Welcome to City-Data.com Forum!
U.S. CitiesCity-Data Forum Index
Go Back   City-Data Forum > U.S. Forums > Pennsylvania > Philadelphia
 [Register]
Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
View detailed profile (Advanced) or search
site with Google Custom Search

Search Forums  (Advanced)
 
Old 07-27-2020, 04:38 PM
 
Location: Germantown, Philadelphia
14,147 posts, read 9,038,713 times
Reputation: 10491

Advertisements

Quote:
Originally Posted by kyb01 View Post
Has the abatement been slashed? I honestly have not been following it. But, starting any of these is good.
The effective amount of the abatement will be cut in half next year.

What will change is that it will become a sliding-scale abatement; the value decreases by 10 percent of the original amount each year after Year One until it reaches 10 percent in Year Ten.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message

 
Old 07-28-2020, 10:17 AM
 
10,787 posts, read 8,749,363 times
Reputation: 3983
Quote:
Originally Posted by MarketStEl View Post
The effective amount of the abatement will be cut in half next year.

What will change is that it will become a sliding-scale abatement; the value decreases by 10 percent of the original amount each year after Year One until it reaches 10 percent in Year Ten.
Thanks.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 07-30-2020, 03:08 PM
 
Location: Center City
7,528 posts, read 10,250,389 times
Reputation: 11023
Blatstein’s plans for Wawa in violation of the master plan for the Delaware has been rejected:

https://www.inquirer.com/real-estate...-20200729.html
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 07-31-2020, 10:34 AM
 
Location: Philadelphia
1,697 posts, read 969,207 times
Reputation: 1318
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pine to Vine View Post
Blatstein’s plans for Wawa in violation of the master plan for the Delaware has been rejected:

https://www.inquirer.com/real-estate...-20200729.html
Love it.

Its about time we had a little vision in this town.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-01-2020, 10:14 AM
 
86 posts, read 60,643 times
Reputation: 286
This city’s heading in the right direction in so many ways Love all the pedestrian and residential improvement and proposals that are going through!
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-06-2020, 07:19 AM
 
Location: New York City
9,377 posts, read 9,319,932 times
Reputation: 6484
https://www.inquirer.com/news/homele...-20200806.html

Article posted below... Wake up mayor.


"Just about everyone who lives in the high-priced apartments and condo units soaring over the Benjamin Franklin Parkway knows the story:
On July 18, a man from the homeless encampment at 22nd Street, clad only in his underwear, ducked into the garage of a nearby residential building and tried to yank open the passenger-side door of a woman’s car as she parked. The man failed, and ran off; a surveillance video of the encounter has been widely shared among neighbors.

For residents near the encampment, the garage incident is emblematic of how their prosperous slice of Philadelphia has been altered — some say “distorted” — by the presence of 100 to 150 occupants of tents staked in a ball field since June 10 as an omnibus protest to support homeless rights, disarm the police, and buttress the Black Lives Matter movement.
“The Parkway, this bejeweled boulevard of museums and cultural institutions, has been trashed to the point where it’s lost its magnetism,” said Ed Dougherty, 66, who works in sales and lives 300 yards from the encampment. “The luster the city derives from this place just feels lost. The Parkway has become stunted.”

Saying they empathize with the plight of the homeless, Parkway residents nevertheless argue that they’re the ones who must cope with intrusive, dangerous, and unhealthy behaviors that would confound any neighborhood.

“More people seem to be coming, moving into tents and feeling entitled — like this is their home now,” said Colleen Walsh, 67, a retired CPA. “People are openly defecating in the park during the day. It’s just in our face all the time.
“It’s dire not just for us, but for the inhabitants of the encampment.”
Tuesday’s storm served to underscore her point, as soaked encampment occupants struggled in mud and water, and had to repair damaged tents that provided medical service and stored supplies.
Members of the Logan Square Neighbors Association as well as the Fairmount Sports Association say that for nearly two months they’ve seen drug use, with needles discarded on the fields on which children normally play ball. The associations also report mounting piles of garbage, acts of vandalism, public nudity, aggressive panhandling, strangers sleeping on residents’ front steps, as well as the siphoning of electricity from traffic light controls and water from fountains.

Acknowledging that local residents are witnessing raw moments, organizer Alex Stewart said: “People without homes do have to scrounge and poop outside and panhandle. So, those who live in the neighborhood should use their high-income platform and their voices to help oppressed people, who should not have to tuck back into the shadows.”

It’s common knowledge that members of the encampment challenge pedestrians, saying that sidewalk public space is actually their private property. They frequently order passersby to avert their eyes from the encampment, threatening to call “security” on anyone who doesn’t comply.
“People no longer feel safe doing everyday things,” said John LaCorte, president of the sports association, which has, for 60 years, sponsored a now-canceled summer softball, baseball, and T-ball program on the field for children from neighborhoods throughout the city. “It’s sad to see the field almost destroyed.”
Asked to comment on neighbors’ reactions, activist Sterling Johnson, an encampment organizer who has demanded that Philadelphia officials secure Philadelphia Housing Authority housing for the homeless, said: “We join them in their disappointment regarding the city and PHA’s inaction. It is really sad that people have to exist outside when there are vacant homes all over the city.”

Organizers have been negotiating with city officials for weeks. At one point, officials announced the encampment would be cleared on July 17. But Mayor Jim Kenney postponed the shutdown to continue talking.
On Tuesday, a city spokesperson said that this week the city’s focus was on “preparing for and protecting people from the storm.”

The area is home to upscale, educated professionals who work primarily in Center City and pay monthly rents that can approach $4,000 for three-bedroom apartments, said Kevin Gillen, senior research fellow with the Lindy Institute for Urban Innovation at Drexel University. There’s also a sizable community of well-off retirees.
Rowhouses near the Parkway can start at $700,000, Gillen said. The city’s largest condominium property, The Philadelphian, with 753 units that Gillen said go for as much as $750,000 for two bedrooms, is across the Parkway from the encampment.
Aware that the perception of well-off Philadelphians complaining about a group of homeless in their midst doesn’t make for ideal optics, retired financial analyst John Mosser, 67, who lives a few blocks from the encampment, said: “We’re not saying their cause isn’t just. But we’re concerned about the health of the environment here.”
Retired University of Notre Dame philosophy professor Margaret Hogan, 79, who is troubled by the encampment, was more blunt: “I’m no ‘Karen,’ ” a slang term for an entitled white woman who exhibits racism when unjustly complaining about others.
“I grew up in Philadelphia up the [Roosevelt] Boulevard, and I worked with the homeless in Wilkes-Barre and Portland,” Hogan said. “The homeless need taking care of, but living in the park is not it. People need to be removed, but in a way that respects their dignity and supplies their needs.”
She disputed the notion that the encampment is peaceful, saying the “aggressive perimeter people” who patrol the site keeping out trespassers also seem to be keeping encampment inhabitants in. “The people seem captive,” she said.

Her neighbor Dougherty concurred: “The occupants aren’t animated, or driven by the issues that seem to drive leadership. The people are desperate and downtrodden. This protest feels like a very stalled enterprise.”
Some advocates have accused encampment organizers of manipulating the homeless, keeping the site in place to forward their own political agenda. Homeless advocates who personally know the encampment’s occupants describe many as being mentally ill and traditionally resistant to living in shelters.
Organizers say the encampment could not exist without the consent and participation of the occupants.

Many who support the encampment see it as a potent political statement, a form of “protest urbanism,” according to Akira Drake Rodriguez, a professor in the Weitzman School of Design and the department of city and regional planning at the University of Pennsylvania.

“I’m OK with the camp being there permanently,” Rodriguez said. “Until there is housing for all, encampments get to stay.”
Dennis Boylan, president of the neighbors association, said simply: “The professor is wrong. She needs to come live with us to see why.”
He said he’s amazed that the encampment is expanding, with the belongings of those who are homeless seen on the grounds of the Rodin Museum, as well as tents on Eakins Oval and at the Azalea Garden at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
“Our civil liberties are being affected more than anyone in the encampment,” he said. “All the neighbors have one question: ‘How long is this going to be here?’ ”"
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-06-2020, 08:00 AM
 
Location: East Aurora, NY
744 posts, read 774,507 times
Reputation: 880
I consider my politics to be well left of center but I feel like I am living in Bizzaro world with some of this stuff. This encampment should have never been allowed to form, it certainly shouldn't be allowed to stay there. The activists are always mad that someone else doesn't know the solution to their problem. Anybody can demand free housing; but they don't have any idea how the housing can be provided with the resources the city has.

Kenney is such a wimp. He has based all his political clout on appeasing the far left but the far left can not be appeased; they will just ask form more and condemn you once you put your foot down on any issue. He should have shut this down and let people yell at him for a week or two until they got made about the next shiny new issue. Nutter would have never stood for this nonsense and would have shrugged off the inevitable criticism.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-06-2020, 02:11 PM
 
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
7,736 posts, read 5,509,104 times
Reputation: 5978
Quote:
Originally Posted by KansastoSouthphilly View Post
I consider my politics to be well left of center but I feel like I am living in Bizzaro world with some of this stuff. This encampment should have never been allowed to form, it certainly shouldn't be allowed to stay there. The activists are always mad that someone else doesn't know the solution to their problem. Anybody can demand free housing; but they don't have any idea how the housing can be provided with the resources the city has.

Kenney is such a wimp. He has based all his political clout on appeasing the far left but the far left can not be appeased; they will just ask form more and condemn you once you put your foot down on any issue. He should have shut this down and let people yell at him for a week or two until they got made about the next shiny new issue. Nutter would have never stood for this nonsense and would have shrugged off the inevitable criticism.

I agree. Enough is enough.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-07-2020, 01:39 PM
 
10,787 posts, read 8,749,363 times
Reputation: 3983
Quote:
Originally Posted by Oh2Me View Post
This city’s heading in the right direction in so many ways Love all the pedestrian and residential improvement and proposals that are going through!
I'm cautiously optimistic right now that we may come out of this not as badly I first thought.

The rioting/looting was limited and seems over now. And we have not had a major protest, to my knowledge, in a long while.
There are two massive construction projects going on 5 minutes from where I live. One is newly started at the NW corner of Broad and Spring Garden.

Philadelphians are resilient.

The damn violent crime stuff though.... Ugh...
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
 
Old 08-07-2020, 01:58 PM
 
10,787 posts, read 8,749,363 times
Reputation: 3983
Quote:
Originally Posted by cpomp View Post
https://www.inquirer.com/news/homele...-20200806.html

Article posted below... Wake up mayor.


The Philadelphian, which is the condo in question, is Entitled Boomer Central. I know the property manager so I hear a lot of stories. These are the exact same folks who compain and moan with the yearly Made in America thing-ee which is not happening this year.

In typical Philadelphia style right around the corner, on Fairmount Ave, you can't even see the encampment. But, agreed, it needs to go but if thousands of evictions actually happen over the next couple of months things all over may get worse nationwide. Much worse.
Reply With Quote Quick reply to this message
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.

Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.


Reply

Quick Reply
Message:


Settings
X
Data:
Loading data...
Based on 2000-2020 data
Loading data...

123
Hide US histogram


Over $104,000 in prizes was already given out to active posters on our forum and additional giveaways are planned!

Go Back   City-Data Forum > U.S. Forums > Pennsylvania > Philadelphia

All times are GMT -6.

© 2005-2024, Advameg, Inc. · Please obey Forum Rules · Terms of Use and Privacy Policy · Bug Bounty

City-Data.com - Contact Us - Archive 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37 - Top