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Originally Posted by 1487
Good point. There shouldnt be any schools near CC's abundant transportation links at all. Keep those kids in their own areas where they belong. It seems like there are almost daily attacks of good CC folks by those thuggish charter school kids.
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I have no idea if you were around here back in the day or not. To be honest, back in the 80s/90s, I didn't think much about "wilding" and smaller-scale related phenomena. It happened with some frequency, I witnessed incidents now and again, and I just accepted it as part of city life.
Then again, back then, Center City was kind of just hanging on by the skin of its teeth. Rent was cheap, apartments were schlocky but affordable, old office buildings were vacant and believed to be obsolete; night life was sparse except in isolated islands of activity along South St east of 7th and on a block or two of 2nd St in Old City around Chestnut.13th St had its night life too, but not the kind most conventional people wanted to be seen to be associated with.
Back then, nobody gave much thought to wilding and unruly teens, it was just part of life and the slow, inevitable demise and devolution of Center City everyone had grown completely accustomed to. My belief at the time was "hey, if you can't handle a little wilding now and again, you're just not cut out for city life".
And, it turns out, most people weren't. Back then, the City had to pay businesses millions not to leave Center City, but they still left in droves; and developers required far more in subsidies to do even modest run-of-the-mill developments that today developers do routinely all over "Greater Center City" with no public participation at all.
Bottom line: little was built, people were leaving, and the place was kind of falling apart. Developers and their investors had little interest in Center City.
Nowadays, investors are hot for Center City . . . in large part because the teen element that was so prevelant 15, 20, 30 years ago, has largely dispersed.
But few people who want to see their investments increase in value want to see the teen element make a comeback. So as not be accused of speaking in code, l'll state the obvious thst the "teen element" was largely an African American teen element. But not exclusively. I think a better description might be an "underclass" teen element. One only needed to go to Deptford Mall or Wildwood boadwalk to see that the unruly underclass teen element could be multiethnic. It just happened to be primarily African American in Center City.
Fairly or no, real estate investors correlate the presence of this element with decline in investment value. And I'm pretty sure there is a correlation (not to say a causation). Real estate people want nothing to do with this element, they think of it like Kryptonite to the successful redevelopment of upscale areas. They will shun anything, like multiplex theaters, that they think will attract it. And believe me, if developers could have their way, they'd get the City to relocate all those charter schools around Market and Chestnut to other places. And adjacent property values probably would go up as a result.
Institutionalized racism? Probably, in a way. Maybe institutionalized class discrimination is a more accurate term.
1487, I'm curious which cities with similar demographic/geographic structure to Philly have downtown multiplexes - ones that weren't built and/or subsidized with public dollars? Chicago?