heart of the city. This is the failed planning of the 1960s, an approach which enlightened cities (such as Portland, Oregon) have rejected.
6. The wedge driven though the heart of Charlottesville will tend to separate the University part of town from downtown, severing the sense of community which many have sought (for example, by improvements on West Main Street) to enhance.
7. All of this is made worse by the proposed US250 interchange. This is an industrial-strength project forced into a constricted residentialand parkland setting. It is no accident that the team being called upon to design the interchange takes pride in having designed the Woodrow Wilson Bridge crossing the Potomac in Northern Virginia. The interchange will reach the height of telephone poles and will project noise across a large residential area. Not many people in Charlottesville would swap their life style for that of Northern Virginia. It is ironic that an interchange better suited for an interstate highway in Manassas would be thrust upon our community.
The injuries being done to our city by the parkway proposal are compounded by the proponents' evasion of state and federal law. There is serious doubt whether the Council's simple majority vote to convey the easement of city land for the project satisfies the requirements of the Constitution of Virginia. It is true that a local judge has refused to grant a preliminary injunction, but that judgment does not reach the merits of the case (judges are typically reluctant to grant a preliminary injunction in cases like this). Even more serious is the manner in which the parkway has been deliberately segmented in a way to avoid federal environmental impact review. Ever since the proposal for a parkway first surfaced, common sense obliges us to understand that this is one project. Yet now we are told that there are severable, free-standing projects, one of which, the so-called McIntire Road Extended, ends in the middle of the park. In truth, there is one project, not more. The only reason to pretend there are segments is to create a fiction -- that a parkway is being built with state funds (thus avoiding federal environmental impact review), separate from the interchange, being built with federal funds. Fictions of this kind are an insult to the intelligence.
During my decades of living in downtown Charlottesville, I have been actively engaged in the affairs of our community. There is no single issue which has aroused my concerns for our city more than that arising from the proposed Meadowcreek Parkway. Countless fellow citizens feel as strongly about this issue as I do.
With best regards,
A. E. Dick Howard
Reprinted with permission
SO WHAT CAN WE DO? LET THE CITY COUNCIL, THE CITY MANAGER, AND THE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS KNOW EXACTLY HOW YOU FEEL.
Mayor Dave Norris 1409 Early St. C'ville 22902 phone 220-1095 email cvilledave@hotmail.com
David Brown 1534 Rugby Ave. C'ville 22903 phone 293 - 3800 (w), 971 - 3537 email dbrowndc@gmail.com
Holly Edwards 917 6th St., SE C'ville 22902 phone 977 - 2969 email hollye@charlottesville.org
Satyendra Huja 1502 Holly Road C'ville 22901 phone 977 - 5094 email huja1@comcast.net
Or you can leave your opinion with the Clerk of Council Box 911 City Hall C'ville, VA 22902 phone 970 - 3113 email council@charlottesville.org
The County of Albemarle Supervisors can be contacted as well.
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Letter from Randy Page submitted to local media for publication.
The Daily Progress’ article, Wading to End, covering the loss of McIntire Park’s wading pool, reflects cool detached journalism but like many changes about to take place in McIntire Park it fails to accurately gauge the loss to our quality of life. The pool may be a leaf catcher in the winter but it certainly catches the attention and is used extensively by young families in the summer. The adjacent grounds allow for play and the mature trees provide shade. Sober reflection of the Vietnam memorial is rewarded in the joy of these playing children. Will the nation’s first Vietnam Memorial be sheltered under an overpass? The golf course, threatened by the Meadow Creek Parkway, is used by over a thousand children enrolled in the First Tee Program and hundreds of citizens unable to afford either the time or money for other golfing options. The closing of Hillcrest Road across from the park to traffic entering Route 250 leaves a school and eighty families only one exit to the bypass. Will the intersection be congested and dangerous? The proposed McIntire YMCA is in the wrong place to serve the underprivileged, one of its primary missions. The facility will destroy bird, deer and wildflower habitat; runoff from the 285 parking places will spoil the creek, and two Lion’s shelters will become dozer debris. There will be no grassy areas to lie and feel sun on your face, picnic or run with your children, no family reunions or company picnics. Removing trees and putting smaller shelters next to the concession stand is inadequate. The current masterplan for the park replaces the softball fields with a rectangular field. Softball loses twenty eight percent of its fields and established infrastructure, for a three percent gain in rectangular fields. It makes no sense. We gain speeding cars and more brick and mortar while sacrificing the very thing Paul McIntire held dear for the area he loved, our quality of life. It is a poor trade. We must speak up; let council know, stop the steamrolling of McIntire. It is irreplaceable.