Mayor Cherelle Parker taps a Kensington activist and ward leader to administration post

mayor cherelle parker taps a kensington activist and ward leader to administration post

City Councilmember Jim Harrity cheers behind Cherelle Parker during a get-out-the-vote motorcade for her campaign in November. He is married to Marnie Aument-Loughrey.

Marnie Aument-Loughrey stood in Philadelphia City Council chambers last week in front of large photos of people in the throes of addiction, some hunched over on the sidewalk and others with massive open wounds.

“We are letting you know what our children have to see every day,” she told lawmakers about Kensington, where she’s lived for decades.

Aument-Loughrey, a Democratic ward leader who runs a civic association in the neighborhood, has for years fought against approaches to the open-air drug market that are seen as progressive, such as supervised drug consumption sites.

Now, she’ll play a more official role.

Mayor Cherelle L. Parker tapped Aument-Loughrey to be a “community coordinator” primarily in Kensington, where Parker has promised to end the drug market that’s long plagued the neighborhood.

The hire is another indication of how Parker’s posture toward Kensington represents a turn from former Mayor Jim Kenney’s administration, which favored public health-driven “harm-reduction” practices and avoided criminalizing people for low-level offenses like drug possession. A change in that approach could lead to clashes with advocates who prefer strategies outside of law enforcement that are focused on preventing overdoses.

mayor cherelle parker taps a kensington activist and ward leader to administration post

Street department crew clearing Kensington Avenue of trash last month. The city recently hired Marnie Aument-Loughrey to serve as a liaison between city service providers and residents.

Aument-Loughrey believes the city has been far too permissive of open drug use and has ignored the pleas of neighborhood residents who are sick of seeing it. She embraces the idea of police bringing people in addiction to a “triage center,” where they can choose drug treatment or jail.

Mayor Cherelle Parker taps a new top police leader to head the department’s Kensington strategy

And, in a November New Yorker article about how Parker “defies the progressive agenda,” Aument-Loughrey expressed nostalgia for the era of Frank Rizzo, the former police commissioner and mayor with a divisive legacy of police brutality.

But Aument-Loughrey says she’s focused on doing right by “both sets of residents,” referring to longtime residents and those living on the streets. She said she’ll be a liaison between them and the city, and will harness relationships she’s built over years both in the neighborhood and working in constituent services for State Sen. Sharif Street.

“We’re gonna take our neighborhood back,” she said. “For the first time in awhile, I’m hopeful.”

Her hire could also signal a burgeoning power center in Kensington. Aument-Loughrey, whose mother was also a ward leader, ran unsuccessfully for Council in 2015 and was a Democratic nominee for traffic court judge in 2013. She is married to City Councilmember Jim Harrity, and both have close ties to Street, the head of the state Democratic Party.

Kensington community members wonder if increased police focus will make a difference

She is also the fourth spouse of a City Hall insider to get a job, appointment, or promotion in Parker’s nascent administration.

New city representative Jazelle Jones, a longtime city employee, is married to Councilmember Curtis Jones Jr. Deputy education officer Sharon C. Ward, formerly a senior adviser at the Education Law Center, is the wife of Parker’s communications director, Joe Grace. Parker also appointed Dawn Chavous to a panel that considers candidates for school board. She is a consultant who has long worked in charter schools and who is married to Council President Kenyatta Johnson.

Tiffany W. Thurman, Parker’s chief of staff, said each of the women is “uniquely qualified to serve.”

“[Aument-Loughrey] is passionate about her community and is a resident who brings her lived life experience to the role and the team,” Thurman said. “The notion that qualified women cannot have their own careers separate from their spouses is archaic, sexist, and offensive.”

Aument-Loughrey starts her new job Monday. She said the city can start improving the neighborhood and residents’ attitudes about it quickly by making small adjustments like fixing abandoned buildings and picking up trash.

In the longer term, she envisions programs that help people get into recovery and enter housing, job training, and therapy.

“We’ve been told we’re cruel or we don’t have compassion,” she said. “At no time did we say we don’t want people to get help. It’s always been ‘yes.’ We want to help get them off the streets.”

©2024 The Philadelphia Inquirer. Visit inquirer.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

News Related

OTHER NEWS

Lawsuit seeks $16 million against Maryland county over death of pet dog shot by police

A department investigator accused two of the officers of “conduct unbecoming an officer” for entering the apartment without a warrant, but the third officer was cleared of wrongdoing, the suit says. Read more »

Heidi Klum shares rare photo of all 4 of her and Seal's kids

Heidi Klum posted a rare picture with husband Tom Kaulitz and her four kids: Leni, 19, Henry, 18, Johan, 17, and Lou, 14, having some quality family time. Read more »

European stocks head for flat open as markets struggle to find momentum

This is CNBC’s live blog covering European markets. European markets are heading for a flat open Tuesday, continuing lackluster sentiment seen at the start of the week in the region ... Read more »

Linda C. Black Horoscopes: November 28

Nancy Black Today’s Birthday (11/28/23). This year energizes your work and health. Faithful domestic routines provide central support. Shift directions to balance your work and health, before adapting around team ... Read more »

Michigan Democrats poised to test ambitious environmental goals in the industrial Midwest

FILE – One of more than 4,000 solar panels constructed by DTE Energy lines a 9.37-acre swath of land in Ann Arbor Township, Mich., Sept. 15, 2015. Michigan will join ... Read more »

Gaza Is Falling Into ‘Absolute Chaos,’ Aid Groups Say

A shaky cease-fire between Israel and Hamas has allowed a surge of aid to reach Palestinians in Gaza, but humanitarian groups and civilians in the enclave say the convoys aren’t ... Read more »

Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families to march together in anti-hate vigil

Demonstrators march against the rise of antisemitism in the UK on Sunday – SUSANNAH IRELAND/REUTERS Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families will march together as part of an anti-hate vigil on ... Read more »
Top List in the World