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Council asks Nutter to restore leaf pickup

City Council found an issue it could jump into yesterday: whether residents of the city's leafy neighborhoods should have to bag their fallen foliage.

With one budget crisis behind it and another looming next year, Council yesterday passed a resolution urging Mayor Nutter to restore the mechanical leaf pickup that about 10 percent of the city enjoyed.

Mechanical pickup allows residents - mostly in Northwest, Northeast, and West Philadelphia - to rake their leaves to the curb instead of bagging them.

Nutter cut the service this year in one of many austerity measures due to plummeting tax revenue during the recession. Council ratified the decision by approving the 2010 budget in June, saving the city $400,000, according to the administration.

Most resolutions, which are not binding, usually coast unanimously through Council. But this one, offered by Councilman Frank Rizzo, struck a nerve. Many city departments were cut 10 percent or more last year, and Budget Director Stephen Agostini this week will ask departments to cut an additional 7.5 percent for the 2011 budget.

"I'm a little bit taken aback today about the importance of picking up leaves for the citizens of this city," said Councilman Frank DiCicco, whose district in South Philadelphia and Center City does not have leaf problems. "We have a budget crisis going on. We have some issues. . . . I just think we have a lot more important issues to be dealing with."

Rizzo said uncollected leaves were a hazard, choking sewers and causing flooding, or forming dry piles that a hot car muffler can ignite.

"We're either going to have to pay now or pay later," he said. "We just cannot leave this debris that will clog our inlets and make our city a very unsafe place to walk and to drive."

Ten of the 17 Council members weighed in on the topic. Majority Leader Marian B. Tasco, whose Northwest district is directly affected, said she was "mindful" of budget issues, but was concerned about seniors who could not bag their leaves.

Councilwoman Donna Reed Miller said residents, including herself, had not received proper notification about the new policy.

Councilman Bill Green proposed offering Nutter savings elsewhere in the budget to pay for leaf collection.

"Governing is choosing between competing ideas for good, with limited resources," Green said. "If we are going to ask for a new service to be provided that's not in the budget, we should say what it is that we are willing to give up for that service to take place."

There were no takers other than Councilman Curtis Jones Jr., who laughingly offered to sacrifice the Phillies' world championship parade.

The administration will not restore mechanical pickup this year, Nutter's spokeswoman Maura Kennedy said. While residents are encouraged to stuff their leaves into recyclable paper lawn bags, they will not be fined if they use plastic bags, she said.

Those who leave leaves piled at the curb will be notified that bagging is required, Kennedy said. After that, "we will consider enforcement."

Rizzo, who lives on nearly an acre of leafy land in Chestnut Hill, said unscrupulous landscapers in his neighborhood had been dumping leaves under a railroad trestle, creating a fire hazard.

The resolution passed, 15-2. DiCicco and Green voted against it.


Contact staff writer Jeff Shields at 215-854-4565 or jshields@phillynews.com.

Comments   
Posted 07:41 AM, 11/06/2009
Kitty_Carlyle
I have been bagging my leaves. Its great exercise so get to it. Can't do it yourself? Pay some kid to do it for you. Problem solved.
Posted 08:50 AM, 11/06/2009
Sluggo
My taxes pay for leaf pickup. Why should I be forced to buy special brown bags for leaves? This year I will mulch what I can and use my leaf blower to move the leaves from my lawn into the street. Deal with that, Nutter.
Posted 09:38 AM, 11/06/2009
19151
Leaf pickup should be restored, as should so many former city services, primarily because the taxes paid by residents are enough that such services are not only warranted, but should be compulsory and unquestionably funded. One item that needs discussion on this debate is if the funding for such pickup is restored, more rowhouse/twin neighborhoods with lots of leaves should be re-added to the list of mechanical pickup zones. At one time, it wasn't just areas with large, single homes that enjoyed this service. Many a block of rowhomes has stands of london plane trees with massive leaves that blanket the block. Mechanical pickup and moving cars used to be done, and should be again.
Posted 09:49 AM, 11/06/2009
philly transplant
I love this. Everyone complains, complains about taxes and how the city needs to make cuts.This is a cut that affects a tiny portion of the city AND is reasonable, and Council and the complainers on this comment thread scream no! People all over the country have to bag their leaves for pick up. Kudos to Green for stating the obvious - you want to restore this cut? Figure out how to pay for it!
Posted 12:53 PM, 11/06/2009
scargosun
Are you kidding me? I live in the burbs where my taxes are higher and I don't have mechanized leaf pick up. Bag your leaves you lazy people. Fine people who push leaf piles into the street causing the unsafe conditions. That is what happens in many neighborhoods outside the city. The city has no money and yet the council wants to spend money on something that residents should do themselves. Philly resisdents, remember who wanted this in the next election.
Posted 01:25 PM, 11/06/2009
Time to Leave
In neighborhoods where there are lots of trees, mechanical leaf collection is essential. It is a basic service that must continue. Otherwise, the gutters and sewers get clogged and substantial flooding follows. For me its just the last straw that leads me to wonder why I still live in the City. I am fortunate to live in a beautiful house, but a significant tax bill goes along with that privilege. I'm happy to pay, but I want something in return. Instead I end up with the latest service cut -- no leaf collection. Add in that the schools are poor, my street doesn't get plowed when it snows, property taxes are sure to rise as part of the reform of the BRT, and that the police are so undermanned that non-violent crimes get absolutely no attention (my house was broken into along with dozens of others in my neighborhood over the summer) and I start asking is it worth it to live in the City? The logical answer is NO. Nutter just doesn't get it. Taxpayers expect and demand basic services. So Michael, lead and figure it out. Stop throwing up your hands or analyzing issues to death. You are a HUGE disappointment. Also, Bill Green, where is your endorsement of the resolution? Your neighbors / constituents would appreciate it if leaf collection would continue. Since you rent your house and lawn care is provided by your landlord I guess you don't care. If you think you are the answer to Nutter you are mistaken. Finally, it is worth pointing out that this service has has been reduced from 2 to 3 x a year to once. Total elimination is not warranted.
Posted 08:04 PM, 11/06/2009
rbpeeple
"Time to leave"...I don't blame you for wanting to leave. Some people on this list say 'bag your own leaves'...when it's obvious they don't live in a leafy neighborhood. These are the same people who could care less about casinos in neighborhoods and say NIMBY without the slightest ability to put themselves in someone else's shoes.
Posted 11:28 PM, 11/06/2009
in 19151
I completely agree with 19151 and Time to Leave. I'm wondering what our taxes actually pay for (taxes that have gone up drastically every year since we've lived here). I can't use my public school, my street is rarely plowed, our district police captain essentially told us we were on our own in our fight against the drug corners...so now I have to bag my leaves and pay for the 60+ bags I am going to need. And find the 10 hours it is going to take to do it..oh wait, those hours are now going to my extended commute thanks to the septa strike. I don't want to pay some kid to do it, I have already paid for it in my TAXES. And what about the landscapers who illegally dumped huge truckloads of leaves on our street last year...one of which CAUGHT FIRE. Is someone going to jump out of the bushes and fine them? I think not. And residents will just have to pay the price. Again. And yes, those in the burbs have to bag. However, your kids can safely use your schools and you just need to sneeze and a cop is right there to offer a tissue, so at least you are getting something for your taxes.
8 comments
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