It could'a been us! Thanks again, Councilwoman Blackwell. You were for  us 
there when we needed you.
 
Al Krigman
  
____________________________________

>From this morning's Inqy
Center City District sued over its fees
By Joseph A. Slobodzian  
Inquirer Staff Writer 
Former Pennsylvania Supreme Court  Justice Russell M. Nigro has sued the 
city and the Center City District,  contending the district's assessment for 
public maintenance services is not  equally applied to condominium owners.  
The proposed class-action lawsuit, filed this month in Philadelphia Common  
Pleas Court, says the district allows condo owners who bought before Sept. 
13,  2005, to "opt out" of paying the property levy. The levy is mandatory 
for owners  who bought after that date.  
The former justice - defeated in a 2005 retention election - bought a $1.35 
 million condominium on Washington Square on April 28 and at closing had to 
pay  $1,176 to the district to cover that year's assessment, according to 
the  lawsuit.  
Nigro, a member of the city's Board of Revision of Taxes, subsequently  
learned that Center City condominium owners who bought before Sept. 13, 2005,  
could file an affidavit and choose not to pay the district charge.  
George Bochetto, the Center City litigator who filed the suit on Nigro's  
behalf, said yesterday that the district's assessment was really a tax, and 
that  the collection policy violated the taxing-uniformity clause of the 
Pennsylvania  Constitution and the equal-protection clause of the U.S. 
Constitution.  
Bochetto called the district's assessment policy "a most peculiar 
patchwork,  a hodgepodge," adding that he was "surprised no one has challenged 
this 
before  now."  
The Center City District was created in 1990, the first of several  
quasi-governmental improvement districts designed to make key downtown  
neighborhoods cleaner and safer. The district concept enabled neighborhoods to  
obtain 
public services that city government could no longer afford.  
The district covers most of Center City's business and residential  
neighborhoods: 120 blocks and more than 4,500 properties. It is roughly bounded 
 by 
the Schuylkill on the west, Sixth Street on the east, Vine Street on the  
north and Locust Street on the south, with extensions along the Broad Street  
corridor north to Spring Garden Street and south to Pine Street.  
Each property is charged an annual amount that helps fund the district, 
this  year yielding $15.2 million, according to the district's budget.  
That the lawsuit is a first is about the only thing on which Bochetto and  
Center City District president Paul R. Levy agree.  
Levy said yesterday that the district's authority to charge property owners 
 was part of the legislation creating the agency. The opt-out exemption was 
 created in the district's early days when condominiums were rare in 
Philadelphia  - basically just Academy House, the tower at 1420 Locust St. 
behind 
the Academy  of Music.  
At that time, Levy explained, Academy House was dominated by elderly  
residents, many of whom said they could not afford the district's charge of  
about $93 each. The solution, Levy said, was to allow any condominium owner for 
 
whom the unit was their prime residence - not an investment - to file a 
sworn  affidavit seeking an exemption.  
By 2005, however, the number of senior citizens seeking the exemption was  
dropping and Center City was in the midst of a condominium building boom. 
The  district's board decided to make the assessment mandatory but to allow 
those who  had exemptions to keep them until they sold their units, Levy said. 
 
He said he saw the exemption as an easy way of accommodating senior 
citizens  with limited incomes, especially because the lost revenue was more 
than 
offset  by voluntary contributions to the district by otherwise exempt 
nonresidential  organizations.  
"We're really talking about pennies here," Levy added.  
Since the 2005 policy change, he said, the number of all district property  
owners with the exemption has gone from about 19 percent to 7 percent.  
"We were surprised at the lawsuit," Levy said. "It's the first time anyone  
has challenged this, and he [Nigro] never contacted us about this before 
the  suit. We're quite willing to sit down and talk whenever he  wants."

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