Friday, July 6, 2007

Next Time, Get It On eBay

Philadelphia made the national news reports once again; and once again, not for anything good. John F. Street, our beloved lame duck of a mayor, bless his heart, spent last Friday sitting in the rain since 3 AM, in line for a new iPhone with the rest of the techno geeks.

Big deal, right? Wrong. While in the larger scheme of things, Street’s gadget vigil doesn’t affect the city’s crime rate or tax base one iota, the public image of a chief executive in a city besieged with troubles sitting around waiting for a new phone got under many Philadelphians’ skin. To the mayor’s surprise, ordinary citizens got up in his face and gave him an earful, in full view of local and national news cameras.

One woman read Street the riot act for not being at his post during business hours. Identifying herself as a former city employee, she said that when she worked for the city, she couldn’t even leave her desk to run out to the dollar store, and yet he can sit here all night and all day on the taxpayers dime. Street seemed genuinely shocked that the woman would confront him face-to-face, and mumbled a lame-sounding defense about working while sitting in line, having sent his first official city-related e-mail at 4 AM.

The problem is that the mayor is right, but completely misses the point. Of course, he can do work from anywhere - using his handheld device to make calls, send and answer e-mails and faxes, and keep up with his appointment schedule. It’s perfectly logical that he could be productive and engaged in city business while sitting in the rain three blocks from City Hall. But we’re talking about public perceptions here, not practical reality.

In a city where the murder rate is rising faster than the summer temperatures, and where residents and tourists alike fear venturing anywhere outside of Center City, perception is reality.

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