
Park
on list of best city programs
September
6, 2006
RICHMOND: Rosie the Riveter facility, a monument
to WWII efforts, is nominated for national recognition
By John Geluardi
CONTRA COSTA TIMES
Richmond's Rosie the Riveter park, a monument to the city's
contribution to the World War II effort, is a finalist for
a national excellence award.
The National League of Cities is considering the park for
the 2006 Municipal Excellence Award. The nomination, in the
midsized city category, is the only one from Contra Costa County
among 57 finalists selected for outstanding programs that demonstrate
public-private partnerships and innovative government policies.
Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historic Park,
which celebrates workplace diversity, innovative child care
programs and the country's first group medical insurance, is
competing against cities in 38 states. Other applications include
economic development programs, new water quality control facilities,
affordable housing developments and summer youth programs.
The awards will be announced in December at the League's Congress
of Cities and Exposition in Reno.
Rosie the Riveter park opened to visitors in 2003, though
it is still a work in progress. The park's general management
plan has not been approved and there are several key sites
-- such as the Kaiser Field Hospital and the Maritime Child
Development Center -- that have yet to be renovated for public
access.
But when the park is complete, it will be the national focal
point for World War II homefront war efforts, said City Councilman
Tom Butt, who helped work on the award application.
"For Richmond, this is huge," he said. "Ultimately
this park will be one of the things visitors to the San Francisco
Bay Area will put on their itinerary."
The National Park Service manages the park, but it is the
result of a grass-roots effort that included dozens of community
members, elected officials and businesses.
"It was the incredible community effort that got the attention
of the National Park Service," said Park Ranger Elizabeth Tucker. "The
community put the spotlight on the potential for a park."
Rosie the Riveter park currently consists of nine sites that
have wartime significance. They include Terminal 3, the permanent
home for the Red Oak Victory ship; the original Kaiser Field
Hospital; the Ford Assembly Building; and the Rosie the Riveter
memorial, a stainless-steel sculpture that evokes a ship's
hull.
Richmond was essentially defined by the World War II homefront
war effort. Almost overnight, the city's population went from
20,000 residents to more than 100,000 as people migrated from
around the country, many from the South, for jobs in the Kaiser
Shipyards.
The homefront war effort was the catalyst for a number of
firsts that many Americans now take for granted. It was the
first time that women and minorities were successfully integrated
into the work force, which laid the ground work for the civil
rights and women's movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Government-funded
child care, essential for supporting women in the work force,
was established for the first time, as was the first company-based
medical insurance plan for workers.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
The Rosie the Riveter Trust: www.rosietheriveter.org
The Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Park: www.nps.gov/rori
510-232-5050
Also
see the NLC Nomination Document and
the
Contra Costa Times Editorial of September 8, 2006
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