Citizens’ Alliance may survive its stormy past as the courts have appointed the head of the Center City District to determine its future.
Citizens’ Alliance
The fate of Citizens’ Alliance for Better Neighborhoods has been a mystery since the convictions of Vince Fumo — who co-created the nonprofit — and its former Executive Director Ruth Arnao. Weeks after the March verdict against the former state senator, Attorney General Tom Corbett filed a lawsuit against the organization once at 1137 Wharton St. to disband its board or revoke its nonprofit status.
Shortly after that, former Executive Director Christian DiCicco announced on the group’s Web site, www.citizensalliance.us, services would no longer be provided due to dwindling funds and continuous litigation.
As the new year rolls in, the 17-year-old nonprofit still has its works, such as street and sidewalk sweeping, graffiti removal, bulk trash pickup, vacant lot abatement and the like, on hold while the courts decide its fate, whether it be dissolution or reorganization, but the first step was naming an interim leader.
Dec. 2, the Attorney General agreed to drop some charges with the stipulation Center City District President/CEO Paul Levy be put in charge of advising the outcome of the nonprofit Fumo and Arnao, who are serving month No. 4 of their respective jail sentences, were found guilty of defrauding of more than $1 million.
“It’s his baby now,” Citizens’ Alliance lawyer Thomas A. “Buck” Riley Jr., of Riley Riper Hollin & Colagreco in Exton, said. “He’s the sole director. The court has appointed him the sole director.”
At the outset, the Attorney General’s mission was to preserve the charitable assets of Citizens’ Alliance and recover what had been mishandled, Mark A. Pacella, chief deputy attorney general of the Charitable Trusts and Organizations Section, said, adding they were open to suggestions from the nonprofit, such as who to appoint as the interim head.
“We did want to secure Citizens’ assets and we were able to do that in a relatively short period of time,” he said of Levy’s role. “Citizens’ assets are now secured.”
Riley joined Joe Lundy, in representing the nonprofit, setting out to accomplish three goals: Prevent its disbanding; hire someone to handle its assets; and keep those assets for the benefit of South Philadelphia, Riley said.
“It looks like this nonprofit has really done some great stuff down here in South Philly,” he said of his and Lundy’s thought process. “I think we ought to look at this on a collaborative basis and see if we can do something. It’s gone off the tracks. It’s obviously in a train wreck.”
The two brainstormed who would be suitable to put the organization back on track and approached Levy in August, the same month as Fumo’s sentencing, for the role of interim conservator, which he took on last month.
Separate from his Center City job, he will “oversee direct and implement all aspects of the organization’s day-to-day operations and affairs,” which includes leasing or selling properties, if necessary, according to the consent decree.
“There was a lot of good work that was done despite other problems,” Levy said. “The work on Passyunk Avenue has been very successful. Whether [Citizens’ Alliance} can afford to serve as large of an area remains to be seen.”
Levy, who will be compensated $225 an hour from the nonprofit’s resources, will be responsible for hiring an auditor to check the books dating from Jan. 1, 2007, to Sept. 30, ’09, in addition to assessing the remaining assets, which include real estate mostly on and around Passyunk, such as Christopher Columbus Charter School, 1242 S. 13th St., warehouses and a few properties outside the area, as well as equipment, such as street sweepers and trash trucks.
He also will recommend if it can be restructured and, if so, how. Related, necessary expenses such as attorneys’ fees, fines, settlements and consultant salaries also will be covered by the organization, according to the consent decree.
“At this point, we have the audits under way,” Levy said. “There were not audits completed after 2005 to 2006.”
Levy’s recommendations for the organization’s future are expected by May 31 and must be approved by the court before their implementation.
“We want to get it in the hands of the court as soon as we can,” Pacella said.
Once the Attorney General receives Levy’s report, it may be months before it goes to the judge for approval, but there is no timeline for a potential reorganization since it depends on the complexity of the recommendation.
“The ultimate result may be to create a new organization or sell off certain assets,” Pacella said. “It may not be all that dramatic.”
The Tasker Street Fountain is as good as new -- or is at least on its way. Earlier this year, the upkeep of the fountain at Passyunk Avenue and Tasker was going downhill. The five-year-old centerpiece was algae-ridden and had broken lights, pumps and speakers that prevented Rat Pack tunes from playing and water spouting from its mermaid or cherubs.
What are your thoughts on the sentences handed down to Vince Fumo and Ruth Arnao?
Linda Sarcone and daughter Lauren Iannarella lease one of the properties still owned by Passyunk Avenue Revitalization, a for-profit subsidiary of Citizens' Alliance for Better Neighborhoods. The two have operated On a Whim, 1838 E. Passyunk Ave., since November, selling women's handbags, jewelry and shoes. Prior to opening up shop, Sarcone met a former coworker, who convinced her to open on the avenue since rents were affordable.
Fumo gets four-and-a-half After five months of a federal trial, countless witnesses and a day of sentencing, the ex-senator will serve 55 months for the 137 counts he was found guilty of in the spri...
By next month, Citizens' Alliance for Better Neighborhoods will stop providing services, something it has been doing for almost two decades, and that is only the beginning of the far-reaching impact of the Vince Fumo verdict.
A local nonprofit was expected to collapse after its former head and an ex-senator were convicted of defrauding it of millions. They are currently serving month No. 10 behind bars — one year and one day and 55 months, respectively. Now as a result of an assessment, the nonprofit could get back to helping the neighborhood where it is based pending a judge’s approval.
Former state Sen. Vincent Fumo is scheduled to be released from federal prison Aug. 26, 2013. Meanwhile, his lawyers are actively trying to get him a new trial while Citizens Alliance for Better Neighborhoods’ former head accepted her conviction.
More than a year into his role as Citizens’ Alliance for Better Neighborhoods’ interim conservator, Center City District’s CEO Paul Levy has stepped down from the post. But not before first launching the new organization: Passyunk Avenue Revitalization Corp., or PARC.
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