Local residents pulled up their sleeves for a day of beautification as a part of an annual citywide event.
Karen Wolfe, right, and daughter Gwendolyn Koziara, 7, planted petunias with other LoMo volunteers outside of Southern, 2101 S. Broad St., as part of the third annual Philly Spring Cleanup Saturday.
Those Philadelphians not busy sleeping in Saturday might have noticed some strange sounds from the outdoors. Amidst the everyday clamor of traffic and the morning chirping coming from birds, one might have been able to discern the swishing of brooms against the sidewalks or the crunching of shovels in beds of dirt. Curious residents may have stuck their heads out of their windows and doors to find a bevy of locals working to beautify the neighborhood.
The early hustle and bustle was all a part of the 2010 Philly Spring Cleanup, “Keep up the Sweep up,” which ran 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Eager residents young and old were removing litter from pavements, planting trees, and tending greenery in neighborhoods spanning the city limits.
South Philadelphia in particular hosted a total of 22 cleanup sites, which included efforts as simple as neighbors pitching in to clean up their blocks as well as wider projects coordinated by local civic groups. Some official sites included Franklin Delano Roosevelt Park, 20th Street and Pattison Avenue, Stephen Girard Park, 21st and Shunk streets, and Gold Star Park, Sixth and Wharton streets, among many others.
“We cleaned from Eighth and Wolf all the way down to Broad and Wolf,” Nicola Gordon, resident of 24th and Moore streets, said about her family’s desire to give back to the community.
While the citywide event was orchestrated by Mayor Michael A. Nutter and the Philadelphia Streets Department, groups like the Lower Moyamensing Civic Association concerted efforts on a community basis. LoMo participants worked primarily at South Philadelphia High School, 2101 S. Broad St.
The entire stretch of pavement bordering Southern was arrayed in chalk illustrations meticulously drawn by participants that day. Sidewalk art included sketches of trees as well as environmentally-friendly messages, such as “This way to a cleaner Philly” or “Recycle.”
“About 100 people turned out for the cleanup,” Kim Massare, president of LoMo, said. “We have 30 members from City Year, a Target team, and some people from Beneficial Bank, as well as local neighbors.”
Volunteers spent the morning handing recycling bins out to residents, distributing flyers about the Recyclebank program and clearing the surrounding blocks of debris.
During the afternoon hours, LoMo volunteers switched to tasks like painting fences and planting tulips in the small orchard of the Southern parking lot. The Southern orchard is the only official green space within the bounds of LoMo’s jurisdiction, according to Massare.
Karen Wolfe, of the 2500 block of South Hancock Street, joined her daughter Gwendolyn Koziara, 7, in gardening.
“We really wanted to help make South Philadelphia a little cleaner and a little more beautiful,” she said.
Another volunteer, Rich Cucarese, traveled all the way from Levittown with his two daughters, Gia, 7, and Arianna, 5.
“We’ve been trying to get some stuff started in our area because we have a lot of problems down there with a lot of trash around the roads and nobody wants to take any responsibility,” he said. “We come down to Philly sometimes to go to the zoo, so we heard this was going on and we wanted to come down and help.”
At about the same time and a bit further to the north, the South of South Neighborhood Association was busy with similar projects around the area of 22nd and Christian streets.
“Probably around 50 to 75 volunteers showed up at our two locations,” said Andrew Dalzell, program coordinator of SOSNA.
The first SOSNA team met at Broad Street and Washington Avenue and continued west to 16th Street while the second team started at 22nd and South streets and moved south to Washington Avenue. In addition, volunteers focused on cleaning up an area construction site as well as a shopping market lot.
“People got involved in a smattering of different ways,” Dalzell said. “They joined up through our e-mail list or went to the Philly Spring Cleanup Web site and found our site through there.”
A popular proverb notes “One man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” During Saturday’s Philly Spring Cleanup, thousands of volunteers tweaked the saying, proving that one man’s, woman’s or child’s rubbish is everyone’s nuisance. For five hours, more than 100,000 dedicated denizens enhanced their confines, taking to the streets to defeat debris.
Once the future comes around, many a movie director and animator has promised us flying cars, robotic servants with existential crises and even the occasional asteroid apocalypse. On a much smaller scale, these creative gurus also take it for granted that everything will be immaculately clean, from whitewashed spaceports to litter-free city sidewalks. But for some, like the Lower Moyamensing Civic Association, the future cannot come soon enough.
“Everybody loves a great flea market,” Kim Massare said in explaining the inspiration behind Saturday’s Lower Moyamensing Civic Association Spring Flea Market and Community Fair.
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1. Marni Reven said... on Apr 17, 2010 at 07:19PM
“What a great story. Positive for a change. Wonderful shot of mother and daughter working together to beautify Philly!”