Submitted by unenlightenedgoblin t3_10ds4lh in Pennsylvania
Of all the decaying cities in PA, something about Chester particularly stands out to me. It’s just outside Philly on the I-95/Northeast corridor, has lots of relatively high-paying industrial jobs nearby and port access to the Atlantic, and from some of the old buildings it’s clear that there was once a pretty vibrant city there. It surprises me that it’s decayed as dramatically as it has (the statistics from Chester are…not good), as it seems to be a really obvious site for urban development.
I’m familiar with some of the general trends at play (suburban flight, disinvestment, corruption, failure of public services), but can anyone shed some particular light on Chester’s past and present? What would it take to bring Chester back (particularly in a way that includes existing residents) and who’s working to help make it happen?
PregnantSuperman t1_j4n5a2e wrote
Chester is in horrendous financial shape and recently declared bankruptcy, which I believe only happened with one other municipality in PA history. It has tons of debt and not nearly enough revenue coming in. It actually has a special Governor-appointed "receiver" who is solely there to work with the city get its finances in shape. In addition to all the factors you mentioned, Chester also suffered from corruption and ballooning police pension obligations that ran rampant for decades. I believe the receiver and the state govt has been working to sell the city's assets for a while, which is where the giant controversy about selling its water system to Aqua came from.
The only thing that Chester has going for it is the soccer stadium. Money has been dumped into that place like crazy and it's great, but there's only so far a single asset like that can take a place.