Old City

Old City

Council passes legislation ending Central Delaware height limits, granting planners more time

A bill ending height restrictions on all properties within the Central Delaware Overlay that are not zoned residential or light commercial awaits Mayor Michael Nutter's signature.

City Council unanimously passed the bill at its meeting last week.

The legislation, introduced by First District Councilman Frank DiCicco, amended the overlay, a temporary zoning measure designed to protect the waterfront from development that goes counter to the city's long-range goals until a master plan and associated zoning are in place.

The amendment also gives the city planning commission an extra two months to develop the guidelines that will govern the implementation of the overlay.

The Central Delaware Advocacy Group lobbied against passing the legislation unless another zoning category were exempted along with C-2 commercial and residential – Commercial Entertainment District, the classification that allows for casinos.

DiCicco said at the committee hearing on the legislation that he thought exempting the CED zones would be redundant, because part of the CED definition says it takes precedence over any conflicting law. But CDAG Chairman Steven Weixler said he'd feel better with an overt exemption, which CDAG believed would be insurance in any future court cases.

Bill Kramer, director of the city planning commission's development division, said at the hearing that he would talk to the legal department, who would then advise DiCicco.

DiCicco's policy chief could not be reached for comment Monday. Kramer said in a voice mail that he expected if the CED concern were to be addressed, it would happen through another piece of legislation. He said that because any project on property with a CED designation would have to go through a detailed Plan of Development process, that process would “take care of any height restrictions or height requirements” and nothing that exceeds what is within the CED zoning language would be approved.

For that reason, he said, “I don't think it much matters” that the amendment to the overlay does not explicitly say the CED height limits still stand. 

 

Previous coverage.

 

-Posted by Kellie Patrick Gates

Philly Weekly Spotlights the Delaware Riverfront

In this week's Multimedia section of Philadelphia Weekly, Stephen Metzger posts a video about the Delaware riverfront, the many neighborhoods it touches and the variety of activities at the river's edge.  Rene Goodwin, board member for Pennsport Civic Association and Communications Director of the Central Delaware Advocacy Group, acts as the tour guide.  Notable sites include Penn's Landing, Yard's Brewery, Penn Treaty Park, Wood Street Steps, the SS United States and Johnny's Hots.

Philadelphia Weekly: Delaware Waterfront

 

Previous videos done by Metzger include profiles of Baltimore Avenue and Northern Liberties.

3rd Annual Philly Spring Cleanup

April 10, 2010

3rd Annual Philly Spring Cleanup
Saturday, April 10

University City District and City of Philadelphia are pleased to announce the 3rd Annual Philly Spring Cleanup to be held Saturday, April 10, 2010 (rain date, Saturday, April 17, 2010).

This year's cleanup, entitled "Keep Up the Sweep Up," will be the start of the City's sustained effort to eliminate and prevent litter and illegal dumping permanently. With ongoing strategies of education, enforcement, intense cleaning and beautification, the City is committed to keeping Philadelphia clean.

If you would like to sign up to participate or organize your block in University City please contact dexter@universitycity.org for more details and supplies.

Wynn now will make pitch to PGCB


Casino entrepreneur Steve Wynn announced this week that he's planning to become Foxwoods Casino's new partner - and source of much-needed revenue.

You can hear more about his plans for the casino set to be built in South Philly here: http://www.dailyfinance.com/event/wynn-resorts-limited/wynn/nas/conference-calls

Any changes Wynn might want to make to the original Foxwoods' plan - even his involvement in Foxwoods – will need approval from the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board.

The PGCB hasn't been so happy lately with Foxwoods, denying its request for more time to come up with site drawings and openly dissing the casino's efforts to get up and running at a hearing in late January. Board members told Foxwoods' attorney that real progress had to be made by the meeting scheduled for Wednesday or the casino could lose its license.

Attorney Fred Jacoby promised a deal with a new investor was coming soon. Wynn says he will outline his plans to the board.

The Wednesday meeting is scehduled for 10 a.m. in Hearing Room One of the Public Utility Commission's Keystone Building, 400 North Street, Harrisburg.

Also this week, the anti-casino group Eastern Pennsylvania Citizens Against Gambling has asked the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to reconsider its decision upholding the state gaming control board's not to allow EPCAG to intervene in Foxwood's request for a license extension.


Contact the reporter at kelliespatrick@gmail.com

 

Inquirer: USS Olympia seeks a new caretaker

Inquirer: USS Olympia seeks a new caretaker

During the Spanish-American War, Navy Commodore George Dewey stood on the bridge of the ship and uttered the words that became famous: "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley."

The vessel's mighty guns fired the first shots of the Battle of Manila Bay on May 1, 1898, announcing the United States as an international power.

The USS Olympia was the Navy's state-of-the-art flagship, a source of pride for a country flexing its muscles.

More than a century later, this last surviving vessel of the Spanish-American War fleet and longtime Penn's Landing attraction is looking for a new home and benefactor with deep pockets.

Its owner, the Independence Seaport Museum, can no longer afford the upkeep and it told the Navy it "will relinquish its stewardship of this national naval treasure and its valuable artifact collections," said Peter McCausland, chairman of the museum's Board of Port Wardens.

The museum seeks an owner who can pay up to $30 million to tow, restore, interpret, and endow the bedraggled-looking vessel.

Small portions of the Olympia's half-inch steel hull along the water line have corroded to the point that only an eighth of an inch of thickness is left.

The hull must be continually monitored and is often patched, even as water leaks through parts of the deck into the interior, causing further rust.

"We don't like to see the ship go, but you don't want to sink the entire museum because of the cost of maintaining" the Olympia, said the Independence Seaport's interim president, James McLane. "The museum is very financially sound, but if you put a drag on it, that puts it at risk over the next several years."

For more than 13 years, the museum has been "a good steward" of the Olympia, McCausland said. "We've spent $5.3 million on her. We love her."

But efforts to find funding from private donors and the city, state, and federal governments have failed, he said. The attraction will close in September.

"She's not in imminent danger of sinking, but not far away from sinking," McCausland said. "We could have a situation develop and then proceed downhill quite rapidly."

Some sections of the hull "are exposed to air and water, air and water" as the tide rises and falls, speeding the rusting, said Jesse Lebovics, the museum's manager of historic ships.

"There is a concern for the future. Once deterioration starts, it goes faster and faster," he said. "The rubberized coating [on the deck] is eight years old. Water comes in, and that starts the rusting inside."

The riverbed around ship must be dredged before the Olympia can be towed to drydock for new decking, hull repairs, and painting.

Cost of those basic repairs? At least $10 million.

An additional $20 million would be needed for interpretation to turn it into a first-class tourist attraction and for an endowment to pay for its future needs, museum officials said.

Unfortunately, a feasibility study showed that the museum would be unable to meet those funding needs in this economic climate, officials said.

"If we don't have the resources to take care of the vessel, then someone who does will be better for her," Lebovics said.

Finding an owner "willing and able to preserve and repair" the Olympia is the museum's responsibility, said Glen Clark, deputy program manager for the Navy's Inactive Ships Program in Washington. "The Navy does not own the ship."

But the military has been "concerned about the condition" of the Olympia and it sent a letter to the museum in May asking for plans for drydocking, Clark said. "It's a national historic landmark."

The museum took over the one-of-a-kind ship Jan. 1, 1996, from the Olympia Cruiser Association, which had maintained the vessel with limited resources for 40 years.

The Olympia is the world's oldest floating steel warship. It was used to carry the body of the unknown soldier of World War I from France to the United States in 1921, the museum said.

It was docked at the Philadelphia Navy Yard from 1922 to 1959, and was on display at Pier 11 at the Benjamin Franklin Bridge through the 1960s until 1976, when it was moved to Penn's Landing.

The ship was authorized in 1888 and commissioned in 1895. It led five other U.S. warships into Manila Bay in late April 1898, and fired shots in the battle to wrest the Philippines from the Spanish.

The U.S. fleet - under Dewey's command - destroyed 10 Spanish cruisers and gunboats in a few hours without losing an American life.

Today, the Olympia is a time capsule, filled with a collection of paintings, photographs, and artifacts.

It has been in the water since 1945, though historic steel-hull ships should be drydocked about every 20 years for maintenance. The deferred work makes restoration more costly.

"We will be rolling out our new strategic plan, connecting people in the region to the water," McCausland said. "But we cannot take care of the Olympia and execute our plan.

"We're very saddened by this, but it is what it is. We did our best."

Added McLane: "It's not what the museum wants to do. It's what we have to do."

On track: Phila. waterfront rail line

Inquirer: On track: Phila. waterfront rail line

Plans for a waterfront rail line in Philadelphia took a step forward yesterday, as a Delaware River Port Authority committee approved a $6.5 million contract for environmental studies and preliminary design, expected to take about two years.

A similar $9 million contract was approved last year for a proposed rail extension in South Jersey.

The latest contract advances a $500 million light-rail project that would operate in the middle of Columbus Boulevard between Pier 70 and Girard Avenue. The route would provide service between the two casinos planned for the riverfront, Foxwoods to the south and SugarHouse to the north.

A Market Street light-rail line also would run from City Hall to the waterfront line. The waterfront trolleys could be running by 2016 if federal funding is available, DRPA officials said.

The contract approved yesterday by the DRPA operations and maintenance committee would allow the agency to pay up to $6.5 million to Parsons Brinckerhoff, the engineering firm that earlier was awarded a $750,000 contract to evaluate route proposals for the line.

Robert Box, general manager of the PATCO rail line, said it was beneficial to advance the environmental study and preliminary engineering as quickly as possible to seek federal funding.

"We've built a lot of momentum and a lot of support," Box said, "and it is important to keep this moving."

DRPA Chairman John Estey said federal money was crucial: "We can't fund this unless there's federal money."

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