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Who’s running in primary election Tuesday

May 20, 2013

voteSo, we’re passing this along in case you forgot: There’s a primary election tomorrow in the city. You could be forgiven if you didn’t remember. On the Democratic side, District Attorney Seth Williams is running unopposed and there’s a dizzying list of judges running. The hot nomination is for City Controller, the city’s auditor of financial affairs. The office has a four-year term and no term limit.

Incumbent Alan Bukovitz is running against Brett Mandel and Mark Zecca for the Democratic nomination. Bukovitz is in his second term as City Controller. Until 2004, Mandel worked in the City Controller’s office on the Financial and Policy Analysis Unit. Zecca is a former Assistant District Attorney.

There’s a Republican in this thing too – retail expert Terry Tracy. He is running unopposed for the City Controller nomination.

Former Assistant District Attorney Daniel Alvarez (Facebook page) is the lone Republican candidate for District Attorney.

Other local offices include: Judge of Court of Common Pleas, Judge of Philadelphia Municipal Court (3 vacancies), Judge of Traffic Court (3 vacancies), Inspector of Elections. Statewide offices include the Judge of the Superior Court.

A list of candidates for the various judge seats is here.

Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. You can check your registration information and find your polling place here.

 

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Elementary school students, parents plan walkout to protest budget cuts

May 14, 2013

SaveSchoolElementary school students from at least two West Philadelphia schools plan to walk out of their classrooms tomorrow (Wednesday, May 15) and travel with their parents to City Hall to protest the proposed school budget cuts.

Students and their parents from Powel Elementary and Penn Alexander will join parents and students from the C.W. Henry School in Mount Airy in leaving school tomorrow morning to travel to City Hall to protest the proposed cuts, which would eliminate guidance counselors, music programs, assistant principals, nurses and librarians at most schools in the city. District officials have asked the city for $60 million to help make up the $304 million budget shortfall. They have also requested funding from the state and for union concessions.

“Our goal is to have City Council provide the additional $60 million in funding to put counselors, secretaries and after-school clubs back in the schools,” said Robin Dominick, who is helping to organize the walkout at Powel. Dominick estimates 20-30 families will take part.

Participating students and parents from Powel plan to leave at about 10:15 a.m. on the trolley for City Hall, where they will join with parents and students from C.W. Henry at between 10:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. at the northwest corner of City Hall.

Students wrote letters to city officials in school this week detailing how the cuts will impact them personally. They plan to deliver the letters to City Council members tomorrow, Dominick said.

A small but growing group of students and parents from Penn Alexander is also planning to attend the rally.

Hundreds of high school students walked out of their schools on May 9 to rally at City Hall in opposition to the cuts.

More details about the proposed budget are available here.

Mike Lyons

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Heavy pursuit, two suspects arrested after string of robberies Thursday night (updated)

May 10, 2013

Penn police keep an eye on the car believed to have been used in a string of robberies Thursday night.

Penn Police keep an eye on the Honda Accord Friday morning believed to have been used in a string of robberies Thursday night.

Two suspects were arrested last night after a string of armed robberies that occurred within about two hours beginning at approximately 8:30 p.m. at 45th and Sansom.

Police say that the first robbery happened on the 4500 block of Sansom Street when two men, one armed with a black handgun and knife and the other with a silver handgun, approached two people and demanded their phones and wallets. The two men got away with an iPhone, credit cards and about $50 in cash.

The second robbery happened at 42nd and Locust about 30 minutes later, according to police. A man was approached by two males, one showing a black handgun, and ordered to give up his phone. The victim observed the suspects flee in a late model black Honda Accord. The Daily Pennsylvanian has more details on this robbery.

At about 10 p.m. five Drexel University students were robbed near 32nd and Powelton by two men armed with guns. The suspects fled with five iPhones and some cash. The students also described the getaway car as a black Honda.

The third robbery led to a vehicle pursuit then foot pursuit, a police source said. A police helicopter was also involved in the pursuit. Penn Police arrested the suspects around 11 p.m. near the corner of 44th and Baltimore. Their vehicle was still parked there this morning (see photo). There were a total of eight victims in this string of robberies, according to the police source. The investigation is continuing.

UPDATE (1:49 pm): There were three suspects, two men and a woman, who robbed a total of 11 people last night, CBSPhilly reports. In addition to the robberies mentioned earlier, two people were robbed of their iPhones at 43rd and Regent at 8:45 p.m. and a man was robbed of some cash near 42nd and Ludlow at 9 p.m. Two suspects, a man and a woman, both 25, were arrested. The police are still searching for the third robber.

Mike Lyons

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Goodbye mini fridges and discount microwaves: No Penn move-out sale this year

May 10, 2013

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The 2010 move-out sale. (Photo courtesy Penn News)

It appears that the salad days of discount mini-fridges, 4-year-old TVs and bargains of all shapes and sizes that signal the end of another school year at Penn are over.

PennMOVES, the university’s organization that in the past has collected discarded stuff from students as they clear out of the dorms, will not conduct the annual sale that had people lining up in past years. PennMOVES is still collecting the stuff this week, but instead of the sale the items will go directly to Goodwill stores around the area.

Much of the merchandise will go toward stocking a new Goodwill store in West Philly at 5050 Parkside Avenue in late summer/early fall.

“A sale at Penn is no longer necessary,” according to a PennMOVES statement.

It is still unclear how this may impact the curbside treasure trove that usually starts to build this time of the year, a time many locals refer to as “Penn Christmas.”

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The “doomsday” school budget and what you can do to help avoid it

May 7, 2013

School Budget Pie 5x7ish2The School District of Philadelphia is once again in fiscal straits and next year’s budget could see the worst cuts yet. More nurses, security guards, librarians, assistant principals, guidance counselors, aides, music and arts teachers, secretaries and even books and school supplies from every school in the city could go if the city doesn’t make up a $300 million shortfall. It’s already being called the “doomsday budget.”

A principal at a West Philly elementary school told parents recently that the proposed cuts are by far the worst she has seen in her 21 years. Students from city high schools are planning a rally today at the District headquarters. Members of the teachers’ union, which has been asked for concessions to help avoid the cuts, are scheduled to do “informational picketing” at every public school in the city tomorrow.

District officials are requesting $60 million from the city, which City Council members are so far reluctant to provide, and $120 million from the state, which also doesn’t seem too interested.

Home and school association parents from around the city are asking residents to get involved.

If interested, here are some things you can do to help:

• Contact your City Council member and members at large. Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell, head of the education committee, is available at 215-686-3418/3419 and jannie.blackwell@phila.gov.

Contact your state legislators. The local legislators are likely to be very sympathetic, so another person to talk to is state Rep. Paul Clymer, the Bucks County Republican who heads the House Education Committee. His district office can be reached at 215-257-0279. His e-mail is: pclymer@pahousegop.com. Here is his Facebook page.

• Stop by the table at Saturday’s May Fair in Clark Park (43rd & Chester) and sign a local petition.

• Join an existing state campaign for funding by signing the petition here.

 

Mike Lyons

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Teen arrested in December double homicide near 46th and Chester

May 7, 2013

Police have arrested a New York teenager for the December shooting deaths of two men at the University Court Apartments near 46th and Chester.

Murder victim Anthony Fletcher Jr. pictured here on Election Day, 2012 from his Facebook page.

Murder victim Anthony Fletcher Jr. pictured here on Election Day, 2012. Photo from his Facebook page.

Marco Joaquin, 18, was charged with two counts of murder and aggravated assault in the shooting deaths of Anthony Fletcher Jr., and Dwayne Page, according to court documents.

Fletcher’s father, Anthony “Two Guns” Fletcher Sr. was a prominent welterweight boxer in the Philly area before being convicted of murder in 1993. The son appeared to be on a different path. He was a delegate for his union, District 1199c of the Hospital and Health Care employees, at Hahnemann Hospital. His co-workers wore t-shirts with the union slogan “We Are One” to Fletcher’s December 29 funeral.

Police arrested 18-year-old Marco Joaquin in connection with a double homicide near 46th and Chester in December.

Marco Joaquin. (Police photo)

Police say Joaquin shot Fletcher once in the head. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Page was shot in the chest and later died at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. A third man was shot in the head and chest but survived, police said.

A police source said the shooting was drug-related.

A preliminary hearing is scheduled for May 22 at 9 a.m. in Courtroom 306 at the Criminal Justice Center (13th and Filbert).

 

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