Philadelphia City Council

Independence Blue Cross experts testify before Philadelphia City Council on racial disparities in city's maternal morbidity rate

Retrieved on: 
Friday, March 8, 2024

PHILADELPHIA, March 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Leaders from Independence Blue Cross (IBX) provided testimony today to Philadelphia City Council on solutions to racial disparities in the maternal mortality rate in the city.

Key Points: 
  • PHILADELPHIA, March 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Leaders from Independence Blue Cross (IBX) provided testimony today to Philadelphia City Council on solutions to racial disparities in the maternal mortality rate in the city.
  • Dr. Lorina Marshall-Blake, president of the Independence Blue Cross Foundation (IBX Foundation) and vice president of Community Affairs for IBX, and Dr. Seun Ross, executive director of Health Equity for Independence Blue Cross, spoke before the Council's Committee on Public Health.
  • Severe maternal morbidity (SMM) refers to life-threatening complications that occur during or after childbirth.
  • In their testimonies, Marshall-Blake and Ross identified evidence-based programs supported by the IBX Foundation and IBX to improve the quality of maternal care and eliminate racial disparities in maternal morbidity rates in Philadelphia.

Students lose out as cities and states give billions in property tax breaks to businesses − draining school budgets and especially hurting the poorest students

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 15, 2024

Bubbling paint mars some walls, evidence of the water leaks spreading inside the aging building.

Key Points: 
  • Bubbling paint mars some walls, evidence of the water leaks spreading inside the aging building.
  • “It’s living history,” said Mayes during a mid-September tour of the building.

Property tax redirect

  • The lack of funds is a direct result of the property tax breaks that Kansas City lavishes on companies and developers that do business there.
  • Between 2017 and 2023, the Kansas City school district lost $237.3 million through tax abatements.
  • An estimated 95% of U.S. cities provide economic development tax incentives to woo corporate investors.
  • Tax abatement programs have long been controversial, pitting states and communities against one another in beggar-thy-neighbor contests.
  • All told, tax abatements can end up harming a community’s value, with constant funding shortfalls creating a cycle of decline.

Incentives, payoffs and guarantees

  • Incumbent governors have used the incentives as a means of taking credit for job creation, even when the jobs were coming anyway.
  • Fairleigh Jackson pointed out that her daughter’s East Baton Rouge third grade class lacks access to playground equipment.
  • The temporary site has some grass and a cement slab where kids can play, but no playground equipment, Jackson said.
  • “When I think about playground equipment, I think that’s a necessary piece of child development,” Jackson said.
  • The city has two bodies that dole them out: the Development Authority of Fulton County, or DAFC, and Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development agency.
  • The deals handed out by the two agencies have drained $103.8 million from schools from fiscal 2017 to 2022, according to Atlanta school system financial statements.
  • What exactly Atlanta and other cities and states are accomplishing with tax abatement programs is hard to discern.
  • Under city and state tax abatement programs, companies that used to be in Kansas City have since relocated.

Trouble in Philadelphia

  • On Thursday, Oct. 26, 2023, an environmental team was preparing Southwark School in Philadelphia for the winter cold.
  • While checking an attic fan, members of the team saw loose dust on top of flooring that contained asbestos.
  • Within a day, Southwark was closed – the seventh Philadelphia school temporarily shuttered since the previous academic year because of possible asbestos contamination.
  • A 2019 inspection of the John L Kinsey school in Philadelphia found asbestos in plaster walls, floor tiles, radiator insulation and electrical panels.
  • The study estimated that a 21.7% increase could eliminate the high school graduation gap faced by children from low-income families.
  • The same researchers found that spending increases were associated with reductions in student-to-teacher ratios, increases in teacher salaries and longer school years.
  • Other studies yielded similar results: School funding matters, especially for children already suffering the harms of poverty.
  • For families in school districts with the lost tax revenues, their neighbors’ good fortune likely comes as little solace.
  • Throughout the U.S., parents with the power to do so demand special arrangements, such as selective schools or high-track enclaves that hire experienced, fully prepared teachers.
  • If demands aren’t met, they leave the district’s public schools for private schools or for the suburbs.
  • Some parents even organize to splinter their more advantaged, and generally whiter, neighborhoods away from the larger urban school districts.

Rethinking in Philadelphia and Riverhead

  • A school serving students who endure housing and food insecurity must dedicate resources toward children’s basic needs and trauma.
  • But districts serving more low-income students spend less per student on average, and almost half the states have regressive funding structures.
  • Facing dwindling resources for schools, several cities have begun to rethink their tax exemption programs.
  • The Philadelphia City Council recently passed a scale-back on a 10-year property tax abatement by decreasing the percentage of the subsidy over that time.

Kansas City border politics


Like many cities, Kansas City has a long history of segregation, white flight and racial redlining, said Kathleen Pointer, senior policy strategist for Kansas City Public Schools.

  • Meanwhile, Kansas City is still distributing 20-year tax abatements to companies and developers for projects.
  • Developers typically have plans in place when they knock on our door.” In Kansas City, several agencies administer tax incentives, allowing developers to shop around to different bodies to receive one.
  • “That was a moment for Kansas City Public Schools where we really drew a line in the sand and talked about incentives as an equity issue,” Pointer said.
  • After the district raised the issue – tying the incentives to systemic racism – the City Council rejected BlueScope’s bid and, three years later, it’s still in Kansas City, fully on the tax rolls, she said.
  • Recently, a multifamily housing project was approved for a 20-year tax abatement by the Port Authority of Kansas City at Country Club Plaza, an outdoor shopping center in an affluent part of the city.
  • All told, the Kansas City Public Schools district faces several shortfalls beyond the $400 million in deferred maintenance, Superintendent Jennifer Collier said.

East Baton Rouge and the industrial corridor


It’s impossible to miss the tanks, towers, pipes and industrial structures that incongruously line Baton Rouge’s Scenic Highway landscape. They’re part of Exxon Mobil Corp.’s campus, home of the oil giant’s refinery in addition to chemical and plastics plants.

  • The company posted a record-breaking $55.7 billion in profits in 2022 and $36 billion in 2023.
  • A mile drive down the street to Route 67 is a Dollar General, fast-food restaurants, and tiny, rundown food stores.
  • East Baton Rouge Parish’s McKinley High School, a 12-minute drive from the refinery, serves a student body that is about 80% Black and 85% poor.
  • The experience is starkly different at some of the district’s more advantaged schools, including its magnet programs open to high-performing students.
  • Baton Rouge is a tale of two cities, with some of the worst outcomes in the state for education, income and mortality, and some of the best outcomes.
  • “It was only separated by sometimes a few blocks,” said Edgar Cage, the lead organizer for the advocacy group Together Baton Rouge.
  • “Underserved kids don’t have a path forward” in East Baton Rouge public schools, Cage said.
  • “Baton Rouge is home to some of the highest performing schools in the state,” according to the report.

Louisiana’s executive order

  • John Bel Edwards signed an executive order that slightly but importantly tweaked the system.
  • On top of the state board vote, the order gave local taxing bodies – such as school boards, sheriffs and parish or city councils – the ability to vote on their own individual portions of the tax exemptions.
  • And in 2019 the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board exercised its power to vote down an abatement.
  • Edwards’ executive order also capped the maximum exemption at 80% and tightened the rules so routine capital investments and maintenance were no longer eligible, Hansen said.
  • In 2019, the campaign worked: the school board rejected a $2.9 million property tax break bid by Exxon Mobil.
  • In fact, according to Hansen, loopholes were created during the rulemaking process around the governor’s executive order that allowed companies to weaken its effectiveness.
  • By receiving tax exemptions, Exxon Mobil was taking money from her salary to deepen their pockets, she said.
  • Christine Wen worked for the nonprofit organization Good Jobs First from June 2019 to May 2022 where she helped collect tax abatement data.
  • Nathan Jensen has received funding from the John and Laura Arnold Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and the Washington Center for Equitable Growth.

Former Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter to Join Outward Bound USA Board of Directors

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 17, 2023

NEW YORK, Jan. 17, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Outward Bound USA proudly announced today, the appointment of Michael Nutter, former Mayor of Philadelphia and founding member of the Philadelphia Outward Bound School, to the Outward Bound USA Board of Directors.

Key Points: 
  • Mayor Nutter steps into national board position to help advance the Outward Bound USA mission in support of tens of thousands of Outward Bound students across the U.S.
    NEW YORK, Jan. 17, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Outward Bound USA proudly announced today, the appointment of Michael Nutter, former Mayor of Philadelphia and founding member of the Philadelphia Outward Bound School, to the Outward Bound USA Board of Directors.
  • Outward Bound USA is honored to welcome Mayor Michael Nutter to its national Board of Directors, starting January 2023.
  • In an interview with Outward Bound alumni, Mayor Nutter remarked, "Outward Bound helped to propel me; to give me the confidence to take that first step and to become the Mayor of Philadelphia."
  • Today, the Philadelphia Outward Bound School is one of ten regional Schools chartered by Outward Bound USA and serves thousands of Philadelphia youth each year.

Stronghold Group Partners with Organizations to Deliver Over $2.4MM in Aid to Ukraine Front Line

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 3, 2023

In video and photo, the IFAKs were distributed to both frontline aid workers and Ukrainian soldiers headed to the front line.

Key Points: 
  • In video and photo, the IFAKs were distributed to both frontline aid workers and Ukrainian soldiers headed to the front line.
  • These IFAKs and antibiotics were delivered to the end users by William McNulty and his team from Operation White Stork.
  • The Azithromycin antibiotics were delivered to Ukraine for distribution to families, front line hospitals, and the Ukrainian military.
  • Many of the gifts and antibiotics organized and shipped by Project Aid & Rescue and Stronghold Group were eventually delivered to families in Ukraine with relatives residing in Philadelphia.

Edenred is Ready to Help Philadelphia Employers as It Becomes the Latest U.S City to Mandate Commuter Benefits for Workers

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 13, 2022

BOSTON, Dec. 13, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Philadelphia is about to become the latest city in the United States to require businesses to provide a commuter benefits program for employees thanks to a new law passed earlier this year by Philadelphia City Council.

Key Points: 
  • Edenred can help any Philadelphia business offer the best commuter benefits programs for their employees.
  • Edenred can help any Philadelphia business offer the best commuter benefits programs for their employees.
  • RideEco offers commuter benefits to companies located in the Delaware Valley who want to offer the benefit to employees.
  • "With our presence in the Philadelphia area, we are excited to help more businesses add commuter benefits to their benefit packages,"said Ed Fleischmann, General Manager of Edenred USA.

Essential Utilities Appoints New Chief of Staff

Retrieved on: 
Monday, August 8, 2022

Essential Utilities announced today the promotion of Dave Kralle to Chief of Staff to the Essential Chairman and CEO Christopher Franklin who created the role shortly after his appointment in 2015.

Key Points: 
  • Essential Utilities announced today the promotion of Dave Kralle to Chief of Staff to the Essential Chairman and CEO Christopher Franklin who created the role shortly after his appointment in 2015.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220805005495/en/
    Dave Kralle has been named chief of staff at Essential Utilities.
  • (Photo: Business Wire)
    As chief of staff, Kralle will play a key role, ensuring that the companys vision and core values including an increased emphasis on people are fully integrated throughout the organization.
  • Essential Chairman and CEO Christopher Franklin said, Dave has been a valuable asset for the company in his government affairs role, which requires many of the same skills that will make him successful as chief of staff.

Hilco Redevelopment Partners Donates 4,000 Thanksgiving Turkeys in Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, and Richmond, CA

Retrieved on: 
Monday, November 15, 2021

CHICAGO, Nov. 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Hilco Redevelopment Partners (HRP), an operating company within Hilco Global, today announced it is donating 4,000 Thanksgiving turkeys to underserved communities in Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, and Richmond, CA.

Key Points: 
  • CHICAGO, Nov. 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Hilco Redevelopment Partners (HRP), an operating company within Hilco Global, today announced it is donating 4,000 Thanksgiving turkeys to underserved communities in Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, and Richmond, CA.
  • "HRP doesn't just focus on sustainable redevelopment, we are also determined to be good neighbors by helping improve the lives of community members," said Roberto Perez, CEO of HRP.
  • "As many families continue to get back on their feet from the economic disruptions over the past year and a half, we are proud to donate 4000 turkeys this Thanksgiving.
  • In Chicago, HRP is working with Beyond the Ball, Casa Central, and Instituto del Progreso Latino to hand out turkeys on November 17th.

Philadelphia Energy Authority Launches New Green Bank - Philadelphia Green Capital Corp. - to Grow City's Clean Energy Economy

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, September 21, 2021

PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The Philadelphia Green Capital Corp. (PGCC) opens for business today to provide low-cost financing options for energy efficiency and renewable energy projects in the Philadelphia region.

Key Points: 
  • PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The Philadelphia Green Capital Corp. (PGCC) opens for business today to provide low-cost financing options for energy efficiency and renewable energy projects in the Philadelphia region.
  • As the non-profit green bank affiliate of the Philadelphia Energy Authority (PEA), PGCC's vision is to spur the growth of a thriving clean energy market that serves all Philadelphians.
  • Green banks are innovative financing organizations that expand clean energy markets by attracting private capital to green projects.
  • Councilmember Derek Green adds, "PGCC is a catalyst for a robust clean energy market in Philadelphia.