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Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker’s first two budgets launched new efforts to fight litter and illegal dumping across the city. That’s not the case with her latest spending proposal, which city officials say would maintain these current initiatives and add funding for more surveillance cameras in parks.
Parker told members of City Council during her budget address Thursday that the city’s current efforts are starting to work.
“We are cleaning up and greening up our city in a significant way,” Parker said. “We are on our way to eliminating that ‘Filthadelphia’ motto. We are trying, Philadelphia.”
Tackling litter and illegal dumping, problems that plague some of the city’s poorest neighborhoods, has been one of Parker’s top priorities since taking office in 2024. She campaigned on making Philadelphia a “safer, cleaner and greener city.”
Her first budget in 2024 included more funding for illegal dumping cleanups in residential areas, curbside bulk item pickup by appointment and a twice-weekly trash collection pilot in some neighborhoods. It expanded the Taking Care of Business corridor-cleaning program Parker introduced as a council member.
Parker’s second budget added money for vacant lot cleanups and anti-dumping efforts in city parks.
The roughly $7 billion operating budget Parker proposed Thursday for the fiscal year starting in July does not include any new line items for fighting illegal dumping, said Sabrina Maynard, the city’s budget director, during a press briefing Wednesday. But it would add funding for 125 additional surveillance cameras in parks.
“We’re continuing our investments in those areas,” Maynard said. “We’ve made really substantial ones in our first and second budgets, … we’re not proposing taking any of them away.”
Last fall, the city launched a task force of 40 existing city employees, newly empowered to issue larger fines for illegal dumping of up to $5,000 per item.
Since this task force formed, the city issued 105 violation notices and secured $3.5 million in judgments against illegal dumpers, Parker said Thursday.
“I don’t simply want you to listen to me saying that our city is cleaner and greener. I want you to think about what they’ve already done,” Parker said. “We’ve executed 94,000 actions last year. Cleaner streets. Illegal dumping tackled. Twice-a-week trash collection restored.”
Parker said illegal dumping on neighborhood blocks lowers quality of life and “disrespects communities.”
“That’s why in this budget … we continue to strengthen our One Philly Illegal Dumping Task Force,” she said. “We are sending a clear message that illegal dumping will not be tolerated in our city of Philadelphia.”