City Controller Alan Butkovitz today accused the School District of Philadelphia of letting eight shuttered district buildings deteriorate into dangerously unsafe condition, and called the empty facilities 鈥渃atastrophes waiting to happen.鈥
Each of the buildings鈥攚hich includes schools closed as long ago as 1998 and 2001鈥攚ere examined by investigators from the controller鈥檚 office and a licensed civil engineer.
What they , documented in and video, were broken windows, unsealed buildings, empty hypodermic needles and used condoms, human waste, garbage, empty liquor bottles, ominously large cracks in outer walls and other evidence of neglect.
Conditions are so bad at the former Roberto Clemente Middle School (at 5th and Rising Sun Avenue) that the building should be demolished immediately, Butkovitz said. Indeed, the report contends that each of the buildings should be torn down, partly for safety鈥檚 sake, partly to make the sites more appealing to would-be developers, a job that would cost as estimated $5 million.
Butkovitz did not share his findings with the school district before releasing them this morning to the press, and the district did not immediately return a request for comment.
The Philadelphia controller鈥檚 report includes findings for each of the following schools:
- Former Clemente Middle School
- Alcorn Annex
- Beeber Wynnefield alternative program
- Rudolph Walton
- Simon Muhr
- George W. Childs
- Elizabeth Gillespie
- Ada Lewis
SOURCE: PlanPhilly/Philadelphia Public School Notebook
But in the past, district officials have said the eight surplus properties cited in the controller鈥檚 report would be some of the first to be disposed of using the district鈥檚 newly drafted adaptive reuse policy. That policy calls for creating evaluation teams comprised of district, community and politically appointed members to consider new uses proposed by non-profit and for-profit developers for shuttered school buildings.
The same policy is intended to speed the sale of future shuttered schools, including the recommended by district staff last month.
It isn鈥檛 entirely clear how much private-sector interest there will be for some of these sites, particularly those with aging facilities in low-income neighborhoods. Others, such as the enormous West Philadelphia High building (which was vacated only this year, and thus was not included on the surplus property list examined by the controller鈥檚 office) seem certain to attract intense developer interest.
The School District of Philadelphia is hardly the only public landowner that has failed to be an exemplary manager of its unused properties. The City of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Housing Authority, the Redevelopment Authority and other public agencies all own lots and buildings that are neighborhood eyesores and worse.
Butkovitz, though, contended that the district鈥檚 failings as a landlord were magnified by the sheer size of the abandoned school sites. And he said neighbors of the facilities were distressed that these former community assets were in some cases becoming magnets for crime and drug use.
As controller, Butkovitz is the city鈥檚 official auditor, but he does not have formal power to audit the state-run school district.
That has not stopped the controller from being a frequent critic of the district, dating back to at least 2005. That was the year Harvey Rice鈥攏ow Butkovitz鈥檚 deputy鈥攍eft the school district to join the controller鈥檚 office, touching off a feud between the two offices that has shown little signs of abating ever since.
In one of many Butkovitz broadsides against the district, he warned in 2008 that the abandoned Thomas Edison High building at 7th and Lehigh posed a risk to public safety. That critique proved prescient. The building was in August, just weeks after the district had sold the property off to a developer.