Slowly coming back

I had some technical problems with this blog site when I moved it to a new server earlier in the year which caused the site to crash. All my old posts were lost. I’ve been blogging at Young Philly Politics, which is a great on-line community. But I’ve been hoping to restart this blog, partly as a way of helping people find my old posts that appeared there and here and partly because I want a place to post longer, more ruminative pieces, that are not really approprite for YPP. So now that I’ve had some time to fix the technical problems, I’m going to be blogging here again. Some posts, but not all, will appear at YPP, too. And I’m going to gradually repost what I think of as the best of my old posts here, leaving out the topical ones about this meeting or that rally. It’s going to take… Continue reading

How much does this have to do with the new central library?

My understanding is that the library addition will costs around $130 million of which $100 million has been raised. Some of that came from the city’s capital funds. Some came from the state and some came from foundations. And some has come from major donors. But capital costs for the building are one thing. Paying the operating costs are another. I imagine that this high-tech library will be expensive to operate. Is that why library administration wants to get library operating costs down now? Is that why the library is taking a 20% hit when other agencies are taking no more than a 10% hit? Don’t get me wrong. The central library addition looks like it will be wonderful. It is being designed by Moshe Safdie who is a brilliant civic architect. (His City of Quebec museum is a wonderful public space as well as a wonderful museum.) But I’m… Continue reading

City council is not powerless to save the libraries

Members of City Council were quick to point out last Wednesday that Mayor Nutter has the power to cut the city budget without their approval. That is true. But what they didn’t point out is that Council can mandate that the city provide certain services. And that decision constrains the Mayor’s budget authority. A few years ago Mayor Street announced that the city could not afford to pick up trash from condos and would stop doing so. He claimed that under his budget authority he could cut back this service. City Council passed an ordinance requiring the city to pick up trash at Condos. Here my memory gets a little hazy. But I believe the Mayor said he would ignore it, Council sued, and won. Trash pickup at condos continues to this day. So if Council wants to mandate that the Free Library have branches at, say 54 particular locations… Continue reading

My first trip to the public library

Perhaps we can use this space to tell our stories about libraries and what they mean to us. The public library in my hometown was, when I first visited at abot 6 six years old, in a little corner of the municipal building / fire house/ courthouse. (With a population of 5000, you can kind of put everything in one place.) It had a distinctive smell, of course, of books. It’s a small I love to this day. The librarian gave us all a little talk about how the library works. When she said we could actually take books home, I looked around in wonder at all the books and felt a sense of ownership. I blurted out, “You mean any of them? We can take them home?” So then I had to find one…and there were lots of choices. That was the day I learned the pleasure of browsing… Continue reading

An Alternative To The Decoupling Strategy

I’m not going to respond Hughes’ vision in any detail here as it would take a small book. Everything I’ve written on city politics and policy in the last four years—which amounts to s small book–is a response. I’m just going to sum up those arguments. (I’ll put in links from this summary essay to the essays where I discuss ideas in detail as I rebuild this blog.) Continue reading

Mark Alan Hughes, The Decoupling Strategy, and The Nutter Administration

I have had really high hopes for Michael Nutter as Mayor since the primary in May 2007. But along with those hopes, I’ve had a nagging worry since October 2007. That’s when Mark Alan Hughes, who once served as a policy advisor to the Nutter campaign and is now the sustainability director, published two deeply disturbing columns about his vision for the future of the city. You can read them here and here. At the time he published those columns Hughes did not work for Michael Nutter. And I had heard Nutter speak enough during the campaign to feel confident that the then future Mayor did not share the ideas found in those columns. But, in the last few weeks, I’ve started to worry that maybe what Hughes wrote reflects the policy of this administration. I’ll explain why in a moment. First I have to present Hughes’s vision for the… Continue reading

Save the branches

Mayor Nutter recently announced that eleven branch libraries will be closed, not temporary but permanently, due to the budget crisis. Thirty six branch library staff members will be laid off as will 25 staff members of the central library. The library is taking, as a percentage of its budget, a larger reduction (of about 20%) than any other city agency. I believe this reduction is a serious mistake and am working with the Friends of the Free Library to build opposition to these cutbacks. Why are these library reductions so unconscionable? 1. Library branches are critical to education in Philadelphia. We live in a city in which elementary schools do not have libraries. Indeed, only one high school library, at Central, meets the states minimum requirements. 2. Library branches are one of the most important places our kids go after school. Our kids find not only books and magazines and… Continue reading

A transformative moment in politics: health care and the neighborhood networks town hall

This is, many of us keep saying, the moment we have been waiting for, the transformative moment in our politics when dramatic change is possible, when we will finally guarantee quality affordable health care for all. As we keep saying it, we hear the other voices tell us that, no, we have to wait, that the economic crisis we face is too severe, requires too much attention, and will be too costly. But a close look at history, at our present crisis and our politics, should teach all of us, including President-elect Obama that the pessimistic voices are wrong. This is the moment for health care reform. And that is one reason you should come to the Neighborhood Networks Town Hall meeting tomorrow. For whether we actually we take advantage of this moment for health care reform is, in large part, up to us. Continue reading