Posted on 02/09/2012 8:03:22 AM PST by BenLurkin
Chicago's City Clerk said Wednesday afternoon she will be using a new design for the next round of city vehicle stickers. Susana Mendoza says the original design drawn by a 15-year-old could include gang symbols.
"The experts have felt that yes indeed it could potentially be perceived as symbollizing gang relations and, frankly, I, as clerk, cannot ask Chicagoans to put a sticker on their car if there's even remotely the possibility of that being misinterpreted."
The stickers were supposed to be printed next week. Meantime, a spokeswoman for the special needs school where the artist is a freshman says she doesn't see gang symbols in the artwork.
City Clerk Susana Mendoza's office made the announcement following posts on two police blogs that point out similarities between the sticker design and the symbol for the Maniac Latin Disciples, a street gang on Chicago's North Side.
The design, which was meant to honor Chicago emergency workers, features a sketch of the city's skyline tucked into a heart shape, with four hands reaching upward toward a police cap, a firefighter helmet and an EMT symbol. It was drawn by a teenager who attends a special needs school in the city, and it beat out about 300 other entries in a city-wide art contest. The winning design was to appear on about 1.3 million vehicle stickers, said Kristine Williams, a spokeswoman for the clerk.
But following questions from reporters that were spurred by the two blog posts, the clerk's office consulted outside gang experts and the Chicago Police Department before it goes ahead with the printing next week, Williams said.
Adding to the flap over the sticker design are pictures that were posted on the two blogs. The photos, purportedly from the teenaged artist's Facebook page, show people forming what appear to be gang hand signs.
Before Mendoza's announcement Wednesday afternoon, a spokeswoman for Lawrence Hall Youth Services, a school for at-risk youth where the artist is a freshman, said she was unaware of whether the boy is in a gang.
"What I do know is that kids all over Chicago and all over the country make stupid choices and put up items on Facebook that may or may not be appropriate," said spokeswoman Jill Watson.
The clerk's office suggested it could choose one of the other top-rated student designs for the sticker if it decides against using the one in question. But Watson said that would disappoint the school - and the student artist.
"He's said, 'I love Chicago. I love our first responders.' I mean, we don't see any imagery in that piece of artwork," Watson said. "What we see is a beautiful piece of artwork created by a special kid."
The city has never had a problem with the vehicle sticker designs during the 17 years it has been running student art contests, said Williams.
The 2012 vehicle stickers had been scheduled to be printed in the next week, and they must be on cars by July 15.
What is the purpose of having a city sticker on your car?
Even if not a gang hand gesture, a symbol of good luck (crossing your fingers) is not a very positive message for first responders to be associated with.
Picture ..
An ambulance racing to the hospital with fingers crossed ... ?
I'll hitch-hike,
The real truth is that the TOTUS called the city and had them quash the design. The background of the heart looks a lot like an Israeli flag and those six pointed stars (of David!), well! They make it look like it is a Jewish city! And the muslim in the Oval office can’t stand the idea of the Zionist dogs controlling Chicago, his ‘hood. Oh, Allah! The indignity of it all!
The purpose is to give between $30 and $450 to the city, depending on the type of vehicle you have, and prove that you’ve paid it.
Oh.....protection money for the city hall thugs.
Hah! I knew there had to be a bottom line!
They also have a rather lucrative source of revenue from people who fail to buy the sticker. I’ve seen cops in the wee hours go down the streets with flashlights making sure that cars have the sticker. If not, it’s a fairly sizable ticket.
They can also get you even if you have bought the sticker. I had an old car that I donated to charity. On the morning that it was to be towed away, before the truck arrived, I removed the sticker and the plates. After I went back in the house, a cop came by and I got a ticket. I appealed the ticket, providing a receipt for the car, plus a photo copy of the sticker — which I had bought and still had — but I still had to pay the ticket.
One of many reasons why I’m moving to Indiana later in the year.
May I recommend north Houston? My wife works with a lady that moved here from Chicago and absolutly loves it here. She tells some sad tales of life in Chicago.
That would be nice, but jobs and family ties make it necessary for us to keep close to Chicago, and Indiana should provide a stark enough contrast to the mess Chicago and Illinois have become.
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