Sarah Williams
I started working for Anne Spirn while I was in landscape architecture
school at the University of Pennsylvania. I was her research
assistant. Later on I started to manage the web site for her. After
that I got more involved in the community group and I would go out to
Sulzberger School. I worked with some of the students there teaching
them GIS. I made the decision to leave landscape architecture school.
The Philadelphia Water Department asked if I would work for them on
the project. I wasn't officially working for the Philadelphia Water
Department, but I was a consultant under Camp Dresser McGee (CDM).
The Water Department needed someone to work as a project manager that
had a background in planning. It wasn't easy at the Water Department
to get a position like that. So the best way for them to do that was
to hire me as a consultant through CDM, who does most of their
consulting.
When I got to the Water Department Joanne Dahme wasn't involved in the
Mill Creek Project. I always involved her in things to make sure she
was updated and knew what was going on with the project because she
was interested in it. When I left she got a lot more involved. The
Water Department has to have an educational component, because of
their requirements through the EPA. Joanne was in charge of doing
outreach and education with community groups in the six major
watersheds in Philadelphia. Mill Creek isn't an official watershed
because it's in the sewer. But she would do anything to help with the
project, any educational outreach kinds of things. When I left she
became much more responsible for those types of things.
The employees who work in the Office of Watersheds don't have a
background in planning or landscape architecture. Most of them are
engineers looking to protect our Watersheds. Howard Neukrug-who is
the head of the Office of Watersheds-was really interested in Anne's
ideas about using vacant lots for water retention or water
reclamation. He paired up with her to write a grant on the premise
that the Water Department could get the money and Anne could create
the design. The Water Department received the grant about the same
time that Anne left for MIT. They were worried that without the
constant support from Anne they would not be able to fulfill the goals
of the grant. They understood the ideas to some extent, but not
completely. So that's why they offered me the position. I spent a
lot of time with the Water Department trying to get everybody on the
same page. It was not easy getting everyone on the same page. The
Water Department had a hard time understanding how they should work
with this community on a design project. Joanne has a lot of
experience with communities so she was familiar with what to do. But
other people that I worked with were not familiar with the community
work. They were familiar with talking to the community in the sense
that they understood it was part of the project task to go talk to the
community and tell them that you are doing an engineering project.
But trying to explain to the community that this is the Mill Creek,
and adding a watershed education component is different.
The grant was an EPA storm water quality control grant that has to do
with combined sewers. Basically what you had to do to fulfill the
requirements of the EPA was to make sure that water would be detained
on the site and that the water would be cleaned before it entered the
sewers. Therefore you were helping to clean water in the combined
sewer overflow. Usually the projects that get this type of grant are
not land-based projects-they'll be some kind of engineering project
where they stick a large tank underground and they have a huge
filtration system in the tank. The water filters through and then
goes into the combined sewer overflow. There's not usually a design
or a detention component of it. There isn't usually a component where
you were trying to create something that would also be suitable for
communities.
Anne had been the Water Department's connection to most of the people
in the community. I was part of the West Philadelphia Landscape
Project before I was hired by the Water Department. But most of the
stuff I had done for Anne up to that point was background things like
web stuff. So I didn't have a huge relationship with the community
members. They knew who I was and they knew I worked for Anne. But
when she left for MIT, all that was left was the Water Department and
so I was seen as a city employee, not as Anne's student. The
community didn't have the same amount of trust that they would have
had if it were Anne. The first meetings that I had with them, they
didn't want to talk about the project at all. They saw us as city
employees, so they brought up every problem they had in the
neighborhood. They weren't interested in working on this grant until
we dealt with some of the issues that they had about the neighborhood.
It turned out that we couldn't start working right away because we had
to start by building a trust relationship. The problems in that
neighborhood are crime, drugs, providing a good home, clothes. To
them, caring about a water detention basin was not a priority. They
said that at the first couple of meetings with me. And it made sense
to me too. I could really understand. They said, a couple of times,
"We like this project, we think it's a great project, we understand
that it's good for the environment, but you're putting all this money
in to invest in a park and couldn't you invest in helping our kids
have jobs and stuff?" We actually did pay the kids who did work
during the summer on the project.
A lot of the problems that community residents had were because they
live on the Mill Creek and their houses are falling in or they have
water in their basements. I did a lot of research about the
conditions of the sewers and I tried to figure out exactly what was
going on. I had the Water Department do video tapes of the sewer to
show the residents the quality of their sewers. What I found was that
the reason that most people in Mill Creek are having problems with the
water in their neighborhood is because their roof gutter drains were
draining onto their land. The Mill Creek area is a buried floodplain
and it is mostly ash fill. Most of Philadelphia is in a similar
situation, but the neighborhoods that seem to be affected most are the
places where people don't have the funding to make sure that their
house is maintained or the water on their property is maintained in
the correct way. I set up a meeting with all the different agencies
that provide funding for different homeownership projects. There are
all these different grants that the city offers for home maintenance
and home repair. I set up a symposium where each one of the
organizations made a presentation and then had a representative in the
back who would help residents fill out the applications. We connected
with the Department of Housing to do homeowner workshops in order to
teacher people about their roof leader drains and how to fix them.
Joanne helped me a lot with this because she's worked for the city for
a long time and she has a lot of connections with other city agencies.
These projects helped us gain trust and then the community was ready
to talk to us more about the project. But we had to do the work much
more rapidly at this point because it was a year long project and it
took us half a year just to prepare.
One of the experiences where I felt like there was a real turning
point in the project was the meeting when we picked out the vacant
piece of land with the community. I had targeted a few lots that I
thought would be good, based on a number of factors, and then they
didn't like them. The spot they chose was really a mess. It had a
lot of trash in it and after meeting, they said, it would make us
really happy if you would do something with that lot instead of some
of these lots that aren't really doing anything to anybody. Some of
the lots were larger, and open, they had a little bit of trash on
them. But this particular lot is nestled in between two buildings and
was full of trash, like people's Christmas trees and junk. And they
wanted it cleaned up, that was something that was important to them.
So we decided that we would clean it and then we would also create a
garden there. Up to that point we didn't have a piece of land to work
with. It was great to have them express interest in the project, and
they seemed excited. I felt like we were really doing something good
because we were cleaning up a vacant lot that they felt was causing
problems in the community. I felt like the project was actually doing
everything I had hoped it would be doing-it was cleaning up the vacant
land, it would help the Water Department with their water problems, it
was close to the school so it would provide connections to the
children. That was a big memory as a turning point.
There were a lot of unanswered questions like if we take a vacant lot,
who owns that vacant lot. The Water Department didn't want to own it,
and we didn't have the support yet of the community group, so they
couldn't own it. And the city wouldn't approve any resources to build
on vacant land that we didn't own or a community group didn't own.
Peter Godfrey started to get involved from CDM. He had also worked
with the city for a long time and knew a lot of political players and
was able to help me deal with a lot of those issues. We found out
that the Redevelopment Authority owned the lot. It had been a house
that had been torn down and they acquired the vacant land. Most of
the vacant land in the city is either owned by the Redevelopment
Authority or the tax assessment department. The Redevelopment
Authority doesn't like to give us the land, because they might decide
they want to redevelop on it some time. The Water Department couldn't
buy it because their policy right now is to get rid of land, not to
acquire new land. We had to build something, and so they did this
five year lease. They're hoping that the community will take it over
after the five years. In order to insure the longevity of the lasting
influence that this is going to have, someone has to be there
maintaining it.
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