Together, city employees and their spouses owed about $5 million in unpaid property taxes.
That is a tiny fraction of the total debt Philadelphia home and business owners owe the city in property taxes. More than 100,000 properties - ranging from commercial towers to tiny trinities - are considered technically delinquent. The collective debt stands at $425 million, which does not include as-yet-unpaid 2009 bills.
Critics such as City Controller Alan Butkovitz blame the unpaid bills on "a culture of unaggressive collection" that he says is epitomized by the city's failure to reliably collect what it is owed even from its own employees.
"The city has a big heart in dealing with its debtors, but the problem with being generous to a few is that you're being unfair to the many who do pay their bills, and who depend on city services being fully funded," Butkovitz said.
Nutter administration spokesman Doug Oliver said the city was trying to change that culture, largely by increasing the number of tax-delinquent houses offered at sheriff's auctions from a historic norm of about 25 a month to 125, with the goal of reaching 200 a month.
Even at that increased rate, though, it would take 41 years for the city to sell all the houses and businesses on its delinquency rolls, and that assumes all other property owners in the city stay current on their taxes.
"This is about striking the right balance between aggressively pursuing the revenue the city needs and also not wanting to eviscerate large swaths of communities through mass foreclosures," Oliver said. "But we concede that the right balance has not been met, and we want the message to be clear that all property owners have an obligation to pay your property taxes."
Philadelphia's need to collect on its debts has rarely been greater.