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One year and five days ago...
As we fought with server issues, I missed the chance to note that on December 23 we passed the one year anniversary of the library lawsuit being filed in Common Pleas Court.
So much had to come together for that whole thing to work, including:
- The outrage of citizens all over the city at the announced closures;
- The botched and ever changing rationales of the administration;
- People organizing all over the city;
- And finally, seven brave women and AFSCME signing on to a lawsuit, joined a day later by Councilman Green.
I sat in the Courtroom as the hearing concluded; it was incredibly tense. As Judge Fox started making her ruling, it was really not clear who was about to win. Then, amidst a Hollywood like mix of murmuring, buzz and then loud applause, she said something like this:
The decision to close these eleven branch libraries is more than a response to a financial crisis; it changes the very foundation of our City. Two of the libraries scheduled to close, Haddinton and Holmesburg, will result in a reversion of the property back to the original grantor because of deed restrictions. No one questions the economic crisis which has rocked both the City and the Nation. However, we are a Nation of hope. A "crisis" evokes something temporary. Defendants argued there were more than enough libraries in Philadelphia. "Philadelphia has more libraries than any other city in the country." Our library system is more than a century old yet in three short months an economic crisis results in permanently closing eleven branches. This court does not envy the Mayor and the tough decisions he has had to make in this financial crisis. Yet, as this court is bound to follow the law, so is the Mayor. The permanent closing of neighborhood branch libraries is changing the very structure of the Free Library of Philadelphia and not just responding to a "financial crisis."
Fast forward a year, and not all is well with the libraries, by any means. But, they have survived, poised to rebound at a time when budgets and tax revenues return to normal. And, one year later, I think the Mayor would agree that libraries- Libraries!- have become the third rail in Philadelphia politics.
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Democracy works sometimes
which is why its always worth it to keep a wary eye on those who devalue it as an institution.
-Sean
Sean, please tell me I am
Sean, please tell me I am missing something, and that this is not a reference to your last post?
Nutter was on the wrong track on library closings
a combination of the lawsuit and political pressure from a wide coalition of folks helped convince him to correct his path. Thats the strength of a democratic system in action.
To quote Winston Churchill:
"It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried."
-Sean
Sean, please tell me I am
Sean, please tell me I am missing something, and that this is not a reference to your last post?
Nutter was on the wrong track on library closings
A combination of the lawsuit and political pressure from a wide coalition of people sucesfually exerted political pressure to correct his path. Democracy in action. A good thing.
-Sean
Workings of Democracy Require Democratic Structures & Activism
Democracy worked in the case of the free library closings for a variety of reasons.
Elected members of the City Council made clear that they would not vote to close the libraries themselves.
A previous City Council (1988) had passed over a mayoral veto a short ordinance introduced by Councilman David Cohen requiring that closings of city facilities be approved by City Council.
Attorneys Irv Acklesberg and Sherrie Cohen were willing to file suit to upheld the 1988 ordinance. So were lawyers in Councilman Bill Green's office, with slightly different legal theories.
A large group of activists--including but far from limited to bloggers on this site-- were making clear to the City of Philadelphia and Judge Ida Fox that there was massive public support for keeping the libraries open.
And finally, a courageous judge elected by the people of Philadelphia, was willing to apply the law in the face of the power of the Mayor's office and the powerful interests allied with the Mayor.
None of this happens automatically. Any of these necessary elements could have, under other circumstances, been absent.
In the Broadway play Cats, which I saw last year in Philadelphia, one of the characters refers to "those magical moments of mystery when we made history." I love that line because it expresses the difficulty in making fundamental changes.
In the case of the threatened library closings, the answers to the mystery are clear. Democratic structures, responsive elected officials, activist citizens, lawyers willing to stand up to the powerful, and judges willing to obey the law at the expense of the good will of the powerful are necessary ingredients to protecting the interests of the average citizens in accessible public services.
Last chance, Sean. which is
Last chance, Sean.
Please tell me I am missing something, and that this is not a reference to your last post?
I'm trying to keep this positive
I'm not sure what you are trying to get out of this question.
-Sean
In other words, after
In other words, after writing a bizarrely vitriolic string of comments, you decided that you needed to hijack other threads to keep on getting in digs.
I am asking you, before I am telling you, to take a couple week breather from the site.
OK fine
I actually tried but was asked by several folks to clarify. Perhaps that was bad advice.
I'd point out it wasn't my repeated questions that misdirected this thread. Perhaps someone else can bring it back on topic.
-Sean
As a nerd
I love this: