A civic association is pushing the school district to meet demands from residents regarding the local super site.
The super site at 10th and Bigler streets hosts the annual Thanksgiving Day football game between Southern and Neumann-Goretti.
Residents were not pleased when they saw area high school baseball teams warming up and practicing at 10th and Bigler streets two weeks ago as they feared foul balls would launch into the community and potentially hurt someone or damage their property.
“We didn’t agree with that,” John Di Giorgio, attorney for the South Philadelphia Communities Civic Association, said of the high school teams practicing. “We are kind of surprised [the School District of Philadelphia] did that. Hopefully that won’t be a flash point.”
The association’s offices are based at the site.
The Zoning Board of Adjustment told both the association and the district when they met March 10 that the fields were off limits until the three met again at this month’s board meeting, Tony Greco, president of the association, said.
The district agreed to install netting around the baseball fields to prevent foul balls from flying into the neighborhood, but the civic association decided to fight the school district over additional quality-of-life demands at a meeting before the Zoning Board of Adjustment until the district agreed to make good on its word, Greco said. After a change in leadership within the district, promises were not kept, he noted.
“We do want the netting, but we had no other option than to contest it,” Greco said.
The School District of Philadelphia communications office did not return calls or e-mails requesting a comment by press time.
A full list of complaints were listed in a Feb. 17 letter from Di Giorgio to the Susan J. Costello and Thomas P. Witt of the Center-City based firm Cozen O’Connor that is representing the school district. It included complaints of the site being overbooked with sometimes two or three games scheduled for the same day causing traffic congestion around the location. During the fall it serves as the home football field for several high schools, including Bok, Eighth and Mifflin streets, Southern, 2101 S. Broad St., and Neumann-Goretti, 10th and Moore streets.
An irrigation system that was promised during construction has yet to be installed, nor has a curtain to prevent people and cars from blocking the pavement. The public address system is not maintained at a volume level of one as the district indicated it would. Nearby neighbors have noted it’s causing a noise disruption to their community.
Neumann-Goretti also is treated as a “stepchild,” Greco said. While many of the neighborhood children attend that school in addition to public schools like Southern and Bok, Greco said the district charges $2,200 per use.
“It’s a public facility,” Greco said. “It’s not a private company and they’re trying to squeeze every cent out of it.”
Five years ago with former Superintendent Paul Vallas at the helm, the district created four super sites as opposed to revamping fields across the city. South Philly’s followed similar projects in the Northeast, Germantown and near North Philly’s Simon Gratz.
Prior to the makeover, the field was “a dust bowl” with a rusty fence and no irrigation system, Greco said, adding it was frequented by drug users.
“We had an opportunity here to clean up the entire facility and add to the value of the neighborhood,” he said of the super site proposal.
After four community meetings that allowed residents to provide input on the approximately $10-million project, the civic association provided three conditions to the school district, including the inclusion an office for the civic on the second floor of the field house, which the SPCCA paid for with a $50,000 state grant, as well as allowing Neumann-Goretti to use the fields for games and when not in use and Stella Maris, 814 Bigler St., students to use the facilities for recreation, which were agreed upon verbally with Vallas and his staff prior to his ’07 departure for a new role as superintendent in New Orleans. The association also obtained a $300,000 grant from the Sports Complex Special Services District for the project, Greco added.
“Before everything was done and I could get everything down in writing — all these arrangements and conditions … everyone I was dealing with was out of the loop,” Greco said.
The site’s revamp broke ground in September ’06 allowing a grand opening for the ’08-’09 school year, but the outstanding problems lingered after its completion, Greco said.
Within the last year, even City Councilman-at-Large Jim Kenney’s office has stepped in as a mediator, administrative aide Rich Lazor said.
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