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Median Matters

Back Off My Median Parking (Or Don’t)

Header Photo: Emma Lee

Let’s just start out by acknowledging that South Philadelphia has…quirks. And they are quirks that cannot really be explained to anyone born north of Washington Ave. Trees? No, thank you all the same. Watering down the sidewalk? Sure!

But there is one quirk, one special something, that raises hackles and boils the blood like no other. I talk, of course, of parking on the South Broad Street median. Parking on the median is something as dear to South Philadelphians as their Mummers, their Broad Street Bullies, their stake in the Genos v Pats showdown.

So when 5th Square PAC filed a lawsuit last week demanding the city end the age-old tradition, it unsurprisingly ruffled a lot of feathers. In response to the suit, three local groups— Taking Our South Philadelphia Streets Back, Philadelphia Block By Block and Citizens for Better Philadelphia—are calling on the city to officially legalize median parking, and have garnered over 1,000 names on a petition.

For anyone just joining us, “parking on the South Broad Street median” is many things: It’s a free parking lot, providing 200 spots between Shunk Street and Washington Avenue, for those bold enough to grab one. It’s illegal, though it has never really been enforced. It’s something that only happens in South Philly, and literally nowhere else on America’s longest street. And, according to 5th Square’s Jake Liefer, it’s a hazard to bikers and pedestrians alike. (More on that later.)

It’s clearly something about which South Philadelphians are divided. Last year, The Citizen conducted the only poll specifically targeting local residents, and found them pretty evenly split on the matter of parking in the middle of Broad Street. (Disclosure: I am one of those residents who lives near Broad Street.)

And there’s something Liefer and his critics can agree on: The city should be doing more to solve the parking conundrum in growing neighborhoods around Philly. “The PPA and the city are turning their back on finding a parking solution,” Liefer says. “There’s been a parking crunch for some time. The PPA is a quarter of a billion dollar agency, and have yet to come up with a comprehensive parking plan.”

There’s been a lot of tough talk over this issue for the last year, which has gotten us basically nowhere. Here, an attempt to provide some perspective:

Gentrification doesn’t have to be bad for anyone. Everyone should be able to benefit when crime goes down, property value goes up, and retail returns. In fact, the Pew report calls out East Passyunk as an example of a neighborhood where gentrification has happened more gently. Partly, that’s a race thing: Both old and new residents are primarily white, and are not displacing African Americans. And with little vacant land, they are not disrupting the landscape, either. But this parking clash is exactly the sort of cultural disconnect that is the ugly side of neighborhood growth.

Point Breeze, directly across Broad from East Passyunk, did not quite make Pew’s definition of gentrification, but was mentioned in it as the epitome of tension: This is where developer Ori Feibush and City Councilman Kenyatta Johnson continue to spar over development; where a group of new residents fueled the fire by deciding to rename their neighborhood “Newbold;” and where Liefer happens to live. Even in East Passyunk, you have the Passyunk Post, which bills itself as “For the new South Philly.” (Emphasis added.)

As if they’re saying, new is better, new knows better. Perhaps it would behoove more recent residents to learn from the mistakes of early Friends of schools groups, which found they got much more done, and made many more improvements, by working with the families that were already there, rather than coming in and telling them what was needed.

Is that really enough though? We need real parking reform in this city, which means we need real conversations about alternatives to the status quo. In Queen Village, for example, the civic association leases land under I-95 that it turned into a relatively cheap parking lot that also generates millions of dollars for the neighborhood. Maybe the city could do the same for East Passyunk, giving over its municipal lot at Passyunk and Morris to the neighborhood group. Maybe we need a sort of “cap and trade” system, like Philly 3.0’s Jon Geeting recently proposed. Maybe we need to charge even more for parking permits, to make multiple car ownership less palatable. Maybe we need to figure out how to get people jobs nearer to their homes.

Clearly that is a harder discussion than a simple yea or nay on the Broad Street median. But that’s the kind of conversation I’d like to hear my neighbors having.

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