
 
        
         
		Parks are critical infrastructure, the next  
 mayor needs to treat them that way 
 COURIER LIFE, APRIL 2-8, 2021 19  
 EDITORIAL 
 Up to speed on legal weed 
 It took a global pandemic that exposed  
 great  economic  suffering  
 and  inequality  in New York  for  
 the  Empire  State  to  fi nally  be  on  
 the  cusp  of  fully  legalizing  marijuana. 
 State lawmakers and embattled  
 Gov.  Andrew  Cuomo  on  Wednesday, 
   March  31  legalized  the  recreational  
 use  of  cannabis  in  New  
 York, setting up an outline for how  
 this dramatic change will work for  
 the state, the economy and its people 
 For years now, medicinal marijuana  
 has been legal in New York —  
 though it’s been speculated that the  
 main  reason why  recreational  use  
 wasn’t  permitted  earlier  was  not  
 due  to health  concerns,  but  rather  
 because no government wants to  
 green-light  a  new  drug  industry,  
 even if the cash injections of taxing  
 this drug would be gargantuan. 
 Obviously,  there’s  new  momentum  
 behind  Cuomo’s  plan.  The  
 state is thinking green here — as in  
 dollar bills, not marijuana leaves.  
 Although the American Rescue  
 Plan  has  been  received  favorably,  
 states  have  bled  so  much  money  
 during  the  COVID-19  pandemic  
 that  every  taxable  industry  conceivable  
 should  be  fully  annexed,  
 lest our essential services go up in  
 smoke. 
 We  want  to  recover,  better,  
 faster  and  stronger.  Decriminalizing  
 marijuana  helps  accomplish  
 that goal on a variety of levels. 
 Legalization  shifts  police  resources  
 on to other things and will  
 help free thousands of New Yorkers  
 wrongly  jailed  for  minor  offenses.  
 A  signifi cant  excise  tax  for  marijuana  
 purchases will pump billions  
 of dollars in new cash into the state  
 economy over the next decade. 
 Moreover,  the  approved  plan  
 also  incorporates  the  desire  for  
 weed-seller licenses to go to women  
 and minority populations. Let’s be  
 honest: an ounce of the green stuff  
 is  going  to  rake  in  a  hell  of  a  lot  
 more profi t that the gumball momand 
 pops of yore. There’s great economic  
 opportunity  here  that  cannot  
 be wasted. 
 Public safety questions abound,  
 and perhaps the biggest concern is  
 for the streets. 
 How will  police  be  able  to  stop  
 drivers  who  are  under  the  infl uence  
 of marijuana from getting behind  
 the wheel?  
 The  plans  call  for  a  research  
 study to develop better methodologies  
 to  detect  cannabis-impaired  
 drivers,  and  additional  funding  
 for  drug  recognition  and  law  enforcement  
 experts to help keep the  
 streets safe.  
 But with  those questions unanswered, 
   there will  likely be  inconsistent  
 policing and enforcement of  
 the rules. 
 While  it’s  high  time  for  marijuana  
 to be legalized in New York,  
 there is much to do to ensure its legalization  
 works out for the best. 
 OP-ED 
 BY ADAM GANSER 
 After  a  long  pandemic  
 winter, spring is here again.  
 And  already  New  Yorkers  
 are turning out in huge numbers  
 to enjoy their neighborhood  
 parks and open spaces. 
 Last  year  the  pandemic  
 underscored  what  has  always  
 been true—that parks  
 are  crucial  to  our  physical,  
 mental  and  social  well-being. 
 They’re not only our  
 shared  backyards  and  the  
 foundation for healthy  
 communities, but crucial  
 sources of our city’s environmental  
 resilience and  
 drivers of economic growth. 
 Unfortunately, COVID  
 also  laid  bare  our  city’s  
 chronic lack of commitment  
 to  ensure  that  every  New  
 Yorker  has  access  to  safe,  
 clean, well-maintained parks  
 and open spaces. Just as people  
 turned out in record numbers, 
  relying on their parks  
 more than ever, the city dealt  
 them an $80 million budget  
 cut and citywide park conditions  
 reached historic lows. 
 As we head into one of the  
 most  consequential  election  
 years for our city in decades,  
 now is a golden opportunity  
 not just to undo the budgetary  
 setback of 2020 but to  
 permanently reorient our approach  
 to  parks  and  realize  
 an  equitable,  21st-Century  
 system. 
 For that, we’ll need our  
 next Mayor and City Council  
 to  invest  in  a  comprehensive  
 and far-sighted new  
 vision for a new era, prioritizing  
 parks as critical infrastructure  
 and a crucial part  
 of New York’s equitable economic  
 recovery and environmental  
 resilience. 
 What does that look like?  
 Here are the policy actions  
 our city can take right now  
 to  start  tackling  this  challenge. 
 First, we need a citywide  
 plan for parks and open  
 spaces—rather than addressing  
 the issue piecemeal. 
 The city needs a crossagency  
 open space vision  
 that focuses on parks access  
 and equity, and emphasizes  
 the  role  that  parks  play  in  
 climate resiliency, public  
 health, and economic development; 
  it also needs a Director  
 of the Public Realm to  
 oversee that program. 
 Second, we need to take  
 parks funding seriously and  
 commit  to  the  longstanding  
 goal  of  directing  to  them  1  
 percent of the city budget.  
 Top-ranked  parks  systems  
 in cities like San Francisco  
 and Minneapolis dedicate 1-2  
 percent of their city budget  
 to parks; New York has been  
 stuck at less than 0.6 percent  
 for decades. 
 It’s time our elected offi  
 cials put our values into  
 policy and commit to the  
 funding our city needs for  
 maintenance and operation  
 of our parks and open spaces,  
 and our natural areas and  
 our waterfronts. 
 Third,  we  need  a  plan  
 that ensures park equity for  
 all New Yorkers. Currently,  
 communities  with  the  least  
 access to parks across the  
 city are disproportionately  
 majority  Black,  Latinx  and  
 Asian.  We need to build new  
 parks and playgrounds in  
 under-resourced  communities  
 and neighborhoods that  
 don’t yet have adequate access. 
 These are three core tenets  
 for  a  successful  parks  
 program in New York City. 
 This  is  an  unnerving  
 time,  but  also  one  full  of  
 possibilities.  With  a  new  
 administration  in  the  
 White  House  and  a  new  
 class  of  elected  officials  
 soon to take over City Hall  
 —  this  should  be  the  moment  
 to  permanently  reposition  
 our  city  towards  equity  
 and justice. 
 That  starts  with  New  
 York’s parks, our shared  
 backyards. 
 Adam Ganser is the Executive  
 Director of New Yorkers  
 for Parks. 
 While it’s high time for marijuana to be legalized in  
 New York, there is much to do to ensure its legalization  
 works out for the best.