Two officers will be stationed at Somerset during its operating hours. The officers will work closely with social outreach specialists who will be assigned to Somerset Station to connect those in need with substance use or behavioral health treatment and other services, according to officials.
There will also be overnight patrols, SEPTA spokesperson Andrew Busch later added.
Richards also said SEPTA will need the community’s help in maintaining the station, but she assured that officials are not asking for free labor.
“We still have a lot of work to do with you,” said Richards. “We need community partners to help us to be present. These will be paid positions. We are not asking for free labor here.”
Similar work will take place at Allegheny Station as well, but SEPTA plans to keep that station open.
“I’m cautiously optimistic here,” said Eduardo Esquivel, a six-year Kensington resident and president of the Kensington Neighborhood Association. “The way that the entire metro area has treated our neighborhood makes me view my celebration once I actually see the train stopping in and once I actually see things getting back to normal and staying that way for a while.”
Esquivel added, “I will also declare more of a victory when I see the kind of community participation, or community engagement that we’ve been asking for.”
“We’ve had a long, long time of being promised things and not seeing the results,” Esquivel said. “In the meantime, our neighbors have been forced to deal with every kind of awful thing over and over again.”
WHYY is one of over 20 news organizations producing Broke in Philly, a collaborative reporting project on solutions to poverty and the city’s push towards economic justice. Follow us at @BrokeInPhilly.