Philadelphia City Council to Strip Communities of Zoning Rights

PLEASE DISTRIBUTE TO EVERY COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION IN PHILADELPHIA

The Community Preservation Network has prepared the advisory below for your immediate attention. If you care about being able to control development in your community - wherever you happen to live or work in Philadelphia - then you have ONE week to contact your district Councilperson, at-large Councilpersons and the mayor to STOP this legislation from being passed.

MEDIA ADVISORY MEDIA ADVISORY MEDIA ADVISORY

Philadelphia, February 14, 2007

Contact: Community Preservation Network

Prepared by: The Community Preservation Network (CPN)

Philadelphia City Council to Strip Communities of Zoning Rights

Councilman Darrell Clarke' bills #060901 and 060902 will alter the landscape of many communities and most don’t see it coming. Hearings show class trumping race in Brewerytown community, but class is proving just as divisive as race. The City of Philadelphia is poised to pass sweeping zoning legislation that would deny the city' poorest communities any effective voice in contesting massive market-rate development or other unwanted projects in their neighborhoods. A companion bill will allow controversial suburban developer Westrum Development to build an additional 595 residential units, priced between $300,000 and $500,000, in Brewerytown, one of the city' struggling and most troubled communities.

The 2000 Census reported that Brewerytown had a 94% African-American population and a median income of only $21,000.00 per year. The last remaining hurdles for the bills, City Council Rules Committee hearings, were cleared on February 7, 2007.

Barring a demonstration of overwhelming opposition, City Council is expected to approve the legislation on February 22, 2007. The mayor, a major supporter of Westrum Development, is expected to sign quickly.

The hidden story about this legislation is its citywide impact and what the battle to pass it revealed about Brewerytown. Significant social tensions are evident there and are rapidly growing out of control, as an uncertain future comes into view for that community. The City Council hearings were the tipping point,remarked a lifelong Brewerytown resident and community activist Martez Cooper. They were little more than a marketing ploy by Westrum.

They showed us that the only people in this community that matter to Clarke, the city and Westrum are those with enough money to live in market-rate housing, not the people who’ve been here for decades. And, there' bad news for the whole city because these bills aren’t just about the so-called ‘Brewerytown master plan’ or Westrum. They’re about the rights of communities all over the city to have a zoning hearing and participate in development decisions in their own neighborhoods. Residents and activists noted that the 595 residential units proposed by Westrum in Brewerytown, coming after 144 hotly contested units are nearing completion, will accelerate gentrification in one of the city' poorest and most African-American communities.

Higher real estate taxes and rents, already forcing homeowners from the community, will only get worse. Long-time Southwest Philadelphia activist Tracey L. Gordon remarked, None of the new residents will have to pay real estate taxes for ten years, while those already living here have to subsidize the new neighbors. And, none of the older residents can afford these new homes anyway. What' fair about this? Why are homes that don’t benefit the existing community being built here?”

At the hearings, Westrum staged the testimony of a dozen nervous owners of their new condo complex in Brewerytown and Councilman Darrell Clarke, sponsor of the bills, removed opponents of his legislation from the witness list. By the end of the hearings, class divisions in Brewerytown loomed as large as fault lines, with Clarke siding with the interests of Westrum and the new owners, not with the economically and socially devastated long-time residents.

CPN argues for comprehensive zoning reform that increases transparency, accountability and community involvement in all decisions regarding new development. Bills 060901 and 060902, however, are piecemeal zoning modifications that benefit only wealthy developers and dramatically reduce transparency, accountability and community involvement. We reject these bills and call upon all coalitions, community organizations, businesses and individuals throughout the city to take public positions against this proposed legislation.

The text of the bills can be found at http://www.hallwatc h.org/profiles/ council/clarke .

Opponents are encouraged to sign the online petition at: http://www.ipetitio ns.com/petition/ NoTo060902and01/ by February 20, 2007 and contact their respective district Councilpersons, as well as ALL at-large Councilpersons.

Every Councilperson can be reached at 215-686-1776. The Community Preservation Network, which prepared this press release, is a growing movement of residents associations, community groups and individuals committed to uniting all Philadelphia residents impacted by gentrification pressures to prevent the displacement of working and poor people. Attached is additional information on the hearings, proposed legislation and what is likely to come.

Comments

Once again, more B.S. The

Once again, more B.S. The Westrum project itself does not displace a single resident. Proposals have been made for protection to current taxpayers from rate hikes in the event of re-assessment. The project is supported by almost every neighborhood, community, and business organization in Brewerytown.

I don't understand why people

I don't understand why people would not want to see their community improve. Why would you want to live in a poor, crime filled neighborhood?

I don't understand why the

I don't understand why the current "life long" residents would not want to see their community improve! Why would you want to live in a poor, crime filled neighborhood?

What makes you think

What makes you think Industrial Transformation Districts are an improvement for neighborhoods. I don't see how taking more power AWAY from communities in the planning process helps them make better neighborhoods for us and our families.

Be real... Westrum and other developers are in this city for one reason... to make money. That's just fact and everyone knows it. This has NOTHING to do with making life better for current residents of Brewerytown. In fact, those very residents only stand in the way of Westrum and the people who buy their condos of making even MORE money off of their investments.

The passage of these bills will effect US ALL. That means everyone in the city, every neighborhood. We should be fighting for MORE power, control and say in the development of our neighborhoods, NOT LESS

If the current residents want

If the current residents want to improve B-town, why haven't they done so? Its only been over 100 years... The potential new residents are not trying to push anyone out; They are in fact all decent people & families, normal working class folks, who will only spend money in the surrounding communities. They are hypothetically NOT those who will be involved in crime. Sounds like a simple equation, no wonder basically everyone is in support of the plan.

Earl, Where do YOU

Earl,
Where do YOU live?

You're basically saying that people with more money are better than people with less. That's improving a community to you? Moving in people with more money? What the hell are they going to do for the neighborhood except complain about the surrounding poverty? Next your going to tell me that people are in poverty because they're too stupid and lazy to do anything about it. Go ahead, tell me your rags to riches story. Basically everyone is in support of the plan? Everyone is the developer, a CDC in an identity crisis who doesn't even know who its director is, and another one that's jumped on the bandwagon? How many people do they actually represent? Who do you represent?

"Basically everyone" is not

"Basically everyone" is not in support of the plan. I know people in Brewerytown, who are from there and who have lived there their whole lives. They are good people. Many of whom have been doing very good things for Brewerytown.

You are a fool to believe that Westrum, or any developer or any city council person for that matter has any real solutions to the problems in ALL of our communities. And you would be an even bigger fool to believe that solving our problems are even part of their agenda.

This isn't about the people who have lived in Brewerytown or the people who have recently moved into Westrum's condos. This is about making a new Brewerytown without the input and say of the communityt. I person who really cares about making this better can honestly support that.

You answered exactly what the

You answered exactly what the "culture of poverty" is a part of. I did not complain about it. The folks buying Westrum condos are not rich, they are middle class. I assume you know your sociology, and that demographic of potential residents, is exactly the group that will NOT contribute to the crime and murders in this part of the city. So, that would be an improvement.

Does it do anything to solve

Does it do anything to solve poverty? Or does this strategy just push out the 'unseemly' poor?

Because they're not going to

Because they're not going to go away.

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