
To help pay for the increased funding, the budget calls for a new billboard excise tax, higher billboard-licensing fees, and a tax on valet-parking operations, the Philadelphia Daily News reported May 25.
Councilman Michael A. Nutter, a frequent critic of Street, said in the May 26 Philadelphia Inquirer that the mayor’s last-minute decision to restore money for the library and other popular programs proved that the funding crisis had been “manufactured.”
Amy Dougherty, executive director of the Friends of the Free Library of Philadelphia, gave credit to library supporters whose “rallies, letters, e-mails, faxes, petition drives, city council testimony,” and other publicity “helped to keep the heat on our lawmakers and build a low murmur of concern into a groundswell of outrage that could not be ignored.”
Posted May 27, 2005.