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Tim McCloskey

Kensington resident

Like everything else, it’s not just the closure itself — I understand that things need to be closed sometimes to be cleaned and repaired — [it’s that] once again, the city has no plan for the other things that happen.

How are they gonna make sure [this closure] doesn’t happen again? How are they going to make sure it’s not gonna happen at my El stop, which is the next one, Allegheny Avenue? What are they gonna do to all the people that have to walk these six blocks [from Somerset Station to Allegheny Station], which on a normal day, at this time, will be covered with drugs, [people who use drugs], and drug dealers.

The drug use and the drug dealing, especially, has gotten a lot worse in this neighborhood. It was never a great neighborhood, but it’s gotten worse in the past year, a lot worse. And nobody ever talks about the drug dealers. They’re the ones with the guns, and they’re the ones I’m most afraid of. You gotta nip it in the bud and say, “How are we gonna make sure it doesn’t happen again?” 

Whenever there’s an event, the city cleans up. But we’re worried about what the next step is, what’s going to happen? That’s the big thing.

Even with a SEPTA police officer at Somerset Station, there’s 24-hour drug dealing going on. … A lot of people stopped taking the El completely, and the bus is no better. So the solution is they’re going to close the El stop down, and they’re going to give us shuttle buses. The same people are going to be on the shuttle buses, too. So you’re not helping us at all.

They’ve done better recently at cleaning up the amount of dropped needles on the ground. But you still sometimes will see a pile of 12 or 15 or 20 in one spot. And you see kids running down the street, like 5-years-old, and you want to grab them. I can’t imagine a kid falling on a pile of needles.

Editor’s note: During the closure, SEPTA has put in place a temporary service plan to allow customers to use the Route 3 Bus – with a free transfer – to connect to and from the Market-Frankford Line at Allegheny or Huntingdon Stations. There’s no shuttle bus service at this time. 

There’s got to be better security. I don’t understand why they can’t have more cameras. I don’t understand why the city can’t organize a drug court, where people don’t necessarily have to be arrested for drug use or anything. 

There should be treatment somewhere upstate. The state of Pennsylvania could support drug treatment programs away from the open air drug market [in Kensington]. 

Other countries and other cities have drug courts where people that are involved in drug crime don’t necessarily go to jail, they get directed towards treatment. We can divert people away, but you have to get people away from here that are the problem. A lot of people are not from around here. A lot of them are from Reading, Easton, Upstate [Pennsylvania], New Jersey, and Delaware. They come from all over now because it’s known as a place to get cheap dope, and the police don’t arrest you for anything. So there’s got to be some plan to get people away from it. There has to be a “carrot and a stick” to help people get off of drugs, and get people that are violent and that are breaking into people’s houses to leave.

We also need more security; more street cleaning. They’ve got to regulate a little bit better the people who come in and give food out. People can pull up and have a little barbecue, start giving out food, and the place ends up being a mess. There are plastic bottles everywhere; pizza boxes. At night that attracts mice and rats and cats.

I don’t know about a community advisory board. There’s gotta be some strong leadership from City Hall. There has to be strong leadership from the top. A committee, I mean that can be packed with activists who don’t even live around here, and have their own agenda.


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Editors: Zari Tarazona, Claire Wolters / Designer: Henry Savage

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