[UC] Email City Council asking them to cut, not raise, funding for the Hist Comm

2004-04-20 Thread Dubin, Elisabeth



Al, you are pretty hard to please.  
Your friend Jannie Blackwell is in support of this increase in funding.  
You have done a lot of ranting about how useless the Historical Commission is, 
and you've supported Blackwell's proposed bill (which is being tabled, I've 
heard, due to the negative reaction it received).  The Blackwell bill was 
really an over-the-top grab for power in the guise of a "check-and-balance" 
improvement.  The bill, in a nutshell, stripped the HC of its powers and 
proposed to give some of them to the City Council (public servants who know 
little or nothing about historic buildings, in general).  There was some 
discussion on this listserve about how it would be preferable to IMPROVE the 
Historical Commission, rather than eviscerate it.  Now, Blackwell's on 
board with this plan, and you are still flapping your wings.  I am getting 
tired of reading your obstructionist, negative emails and wonder if there's 
anything constructive you WOULD support, rather than tirading against the 
attempts of others.
 
HillierARCHITECTUREElisabeth DubinT 215.636. x4176 | C 267.259.4206 | F 
215.636.9989One South Penn Square | Philadelphia | PA | 19107-3502www . 
hillier . com 

  -Original Message-From: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On 
  Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Monday, April 19, 2004 6:35 
  PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [UC] Email City 
  Council asking them to cut, not raise, funding for the Hist 
  Comm
  City Council will hear a presentation on Wednesday from the Historical 
  Commission asking for a 22.6% increase in funding and a 20% increase in 
  staffing. Even right-minded solid citizens who support the 
  nomination of Spruce Hill as a local historic district should disapprove of 
  this absurd request. Owing to serious budget shortfalls, the city will be 
  cutting all manner of vital services -- from police, fire, and trash 
  collection to recreation programs that keep kids on the playgrounds and 
  off the street corners. How, in all conscience, can they even consider raising 
  the appropriations for this function?
   
  And, if you think what this Commission does is somehow important, take a 
  look at the photo of Sigel Street in South Philly. Believe it or not, the 
  busted up bricks on this half-block long dead-end alley, lined by commercial 
  garages, are protected by the Historical Commission. One result was that 
  the Water Dept was denied a permit to open the street and install new water 
  and sewer lines when every other block in the vicinity got them.
   
  You can email everyone in City Council in one fell swoop and urge them to 
  deny the PHC an increase -- or to decrease their appropriation and 
  use the money where it will actually do people some good. Just click here [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  and whatever email message you write will be dispatched privately to each 
  member of City Council and the Mayor. (And, if you think that the PHC should 
  get money to regulate the outside of people's homes, while L&I is cut back 
  on resources to help ensure the safety of residents, there's nothing to stop 
  you from using the above email facility to say that, too).
   
  Al Krigman
  (PS -- please forgive me if you get a duplicate of this message.)
   
   1100 Block of Sigel St, 
  historically designated


[UC] Email City Council asking them to cut, not raise, funding for the Hist Comm

2004-04-19 Thread Krfapt


City Council will hear a presentation on Wednesday from the Historical Commission asking for a 22.6% increase in funding and a 20% increase in staffing. Even right-minded solid citizens who support the nomination of Spruce Hill as a local historic district should disapprove of this absurd request. Owing to serious budget shortfalls, the city will be cutting all manner of vital services -- from police, fire, and trash collection to recreation programs that keep kids on the playgrounds and off the street corners. How, in all conscience, can they even consider raising the appropriations for this function?
 
And, if you think what this Commission does is somehow important, take a look at the photo of Sigel Street in South Philly. Believe it or not, the busted up bricks on this half-block long dead-end alley, lined by commercial garages, are protected by the Historical Commission. One result was that the Water Dept was denied a permit to open the street and install new water and sewer lines when every other block in the vicinity got them.
 
You can email everyone in City Council in one fell swoop and urge them to deny the PHC an increase -- or to decrease their appropriation and use the money where it will actually do people some good. Just click here [EMAIL PROTECTED] and whatever email message you write will be dispatched privately to each member of City Council and the Mayor. (And, if you think that the PHC should get money to regulate the outside of people's homes, while L&I is cut back on resources to help ensure the safety of residents, there's nothing to stop you from using the above email facility to say that, too).
 
Al Krigman
(PS -- please forgive me if you get a duplicate of this message.)
 
 1100 Block of Sigel St, historically designated