The transit crisis continues and your help is beeded to end it

After a holiday weekend, the morning trip back to work is always hard. Now imagine your trip costing substantially more than it costs today for we are facing an 11% increase in SEPTA fares in July and a total increase of 30% by September. -The cash fare will go up from $2.00 to $2.50, an increase of 25% -Transfers will be eliminated so a token and transfer will go up from $1.90 to $2.80, an increase of 47% -A weekly transpass wil go up from $18.75 to $25.00, an increase of 33% -A monthly transpass will go up from $70 to $105, an increase of 57% -Zones 1 and 2 on the regional rail will be merged. A monthly combined zone 1 / 2 regional rail pass will go up from $70 (zone 1) or $106 (zone 2) to $143.50, an increase of 105 and 35 respectively. And, whether you… Continue reading

On ward politics and street money

Originally posted at Young Philly Politics. A number of my responses to comments made at YPP are below There is an article in the Inquirer today that briefly reports on some of my experiences with ward politics during the last election. I was disappointed by the article, in part because I thought I was talking off the record with the reporter and in part because the article is misleading about the role that wards and street money played in my campaign or other grass roots campaigns. (The Inquirer will be running a clarification about part of the article tomorrow.) I plan to write about this subject in detail later, because these are two subjects that most people interested in Philadelphia politics do not understand very well and about which I learned a great deal in the last five months. Here are some preliminary points. Continue reading

Thank you all from Marc Stier

Dear Friends, I want to thank all of you who voted for me on Tuesday. And I want to thank even more all of you who worked for me in various ways—going door to door with my literature, working the polls, sending out emails to your friends, making phone calls, and raising or contributing money. I am honored and humbled to have had so many good people around the city believe in both me and the ideas I presented during this campaign. I am, of course, disappointed by the result. I knew from the start that this was going to be a difficult race. But the response I was getting around the city was so positive and supportive that there were one or two moments when I thought I might even squeak by. Optimism is certainly useful in a race as difficult as the one I ran. But, even after… Continue reading

Bob Brady's finest hour

Bob Brady campaigned extremely hard up to the end, even though he had known for some time that he had little chance to win. But, as he said at a ward meeting I attended, the situation in the Mayor’s race was fluid. And as he did not say…but some of us knew…by campaigning hard in particular areas of the city, and by running hard hitting ads against Knox, Brady helped made Michael Nutter win. He did not, as far as I know, release ward leaders to support Michael Nutter. And that, too was a good move because had he done so, many of those ward leaders might have supported Knox. Continue reading

One From the Heart (and the Head): Marc Stier for Council At Large

By Sam Durso on YPPon Sun, 05/13/2007 – 8:21pm. I generally don’t post other people’s writings here. But this was such a nice thing Sam Durso wrote about me that I’d like to put it up. Should politicians be nice guys? My stock answer for a long time has been that it doesn’t matter. Some very driven, aggressive, nasty people actually make effective and useful public servants, and some nice guys end up being very corrupt or inept. But having thought about city politics more intently this year than any before, I’d like to amend that. Given the job he or she must perform, an At Large Councilperson should be a really good person. That’s one reason why the first At Large vote I’ll cast will be for Marc Stier. An At-Larger has this funny job of representing the entire city, as though he were mayor, but as a legislator… Continue reading

I want the best service: How to save hundreds of lives by fixing emergency service

I wrote this with Daniel Hunter during my campaign for City Council in 2007. If you are shot——or have a heart attack—where would you rather be, New York City or Philadelphia?  If you want to stay alive, the unfortunate answer is New York City. Why? New York City has invested resources in emergency medical services. And they don’t hamstringing their paramedics, fire fighters, and police with unreasonable rules. Here’s one example: New York City has far more ambulances per person than Philadelphia. They have so many ambulances, in fact, that they don’t have enough stations for all of them. That’s why you see many parked on street corners waiting for a call. In Philadelphia the situation is the opposite.  We have too few ambulances.  So when police rush onto the scene after someone is shot, they often arrive long before an ambulance.  As a result, they have to put gunshot… Continue reading