Occupy Wall Street: Philadelphia Edition

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“Wake Up, people…it’s time to wake up!,” shouts one woman wearing a green military jacket holding a stop the bullsh#t sign.

Several hundred protestors gathered today setting up a medic table, family and children area, and what seemed to be a little technology corner along with some chanting of their demands in the city hall plaza.

The protest is a spin-off of the Occupy Wall Street NYC –and no police violence has been reported yet.

There seemed to be consensus on what folks DON’T want to see—and some suggestions on what they do–which I personally prefer–like abolishing student debt, a single payer healthcare system, and eating the rich.

We’ll see where this goes.

Germantown: Chelten Plaza in Photos

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These are just some photos that I’ve taken over the past few weeks of the Chelten and Pulaski construction site in Germantown. This seems to be a hotly contested place in Germantown right now. Really interesting discussion all around.

The developer’s proposed store opening date is December 2011.

It’s the Donut Man, in Philadelphia

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It’s 4 a.m. on a Sunday morning in Germantown, the grass between the sidewalk and the street is still wet from the morning dew, houses are dark. The corner of Wayne and Chelten avenues is silent except for the click of the automatic light change. Shadowy figures emerge from the bushes of a house on Wayne.

Three men, once all strangers now more like brothers finish loading a beat up 1980s vintage van with boxes of donuts and carafes of coffee. A photo snaps silhouetting their figures against the vehicle and David Shively checks his watch – time to go.

On the highway, the old van shakes and rattles as it picks up speed. “Oh heavenly Father,” Shively begins thanking God for the 17 boxes of donuts donated by the local Dunkin Donuts the day before.

“When I first went out here, I couldn’t stop crying,” says Shively in a gruff voice. Then softly, “We weren’t made to sleep out here like these men and women do, it’s unbelievable.”

Our first stop is the subway concourse under City Hall. Shively says we have to get there before the police do.

The city is virtually empty by the time we make it to the subway station. Descending the steps, the stench of urine is hard to ignore. Armed with 20 bags of donuts each, Shively and his companions, Jullian Bisilva and Larry Bonner, start to lay the bags next to sleeping bodies curled up on cardboard beds.

Suddenly, a bullhorn echos in the concourse, “Get up, lets go!” shouts a Philadelphia police officer while his partner drives a battery powered golf cart through the halls.

The officers are cordial to Shively and his crew, even pointing out homeless people who haven’t been given a bag yet.

An impact

Brigette Fleming was one of Shively’s regular stops once.

“I was sleeping around 22nd and the Parkway in a baseball field,” she recalled recently, while sitting in her Germantown dining room. “I woke up and there was a brown bag laying beside me with a tract on it. It was a tract about God.”

After years on the street, Fleming now works two part-time jobs and is putting together a directory of services for homeless people in Philadelphia. She remembers waiting up all night to catch the Donut Man, the deal was – if you were awake, he would treat you to some coffee too.

“This man is truly amazing. Any place you could think of…  he’ll find it and you’ll have a donut every Sunday,” she said.

Eleven years ago David Shively says God ordered him to start serving donuts to homeless people in Philadelphia. Shively, now pushing 70, makes runs through Center City every Sunday between 4 and 7:30 a.m. seeking people who are hungry for food and by extension, he believes, God.

Shively is the prime mover in a homeless outreach ministry run by New Covenant Church. He is a giver of bread, donuts and anything else donated to the effort by places like Pathmark and local bakeries.

He works a night shift job delivering pretzels and snacks to gas stations, and he runs the homeless ministry during the day. It’s unclear if he’s slept more than three hours a night in years

Among the shelters he serves regularly are the Germantown Y men’s shelter, Teen Challenge, Covenant House and Queens Lane Apartments to name a few.

After ten years of ministry as ‘the donut man’ on Sundays, Shively and his team have fed over 183,000 people, a total figured out by keeping track of how many bags of donuts they start with each time. Shively says it’s amazing to him when the numbers are added up, “last year we gave over $70,000 dollars worth of bread away.”

He says he would prefer to give healthier options but in most cases stores are not allowed by law to give away anything but bread products.

The morning run

After traveling to a number of known places for homeless people to sleep – Love Park, Logan Circle, Suburban Station and the Broad Street Concourse – Shively is breathing hard now. He has to rest after all the rushing around.

The van runs a similar route every Sunday, even stopping in seemingly random alley ways to serve people sleeping behind dumpsters. “She’s been there for years,” he says after making one particular donut drop.

Shively  says he and his crew used to start earlier but, “since my heart attack, we moved it to four.” He chuckles and then coughs. Years of smoking over 4 packs a day has finally caught up with him. (Shively quit after the heart attack.)

Despite curiosity, Shively says he doesn’t pull back the covers of those cocooned in blankets and bags. He just says, “Donuts” and lays the bag next to them.

“There’s a guy on the parkway—all you see is a body covered in trash bags, I’ve never seen his face. I never cared to see his face, its just not necessary.”

But Shively hasn’t always lived this way.

A calling

For most of his life, Shively described himself as a “functional alcoholic” while raising two adopted sons, and running a florist business in Germantown. Helping people through the ministry saved his life, he says.

“Where would I be if He [God] hadn’t called me?” he wonders. “I’d still be in the bars, having hangovers, I’d still be driving with blackouts taking my kids camping.”

Shively says he tried to quit drinking plenty of times; he went into treatment and was sober for four years. But he fell back into it for another two years after that. He blames the devil and not working with God. Things got so bad, he almost lost his house and family

A friend worked on Shively for two years trying to get him into a church. Once he finally decided to try it, three visits to New Covenant Church was all it took and he was born again.

“I had a forty waiting beside my bed and after church I decided that I didn’t want it,” he says. “After a week or so I realized that I was no longer an alcoholic.”

Shively says he was healed as if removing some cancer from his body

“The Lord came and just took the addiction away,” he says.

Hope in darkness

Shively says he hopes the ministry can introduce that kind of change for others.

“The whole idea of the ministry is to put a bag of donuts beside a sleeping person so when they wake up instead of saying thank you Dave they say thank you Jesus,” he explained

Beyond feeding people, Shively offers his own home to those without – but he says it’s not a shelter. He has space for six individuals and the rooms are by “invitation only.” Mostly it seems those who are committed to helping with running the ministry and frequent church are invited.

Shively says New Covenant has a 13-week program that teaches people about Jesus, “hopefully that helps them change and get their life together.”

But he has seen people lapse into old habits. “You can’t make a person give up that addiction unless they want to.”

Brothers

The final stop on the Donut Man’s tour is Our Brothers’ Place homeless shelter. Over 100 men were already lined up at 7a.m., and Shively and his partners are right on time, as usual. Most shelters, Shively explains, can’t afford coffee so even the small cup of joe they bring is a treat.

Some men shy away from the camera, others say they want people to see them.

“I want my people to know that I’m begging for donuts and coffee,” says a man who identified himself as Butch. “I live under a bridge, and I need help.”

Our Brothers’ Place located under the I-95 expressway.

“I’m not ashamed,” says another man called John, his arms outstretched. “I work 60 hours a week. It’s not always about drug and alcohol.”

John says he was recently kicked out by his fiancee and this was where he landed.

Shively’s partners, Larry Bonner and Jullian Bisilva, have something to say on the topic too.

Bisilva is an African-American man in his mid-30s. He is quick to smile in his Sunday best of a v-neck sweater and starched collared shirt. He says he holds a college degree and comes from a wealthy family but things fell apart when he started hanging with the wrong crowd. Jullian experienced homelessness for a year in Philadelphia. He met Shively one morning three and a half years ago and started going to church regularly.

He now lives with Shively in Germantown and helps run the ministry.

“You gotta do something, I think about the people. It’s a big responsibility but it’s fun,” he says.

Contrary to popular belief, Bisilva says, most homeless people he meets are not unskilled. “I’ve met some very smart people out here, some are ex-fighter pilots, soldiers, doctors, I’ve met a lot of good people.”

On the other hand, Larry Bonner is the strong and silent type. Now in his mid-60s he walks with a limp but never fails to keep up. When he does speak, it is nearly a whisper.

He leans in close. “Without [Shively] I would prolly be dead by now,” he whispers, as his eyes start to glisten with tears. “I love him.”

Bonner says that Shively let him stay at the ministry about three years ago despite the fact they were complete strangers, he says it was the kindest thing someone has ever done for him.

The sun also rises

After all the men have received at least two donuts and a hot coffee, Shively and his crew hop back in the van with numerous parishioners he picked up along the way. Collected from various Center City shelters, they all head back to the Northwest to catch the New Covenant Church service.

Shively quips that he never thought his church would be full of homeless people.

By eight o’clock and the morning sun is streaming in the van window, no more shadows or dark concourse hallways. Shively is calm now, no need to rush as he drives the faithful back to Germantown for church and brunch. Gospel talk radio fills any silences among the old friends.

After a minute of thought, Shively admits the sugary treat doesn’t really matter to the people he serves.

“It’s not the dumb little donuts, it’s the fact that somebody cares about them,” he says, as the old van rattles down the highway.

By Kristen Mosbrucker (appeared on NewsWorks.org)

Homelessness Survival Guide in Philadelphia

By Kristen Mosbrucker (Appeared on NewsWorks.org)

“There are so many little things that a lot of people don’t know about,” says Brigette Fleming of being homeless. “It’s like a city within a city, if you don’t know the right hand shake you don’t get in.”

She laughs.  A camera snaps what she says are the first pictures taken of her in years.

Since 2004, Fleming has been collecting notes about well over 70 organizations that cater to homeless people across the city of Philadelphia – notes from an insider’s perspective. Mostly she looks at soup kitchens and churches but also some places where people can receive free medical help, legal aid, clothing, toiletries and the like. It’s a survival guide for people who find themselves on the streets. She calls it, “Better Living with Dignity.”

“Even though you’re homeless you do have dignity,” she says. “A lot of organizations are set up to take that away from you.”

Her directory is more than a list of established organizations; it has minute details like  “must bring ID” or “hot meal on Sundays and free telephone use” that can make a real difference for someone on the edge. Fleming even checks up on the sites from time to time to make sure they still offer the services they have promised. And after all these years, she finds the list of services keeps growing.

Some places better than others

Fleming says in her home neighborhood of Germantown it’s hard to go hungry. “You can go into St Vincent’s and receive food almost every day, legal help, medical help, and they help you find housing.”

Not every organization is that good, however, and she will only list places that she feels are the best. “Some places only want the money, but at Mercy Hospice, a woman can go and have an afternoon meal every day and on Wednesdays [she] can take a nice shower,” she said.

Fleming says eventually she wants to create a website to help homeless or formerly homeless people give feedback on the services that are dotted around Philadelphia. She sees that kind of open critique as a way to help improve the city’s survival network.

“I thought if I could compile it, then have it be interactive where people can go to a computer and give a rating on a shelter or how the food is at one of the soup kitchens, it would help,” she said. “Maybe through our eyes, we can help form a better structure at these places.”

Fleming knows that having a plan about where to go for help once you find yourself on the streets can mean the difference between being homeless for 6 months, or in her case, over 6 years. She hopes her guide will help others form that plan.

It doesn’t take much

Her first time being homeless was completely unexpected. She had been living in Germantown for years. She had a high school diploma and a secretarial job.

“I had worked most of my life to make sure [my son] had a better opportunity,” she said.

Then In 2000, after her son had graduated form college and moved out of Philadelphia, her company downsized due to a merger and she lost her job.

“I fell apart,” she said. “I thought I could do it on my own but the next thing I knew I was on the street.”

Fleming says she was too ashamed to tell her family or ask for help from friends and she fell into a deep depression. She slept on a bench in Logan Square for years. No address meant no mail, which for Fleming meant no possibility for a job, and the hole just kept getting deeper.

Once, while getting money for food from an ATM in Center City she was attacked from behind. She suffered a blow to the head from a rock. “I was walking down Broad Street bleeding from the back of my head and no one would help,” she said.

By the time she got to a hospital she was covered in blood and the hole was so deep the doctors could see into her skull.

“At that point I knew God had his hands on me,” she said. But after the staff realized she was homeless they discharged her. “They put six staples in my head, gave me some aspirin and sent me out at 3 a.m. back out in the streets.”

Eventually, Fleming went to a shelter and, from there, found a job as a security officer. That lasted until a slip on the ice left her with a bone fracture that kept her from returning to work. Within a year she was back on the street.

Finding a turning point

Fleming says the biggest stumbling block to finding help in Philadelphia was being a woman and not being an addict.

“A decent, fairly intelligent female over forty out on the street? You aren’t going to find too much,” she said.

Even at shelters Fleming had to go through 12-step drug programs despite never testing positive for drugs. So she fought back with mixed results. “When I would speak for myself, I was being insubordinate, or I was told I had characteristics of a drug addict,” she said.

Finally, after refusing to attend meetings or be drug tested, Fleming was appointed a social worker and things slowly started to get better. “The social worker stood up for me and I found a place that helped me find a job,” she said.

Fleming now teaches basic computer skills courses at her local library. She is still looking for a full time job. Now she’s in touch with family, has grandchildren, and is renting a room in Germantown. She speaks about the importance of having a strong support system, especially friends.

“I think that even if I wanted to go back, my friend Susan wouldn’t let me,” she said. “She’s so encouraging, she helped bring the spark back in me.”

The Better Living with Dignity directory is scheduled to be released to the public by the end of April.

Germantown: Fresh Grocer Developer vs. Citizens Debate

This is a long clip, I didn’t edit anything yet but if you skip around it you’ll hear how boisterous it was. Very lively, interesting points on both sides. ;
I’ve never seen a developer meet with the community at large for a Q&A session like this. Emotions were high to say the least.
There is a ton of backstory but I think the clip explains itself.

To Frack or Not to Frack hardly seems a question anymore.

            

On the one year anniversary of the BP oil spill activists staged a funeral and puppet show in front of a North Philadelphia gas station. Using gigantic papier-mache bobble-heads and chocolate sauce filled glasses to signify crude oil in their cups they tried to re-enact closed door meetings between industry executives and local politicians.
In this case, Senator Pat Toomey (or Casey) was being wooed by corporate money.
Little did they know at the same time, a hydro-fracking drill site in Bradford County Pennsylvania was gushing liquid contaminated with chemicals used in the fracking process. The small stream of waste water has found its way into the local river system. It is unclear what impact this will have on the Delaware valley down stream.
Anti-fracking advocates aren’t willing to wait to find out. A “River to River” march is starting at 40th and Walnut today at 1pm and heading towards the Walnut street bridge by 2pm  and ending at the Fishtown Shadfest.
-Kristen Mosbrucker

Mt Airy: Barefoot Boogie

If you love to dance to music but hate the events where you’re “supposed” to have a partner there is an interesting alternative for you.

Every third Saturday the public (kids welcome) can enjoy live drumming and dance freestyle. The whole point is to just feel the music and let your body move to it. No dance partners are needed because you’re essentially dancing with a group.

It offers a space for anyone who wants to dance without rules to a variety of music including live drumming. The dance is a smoke and alcohol free environment. No shoes are allowed but dancing in your socks is fine.

Elise Rivers of Mt. Airy Community Acupuncture organizes the Philadelphia Barefoot Boogie. She holds them at the Philadelphia Dance Theater studio on the New Covenant Campus.

Published via NewsWorks.org March 3rd 2011

http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/neighborhoods/mt-airychestnut-hill-/item/14364-barefoot-dance

Sand Man comes to Philadelphia

 

“As the sand mandala is created, it’s like your mind is developing at the same time,” says Elise Segal, founder of Laughing Pines Sangha, a Buddhist meditation group in New Jersey.

Over 13 years ago Segal went to a sand mandala workshop at ProjectHOME in North Philadelphia. “I thought it was arts and crafts,” she laughs.

And it changed her life.

Segal sold her tax accounting business, cut down her hours as a nurse to become the Buddhist student of Tibetan monk sand mandala extraordinaire, Losang Samten.

She now creates sand mandala’s herself and volunteers tax preparation to Tibetan refugees in Philadelphia.

“His happiness and peace of mind was contagious,” she said.

Originally, sand mandalas were made of crushed colored stones, but now most are made of dyed sand. Samten was sent by the Dalai Lama himself in the late 1980′s as the first monk to bring sand mandalas to the western world. At first, he only used sand from India to create the mandala but his suitcase was too heavy at the airport and security gave him trouble.  He says now his friends send him sand in the mail.

“My nickname is Sand Man. Every once in a while in there’s a heavy box. That means it’s sand,” he laughed.

Each grain of sand is controlled by metal funnels called chak-pur. If you rub them together they act as a pastry extruder and their sound is a form of meditation music.

Most sand mandalas are over 10 feet in diameter and roped off from the public, but at the Philadelphia Folklore Project the setting was much more intimate.

“Usually I’m like a mediator between Samten and the public, but at PFP people could just ask him questions directly,” Segal said.

Despite the serious tone of the sand mandala as a sacred space, the process is a tool for teaching Buddhism.

Once during a mandala creation, Segal was pointing to a delicate inscription in the design and her hand slipped.

“My finger went into the sand and everyone held their breath. Everyone was so distressed but Samten and I just laughed,” she said

“That fingerprint is like my multiple sclerosis, it’s all about responding to life in a different way,” she continued.

Segal has experienced a brain aneurysm, and severe blindness due to MS, but says her illness was the best thing that’s happened to her.

“I always have peace of mind now, regardless of what my body does or doesn’t do.”

Losang Samten will be creating a sand mandala at the Glencairn Museum on April 6th.


Germantown Settlement Begins to Crumble

The difficult issues of Germantown Settlement and its subsidiary Greater Germantown Housing Development Corp. (GGHDC) have been playing out in bankruptcy court like a bloodless coup d’état. The non-profit monopoly is being dismantled with apparently no recourse to restructure.

Most recently, Chief Bankruptcy Court Judge Stephen Raslavich ruled that Germantown Settlement and GGHDC would no longer be a Chapter 11. The case has been changed from Chapter 11, which would allow reorganization, to Chapter 7, which calls for the sale of assets to pay creditors.

In an unusual ruling, Raslavich also permitted members of the Germantown community, namely Germantown Community Connection (GCC) to have a voice for questions in future creditor meetings during the liquidation.

GCC President Betty Turner is excited about giving the community a voice.

“This ruling allows us to have a voice in shaping our community and shows the positive effects community connectivity and civic engagement can have on addressing common ground concerns and issues in Germantown,” she said. “It will provide opportunity for a shared vision for Germantown–what do we want Germantown to be and how do we get there from here? This ruling brought fresh favor to Germantown in many ways. It is great.”

The decision means at the future “341 hearings,” during which Settlement President Emanuel Freeman and other officials will be questioned as if in court about assets and liabilities of their organization.

Settlement’s remaining assets include the former YWCA on Germantown Avenue, The Burgess Center at Wayne and Chelten, 48 E. Penn St., and other housing developments would be liquidated. The monies collected from these properties will go directly to the secured debtors in the case, or those who have mortgages.

Between them, Settlement and its subsidiary have debts estimated at $16 million. Of those debts, more than $5 million is owed to city, state, and federal agencies. Taxpayers are likely to recover no more than $1.3 million, which was money lent to Settlement by the city to buy the now-abandoned YWCA. For the Burgess Center alone, taxpayers might lose $2.4 million from a city loan that wasn’t repaid.


COMMUNITY

Debra White-Roberts, the director of Operations for the Wister Neighborhood Council attended the initial bankruptcy hearing.

“What I took from the hearing is that the judge is fed up. I am too. No more smoke and mirrors.” But she said this isn’t the whole story.

The Wister group had paid Settlement to do its bookkeeping. When White-Roberts became a board member in 2006 the NAC took over its own financial management. She said the taxes hadn’t been paid and financial statements to the IRS were incomplete. As a result, the council had to  pay about $10,000 in liens.

Even a police substation next to the Wister Council office remains vacant. For years Wister NAC has been trying to buy the building back, but the city vetoed the idea because there was a problem with the title for the property.

“We really need this station just for the police presence that we had. This block is hot with drug activity,” she said. “It would really help out.”

But a serious issue is still ahead. Because GGHDC owns over 45 properties, including residential single-family homes and vacant lots any development is impossib

le until the court case is finished.

Despite these challenges, the Wister council, a 40-year-old neighborhood organization, is confident in the future. White-Roberts said: “These buildings are beautiful and historic. They belong in use. But we don’t want just anybody purchasing these properties and building just anything so we want to be a part of the future process and we have plenty of volunteers.”

COURT MOTIONS

In a recent motion filed in court attorney Irv Ackelsberg argued that a history of “dishonesty, incompetence and gross mismanagement demonstrated during these bankruptcy proceedings” describes merely a reflection of what Germantown Settlement has done prior to the bankruptcy filing.

Secured debtors, those who have a formal mortgage on properties and loans, have come forward to foreclose on Settlement properties. But many creditors are silent. Despite over $2.7 million in unsecured creditor debt under Germantown Settlement and $2.2 million under GGHDC, no unsecured creditors or government authority have come forward to collect.

At an October hearing the proposed YWCA buyer was named as Germantown Housing and Land Holding Corp. State records reveal Germantown Settlement owns this for-profit entity. At the same hearing Settlement presented a buyer for the Burgess Center as Lower Germantown Limited Partnership. This too, according to state records, is owned by GGHDC, a subsidiary of Settlement. Furthermore, another for profit company called Lower Germantown II Development is a partner of Settlement listing President Emanuel Freeman as secretary/treasurer and Herbert Wetzel as president. Weztel is a former officer of Settlement.

Furthermore, operating statements submitted by Settlement were sparse, “facially incomplete and misleading,” according to the motion filed by attorney Ackelsberg. In an April operating report $6,144.93 in insurance and utility expenses were written as paid by a “loan from a related entity.” Upon further inspection of e-mails between Freeman and City Councilwoman Donna Reed Miller provided through a request of the Right to Know Act indicate the insurance and utilities of the YWCA were paid by the Mosaic Development Group in 2009. So were the masonry seals and security of the building. The Mosaic Development group could not be reached for comment.

In a recent Philadelphia Inquirer article, a large secured creditor, Parke Bank, filed a motion that GGHDC be held in contempt of court for illegally diverting the money and that the bankruptcy case be dismissed. In the April operating statement filed by GGHDC the organization tried to explain accounting absences by saying it did not collect the rent from the Burgess Center directly, but that Parke Bank collected it first. However, Parke Bank’s motion asserted that just the opposite happened. GGHDC continued to collect rent despite an agreement that Parke Bank would be paid first because of a $7 million mortgage on the property. Instead it was used to pay other GGHDC debts, the court filing stated.

POLITICAL CONNECTIONS

So how did over $100 million of public funds get funneled into Germantown Settlement? Life-long resident Jim Foster believes that you can’t even think about Settlement without noticing the close political ties especially between Settlement President Freeman and Councilwoman Miller.

“The Settlement relationship with the political structure of the area, which is a significant relationship, the impact of Settlement within the political structure was kind of well known. Because there was such significant political relationships in starting Germantown Settlement and funding it, of its subsidiary corporations of which there were 30, became the largest owner of real estate in Germantown and the largest employer. ”

Foster described how Freeman began creating non-profit and for-profit corporations under the umbrella of Germantown Settlement. “It became obvious to me as someone who grew up here and had watched what happened to Germantown–what negatively happened it was impossible to separate the impact of Settlement with the fact Germantown went downhill economically, socially and safety wise,” he added.

The city  began cutting off Settlement’s funding in September 2009, but some residents support the organization because it represents something bigger.

“You have to understand, years ago black people weren’t allowed to even walk through Vernon Park let alone sit down. Germantown Settlement began as an example of something for the black community to be proud of, when for so long things were controlled by whites, “ explained a senior citizen, who wished to remain anonymous. The rise of African-American men and women ascending to positions of power was a sense of pride for many people in Germantown.

Debra White Roberts worked for Settlement in the 1980s. She said staff at Settlement were committed to the mission as a service agency. She said that Settlement did provide some services and complete projects such as Freedom Square, a strip mall near Wister and Germantown avenues and Elders Place I and II. But the quality of those projects is not evident today as the Freedom Square Mall has many vacancies and Elder’s Place needs many repairs.

Connie Winters, a longtime resident and historic property developer in Germantown, said she knew something was wrong with Settlement long ago.

“At one point about 10 years ago, I found out all the properties owned by GGHDC in southwest Germantown and there were a lot of them. I went around and took pictures of them. None of them were in the process of being redeveloped, and most of them looked occupied. And I realized, if you rented each of those houses at $400 a month and get paid in cash, they money could not be traced.”

A span of three years worth of e-mails between Freeman and Miller were obtained through a Right to Know and the Freedom of Information Act request. One of the most recent e-mails was in September 2009. Freeman wrote to Miller urging her to convince Mayor Nutter to give Germantown Settlement more time to get its audits done without losing city contracts and agree to release funds for community projects.

“Now that the budget crisis has been averted, can you press Nutter on giving us the time we need. We want him to agree to the following: Keep all of our existing contracts in place until the end of this year [2009]. And release our city funds,” the e-mail stated.

“We will deliver the audit reports for 06, 07, by Dec 31 and 08 by Jan 31. The city is closing down all of our contracts. This is do or die for GS.”

City Controller Alan Butkovitz revealed in late October that over $3 million in audit reports for fiscal years 2006-09 have still not been submitted to the Department of Human Services.

Miller and Freeman both declined interview requests.

Miller isn’t alone with close ties to Germantown Settlement. In an interview Democratic State Rep. John Myers said he supported Germantown Settlement’s reorganization just as he would support any non-profit because the community needs services.

“It’s unfortunate they haven’t been able to more forward at this particular stage, but they do have a strong history and I think that people should not forget the good work they’ve done and just focus on the problems that they’re having,” he said.

Historic property owner Connie Winters recalled a meeting with Miller regarding a building purchase. Miller promptly called Myers. Winters’ offer was turned down and a local church was given the lot some time later.

“I just really don’t think that makes sense when the city is strapped for cash,” she said.

Miller previously served as a Settlement board member and was in City Council while she held a seat in the Central Germantown Council too. In January 2007 Freeman requested favors from Councilwoman Miller in an email where he asks Miller to sign an agreement for the YWCA deal. He also requested a five-year agreement that GGHDC pay only the principle amount of real estate taxes for Freedom Square, lower interest, penalties, and cancel city liens against GGHDC.

And Councilwoman Miller was more than willing. In July of 2008 her response to Germantown Settlement laying off fifteen staff, “We need to get together and talk, we can not let this agency go under—God Bless you and GS.”

In September 2009 Freeman wrote to Miller in desperation. “We are in a bad situation. The city will not release funds until they receive at least the 2006 audit and we need their funds to help pay for the audits. Needless to say we can’t even pay our staff.” He asked her to approve more funds from the city to cover expenses.

Miller was influential in securing the RDA loan of $1.3 million to buy the YWCA.

“I had no knowledge of their financial situation then [in 2006],” Miller said in an interview with thePhiladelphia Inquirer. “I just knew it used to be one of the city’s best social service agencies.”

According to the IRS Form 990 in 2008 for Germantown Settlement, Freeman made $158,814 and paid compensation to his wife of $94,818. During a bankruptcy hearing meeting of the creditors in May Freeman described his salary as “insufficient, let me say that.”

Published via Philadelphia Neighborhoods November 10th 2011

http://sct.temple.edu/blogs/murl/2010/11/10/germantown-settlement-begins-to-crumble/

fa1008germantown Mosbrucker Final Germantown from Philadelphia Neighborhoods on Vimeo.