Chicago Sun-Times

BIRDS BEAT BANDS

Organizers cancel festival after weeks of back-and-forth with animal rights activists

- BY NADER ISSA, STAFF REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Endangered piping plovers win Montrose Beach standoff as organizers cancel music festival

A group of endangered birds, with the help of rising Lake Michigan waters, has won the battle over Montrose Beach against a popular Chicago music festival.

Mamby on the Beach has been canceled after weeks of back and forth between organizers and animal rights activists over the piping plovers that made the festival’s planned venue home.

The music festival, set for Aug. 23 and 24, was axed due to “circumstan­ces beyond our control,” organizers wrote in a statement.

“These unforeseen circumstan­ces include significan­tly higher than average waters of Lake Michigan eliminatin­g the beach portion of our intended site,” the statement read. “Additional­ly, our original footprint was affected by the presence of Great Lakes Piping Plover shorebirds, a federally protected species.”

Organizers said tickets would be refunded within five to 10 business days. The two-day fest was expected to attract up to 20,000 people per day.

Jill Niland of the Montrose Lakefront Coalition, which fought to have the festival moved away from the Montrose Beach area, said the decision “certainly going forward will be much better for the plovers.”

“We’re just happy that they decided to cancel,” Niland told the Sun-Times. “We’re satisfied that JAM and the Park District realized that Montrose isn’t really a good concert venue . ... I think it’s best all around that they’re not going to be there near the beach.”

Jerry Mickelson, the head concert organizer of JAM Production­s, was out of town and not available for comment, a company representa­tive said.

In a Chicago Park District meeting this month, festival promoters released a plan to move the festival from the beach to parkland between Wilson and Lawrence avenues, the Park District said in a statement.

In announcing the cancellati­on, organizers said it became too late to move the festival.

“Despite working tirelessly with the Chicago Park District and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services to find a new location, moving the festival at this late a date, while still providing a superior beach event experience, would be impossible and a disservice to fans and artists alike,” the statement said.

The two endangered and federally protected piping plovers prompting the cancellati­on have been nesting on the beach for months — and more than doubled in number this week.

In June, the plover nest was flooded and its four eggs removed to Lincoln Park Zoo for safe keeping, but those eggs did not develop.

The birds came back and made a new nest farther north on higher ground, and laid a second clutch of eggs. One plover chick hatched on the beach Wednesday night, and two others Thursday, according to the Chicago Ornitholog­ical Society. Their parents have been nicknamed Monty and Rose, in a reference to Montrose Beach.

The Park District, which is responsibl­e for issuing the festival’s permit, said it had been working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which was considerin­g mandating a 1,000-meter buffer zone to protect the birds from concert noise.

 ??  ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? One of three newly hatched piping plover chicks walks near their mother, nicknamed Rose, on Friday on Montrose Beach.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES One of three newly hatched piping plover chicks walks near their mother, nicknamed Rose, on Friday on Montrose Beach.

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