Philly Style Civic Design Review

Civic Design Review (CDR), a committee of the Philadelphia Planning Commission, is holding a special meeting to evaluate the Philadelphia 76ers’ proposal to build an arena adjacent to Chinatown. CDR is triggered by building projects of a certain size and/or location as outlined in the Philadelphia Code.

The Planning Commission is an agency within the Department of Planning and Development (DPD). Eleanor Sharpe, DPD interim director, said in a press release:

Whenever a major private development project is proposed, the City looks closely at the proposal to understand the complications, challenges, and potential positive and negative impacts. It is the City’s responsibility to make sure that the people of Philadelphia will benefit as much as possible if the project—in this case, an arena—becomes a reality. Figuring this out is what we mean by “due diligence.”

The public forum was preceded by 15 months of closed door meetings between Planning Commission officials and representatives of the Sixers – the same people who will appear before the CDR Committee.

An investigation by the Philadelphia Board of Ethics found that Sharpe, then-director of the Planning Commission, diligently met with Sixers’ lobbyists beginning in April 2022 – three months before the public announcement of 76 Place.

Records obtained in response to my Right-To-Know Law (RTKL) request show that Sharpe and Martine Decamp regularly communicated about 76 Place. Decamp, interim director of the Planning Commission, is a member of the CDR Committee.

After the Board of Ethics released its report, I submitted a new RTKL request to the Planning Commission, specifically requesting records related to Sharpe’s and Decamp’s communications about the proposed arena. The agency did not respond so I filed an appeal with the Office of Open Records (OOR).

The OOR issued its final determination on November 20, 2023. My appeal was granted in part and denied in part. The OOR found that portions of my request are sufficiently specific, and that the request is not disruptive or repetitive. The OOR ordered the City to search for responsive records and turn them over to me by December 20, 2023. Instead, the City appealed the OOR’s decision to the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas to block release of the records.

Paula Knudsen Burke, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press Local Legal Initiative attorney for Pennsylvania, is representing me in this matter.

Knudsen Burke’s due diligence will eventually disclose what Sharpe, Decamp and other Planning Commission officials said behind closed doors.

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