PATCH
By Nick Garber
Chronically-filthy blocks of 125th Street look cleaner than ever thanks to a city cleanup program — but new cuts may mean "going backwards."
EAST HARLEM, NY — A cleanup effort that has transformed the once-filthy blocks along 125th Street near the Metro-North train tracks has come to an end, as the demise of a citywide sanitation program threatens to undo what residents say has been the corridor's biggest improvement in years.
A series of blocks long strewn with trash, drug paraphernalia, and sometimes human waste have been spruced up, power-washed and given some much-needed love. The new look is thanks largely to the City Cleanup Corps: a New Deal-style pandemic initiative fueled by federal stimulus money, in which the city hired thousands of workers to wipe away graffiti, pick up rubbish, plant flowers, and more.
Now, as those federal funds dry up, the city says it is planning a smaller cleanup program to replace the Cleanup Corps — but Harlem residents fear that months of progress will still be undone.
In East Harlem, up to 40 Cleanup Corps workers have posted up since October on five blocks surrounding the intersection of 125th Street and Lexington Avenue, spending seven days a week cleaning the chronically-grimy thoroughfare — and collecting up to 350 trash bags each week.