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Funeral arrangements for community leader Paul Brooks

March 7, 2011

Funeral services will be held Saturday for Paul Brooks, a community leader in West Philadelphia who started the Clark Park Youth Soccer League, was a past president of the Friends of Clark Park and fought for legal justice for low-income Philadelphians as an attorney with Community Legal Services.

Brooks died Feb. 5 of complications from thyroid cancer, the diagnosis of which he had kept secret from most friends for years. He was 52.

The University City Review has a story about Brooks here.

The funeral will take place at the Iron Gate Theater (37th and Chestnut) beginning at 10 a.m. The burial will follow at the Woodlands Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Paul Brooks Youth Soccer Scholarship Fund. Please make checks payable to “Friends of Clark Park” with “Paul Brooks Soccer Fund” on the memo line. They can be dropped off or sent to:

Paul Brooks Soccer Fund, c/o Frank Innes, 4522 Regent Street, Philadelphia, PA 19143-3723.

 

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Windermere Court Apartments demolition began today

February 28, 2011

windermereThe demolition of the Windermere Court Apartments at 48th and Walnut, which had been on hold, proceeded today.

Crews have begun to remove the top floors on the southwest corner of the four-story building near where the Jan. 10 fire began. The demolition had been delayed as residents pressured the building’s owners and the city to allow them to retrieve more of their belongings and giving stranded pets some additional time to be rescued or leave the building.

The West Philly-based feline rescue group City Kitties ended their rescue efforts inside the building on Feb. 19 as warm weather melted ice inside the building leaving the building more unstable. City Kitties, the Walnut Hill Community Association, Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell’s office helped residents make their stories known throughout the region. City Kitties has set up a website – windermerefirepets.org – to help keep alive the concerns that came up in the fire’s aftermath.

Residents have also filed a class-action lawsuit against building owners, David and Sam Ginsberg, and management company, Windermere Court Management Corp. The suit alleges that the building was not equipped with the proper fire suppression equipment – sprinklers and smoke alarms – and that the building had not been regularly inspected.

windermere

 

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Saad’s reopens; fire still under investigation

February 24, 2011

We are happy to report that Saad’s Halal Restaurant at 4500 Walnut St. has reopened after a fire on Feb. 17 that heavily damaged the three floors of apartments above the restaurant.

The fire began on a third floor apartment, according to the Philadelphia Fire Commissioner’s Office, and the cause is still under investigation. The fire destroyed the top two floors of the building, forcing out about two dozen residents. The apartments will require extensive rebuilding and the roof of the building will likely need replaced.

Saad’s suffered some water damage and minor smoke damage, but is back in business.

The fire commissioner’s office also confirmed this morning speculation that smoking in bed caused the Feb. 16 fire at the single-story Transition to Independent Living Inc. building at 4536 Spruce St. The official explanation was “discarded cigarette in unit 4.”

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PW digs deep into Windermere fire story

February 23, 2011

fireThe Philadelphia Weekly’s Tara Murtha has taken a thorough look at the aftermath of the Windermere fire for today’s paper. The piece, “Burning Questions in West Philly Apartment Complex Fire,” fleshes out all the parties in this tragic story – from the residents protesting for access, to the owners’ PR agent to a spokesman for the Mayor’s Office. The story also introduces us to a little known city agency that seems to share in some of the responsibility – Philadelphia’s County Animal Rescue Team (PHL-CART).

Many of us have been following this story for more than a month. Murtha’s piece is a must-read for a look behind the emotions and blame to see what a breakdown in communication between a city government, its residents and private enterprise looks like.

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New look for the Friends of Clark Park

February 22, 2011

The Freinds of Clark Park has a new website. Brian Siano said in an e-mail today that the new site is designed to be more of a community discussion site than the old site. The site also offers the ability to share content on Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites.

Here’s a sneak peak:

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West Philly activist fighting upstream gas drilling

February 22, 2011

Marcellus
The March cover of Grid.

This month’s issue of Grid, a magazine that covers sustainability in Philadelphia, features a cover story on West Philly activist Iris Marie Bloom, who is organizing to challenge natural gas drilling in Pennsylvania.

In an article entitled “Stepping on the Gas,” Bloom, director of the environmental group Protecting Our Waters, explains opposition to drilling in a massive rock formation known as the Marcellus Shale, which stretches from the northeast corner of the state to the southeast corner. Much of the drilling is concentrated in small farming areas in the northeast, northcentral and southeast parts of the state, in towns that most Philadelphians have probably never heard of – places like Towanda, Wilcox, Dimock and Hickory.

Bloom and others argue that the drilling, which includes a process of forcing sand, water and chemicals into the ground to break up the shale and free natural gas, is an imminent threat to fresh water in the state. The process is known as “fracking” (hydraulic fracturing) and Bloom and others are pointing to water contamination as one of the main hazards of the process.

“Drilling is being done in a rush because it is underregulated,” Bloom told Grid reporter Jacob Lambert.

Bloom’s opponents in the fight are, of course, big gas companies and drillers, legislators who support them and, sometimes, the residents of these areas themselves. In most cases, drilling companies have paid handsomely for the rights to drill on vast swaths of privately owned farm land, making many farmers instantly wealthy.

Willingness on the part of state legislators to regulate the drilling is likely to wain with newly elected governor Tom Corbett, she said. Just yesterday newly elected Governor Tom Corbett rescinded a moratorium on new leases for drilling in state forests.

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