Chicago Sun-Times

Maybe closing Lakefront Trail was the only path left to take

- MARK BROWN markbrown@suntimes.com | @MarkBrownC­ST

Chicago’s bustling lakefront is now closed. So be it. Like a lot of other people, I had hoped the parks and the paths could be kept open during the coronaviru­s crisis, an opinion I expressed in Thursday’s newspaper.

Some people thanked me for sticking up for their need to use the park. Others told me I was a self-centered idiot.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot weighed the consequenc­es of leaving the lakefront open and decided the risk of crowds further spreading the disease was too great.

She ordered the lakefront — the 606, Riverwalk and other parks — closed Thursday morning.

When I took a drive at 2:30 p.m. from Hollywood all the way south to Marquette, the only people I saw on the east side of Lake Shore Drive were police officers sitting in their cars at all the access points enforcing the mayor’s order.

That’s quite extraordin­ary, especially in an era when bicyclists regularly use the lakefront to commute to work even in snowstorms.

The lakefront is never totally dead, but it apparently will be for the immediate future.

Now that it’s done, though, I fully support the mayor in her decision, as should we all.

While each of us may think we are making the best decisions for our own health and those around us, we must appreciate that the mayor has responsibi­lity for everyone.

That’s an especially awesome burden right now, when the actions of each of us could become a matter of life and death for strangers. The threat from COVID-19 is real, which soon will be more painfully apparent than it already is.

The mayor says we’ve all got to do our part to confront that threat, and so we will.

If “stay at home” has now turned into “stay inside,” as Gov. J.B. Pritzker intoned Thursday, that’s what we’ll do. I don’t have any problem with that, and I’m sure others will follow the rules.

It may chafe a bit that both the governor and mayor seem now in conflict with their own previous guidance, which was often confusing about what was acceptable or even encouraged outdoor behavior under the social distancing guidelines. Most people were trying to do it safely, only going out alone, in couples or with family members, something that seemed to get lost in the mayor’s public shaming.

But I’ve decided the best way to make peace with her decision, especially for the hundreds of thousands of us who live along the lakefront and for whom it is our only neighborho­od park, is to understand that there are just too many of us here for this to be workable. The sheer population numbers compared to the limited green space don’t really allow for everyone to keep a safe distance, especially when some aren’t trying.

Personally, I think I’m at greater risk of contractin­g or spreading the disease while using my building’s elevator or laundry room or walking past someone on the sidewalk or visiting the grocery store than when running or walking alone through the park. But I can’t be sure.

At some point, perhaps someone could at least acknowledg­e that the messages from the top have been a little mixed, such as: stay at home, but by all means, please continue to visit your local restaurant to pick up a carryout meal.

Whether you or I agree with every decision Lightfoot and Pritzker have made over the last several weeks, and there’s really not much I would quarrel with, I appreciate above all that they have had the courage to step up and make those tough decisions — whether those involved closing schools or closing businesses, or going through with an election.

They have given me confidence that they are trying to act in our best interests, not just take the politicall­y convenient route.

I’m not quite sure yet how I will keep my sanity shut up indoors for days on end, but there are plenty of alternativ­es — good books, online workouts, cooking and eating.

And when it’s over, we’re going to have a helluva party, maybe a picnic on the lakefront.

WHILE EACH OF US MAY THINK WE ARE MAKING THE BEST DECISIONS FOR OUR OWN HEALTH AND THOSE AROUND US, WE MUST APPRECIATE THAT THE MAYOR HAS RESPONSIBI­LITY FOR EVERYONE.

 ??  ?? A police barricade blocks access to the Lakefront Trail at Fullerton Avenue on Thursday afternoon as the city closes the area amid fears of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
A police barricade blocks access to the Lakefront Trail at Fullerton Avenue on Thursday afternoon as the city closes the area amid fears of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
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