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Editorial: Get down to business

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The more things change, the more they stay the same.
That old saying applies to so many things, including the long commercial strip along Bustleton Avenue in Northeast Philly’s Castor Gardens and Oxford Circle sections — where the types of businesses, like the surrounding neighborhoods, have undergone somewhat of a transformation of late.
Change can be a good thing, even in the wonderful world of good old-fashioned family-run businesses, which are prevalent on Bustleton Avenue, which has seen an influx of Asian, Middle Eastern and Hispanic merchants.
Indeed, ZIP code 19149 was described as a “global nation” by an Asian-American official of the city’s Commerce Department, which last week stepped up efforts to create a Bustleton Avenue Business Association.
The new group would address issues that long ago have been tackled by organizations in other Philadelphia neighborhoods, including security, sidewalk cleanliness and parking. To be sure, the Northeast deserves some of the blame for the City of Brotherly Love’s other, less charitable nickname, Filthydelphia, so whatever the new Bustleton Avenue group can do to chip away at that embarrassing moniker would be welcome. Upgrades to the sidewalks and installation of benches would be a good start.
The new inhabitants on the residential and business sectors, along with the old-timers who have not yet fled to greener, “safer” pastures in suburbia, represent an opportunity to rejuvenate an area that once put the “bustle” in Bustleton. All it takes is for the merchants — ALL of the merchants — to join together and make it happen.
Send letters to: pronews@bsmphilly.com

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Paulina 06/27/2012 12:12 am
I am in a new development, and my house is 4 years old. There's some amuont of guilt to this, knowing this was a farmer's field not too long ago. For years I've tried to rejuvenate an American elm on the corner of our lot who had its roots all scraped away. But the street trees they put in they've replaced twice. They plant them in early December, don't water ever again, and now the 2nd tree (12 tall) is dead to about 3 feet off the ground with desparate new 4 shoots lurching out in the cardinal directions. Shoot look nice for the garden tour this summer! This mostly-dead thing has been sitting out there for almost three years!
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