Lots of big American cities have a “skid row,” an impoverished part of town where the homeless and drug addicted often gather. San Francisco’s Tenderloin and the original Skid Row in Los Angeles are two of the best-known examples, but Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood is just as bad -- and it’s getting worse.
Kensington, which is just north along the El train from the gentrified Fishtown neighborhood, has long been a rough part of town. It began, writes Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Alfred Lubrano, as an industrial neighborhood full of factories making Stetson hats and Disston saws. Since the 1960s, when the factories shut down and the jobs left, the area has become known as a place to score heroin.
Things have gotten worse there as the opioid epidemic has morphed into a broader crisis. In the past year, Kensington’s homeless population, which has been linked to the epidemic, has more than doubled, from 271 to 700 people. In 2017, the area saw a 23 percent spike in homicides -- a trend that appeared to continue last year.
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My wife and I visited San Francisco some years ago and marveled at all the neat stuff. I wouldn't go back there on a bet!
ReplyDeleteGo to central PA- go to places like Scranton or Wilkes Bare or the rural counties- it looks like a bomb hit them. You can sense the despair in the air- but these are mostly white people suffering, so no one cares...
ReplyDeleteOpioids are not the cause, they are a symptom of skid rows in the cities. It's welfare and poverty that are the causes of skids rows. More welfare equals more projects and skids rows. Simple. Thanks Obama. Greatest growth of welfare recipients in our nation's history under Obama. That's one of the greatest legacies of his administration. And believe it or not, it was part of his goal to "fundamentally" change America (into a Socialist state). Skid rows, projects, and poverty are hallmarks of socialism.
ReplyDeleteJakes bury looks just as bad
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