COVID-19 made the past year especially difficult for Philadelphia and its residents. It also raised profound questions about how to build a safer and more prosperous future.
The Pew Charitable Trusts’ latest State of the City report and poll data show how the pandemic affected virtually every aspect of life in Philadelphia over the past year—including physical and emotional health, the economy, public safety, and education—and magnified existing inequities while exposing new fault lines.
In January, the city’s COVID-19 case count topped 100,000; the death toll passed 3,000 a month later. Nearly 500 homicides were reported in 2020, the most since 1990 and a 40% increase over the already high 2019 numbers, with much of the violence concentrated in neighborhoods with high rates of coronavirus-related deaths and job losses. And if these numbers weren’t tragic enough, an estimated 1,200 people died in the city in 2020 from overdoses of opioids and other drugs, roughly matching the record high set in 2017.
Experts and local officials said that the increased homicides and overdose deaths, seen in varying degrees in other cities, were at least partly due to the disruption and despair brought on by the pandemic. Pew’s polling showed 49% of Philadelphians reported feeling seriously depressed after the onset of the pandemic.
Unemployment more than tripled from 5.9% in February 2020 to 18% in June, before declining gradually, averaging 12.2% by the end of the year. But not all was gloom and doom on the economic front: Developers took out building permits for a record 7,231 residential units, a vote of confidence in the city’s future spurred in part by looming changes in its tax abatement law.
The School District of Philadelphia struggled to educate students virtually throughout the academic year. In some neighborhoods, more than 6% of students eligible for free laptops still had not received them as of February, nearly a year after in-person schooling shut down.
The impacts of the pandemic, as well as the movement for racial equity, made long-established disparities harder than ever to ignore. Before the pandemic, the city’s poverty rate was 23%. But the rate for Hispanics was 40%, for Black residents 27%, and for Asian Americans 23%, compared with 13% for White residents. The median household income for Black Philadelphians was approximately half that of White Philadelphians, and only 6% of city businesses with employees were owned by Black residents.
With post-pandemic life on the horizon, a number of questions need to be asked about what kind of city will emerge from a trauma that has been both global and distinctly local:
Will Philadelphia be a beneficiary or a victim of the trend toward remote work, allowing more people to separate the decision about where they live from where they work?
How much will Center City offices, as well as the businesses that depend on their occupants, and the taxes they generate, recover from the pandemic?
Will Philadelphia be able to match or even exceed its solid, pre-pandemic record of job creation, having outperformed the nation in three of the four years before the shutdown?
When will progress be made on racial and ethnic inequities—and how will the benefits of future economic growth be shared?
How soon will the city see an end to the staggering increase in gun violence and homicides?
A recovery will come. But mass vaccination and the end of virus-related restrictions won’t lead to universal celebration. The scars from the past year are deep, and the challenges ahead are daunting. How city officials and other leaders deal with both will help determine Philadelphia’s future—and whether it can move toward economic growth that addresses underlying inequities and challenges.
Larry Eichel is a senior adviser and Katie Martin is a senior manager with The Pew Charitable Trusts’ Philadelphia research and policy initiative. For more findings on issues facing the city, visit pewtrusts.org/Philaresearch.
This op-ed was originally published by The Philadelphia Citizen on April 13, 2021.