I remember thinking it was a typically dumb Hartford idea,
back in 1993, to start promoting the South End as Little Italy.
The neighborhood had been largely Italian, but it was changing.
A lot of the old-line Italian families were moving to the suburbs.
The next few years seemed to confirm my suspicions. Franklin,
Maple and Wethersfield avenues, the three major stems in the
neighborhood, began to look shabby.
But something happened. A couple of years ago, the downward
slide seemed to stop. Now, though there is still plenty of
work to do, the signs of life are numerous. There are new and
rehabbed homes, new bakeries and new restaurants. The South
End was always a good place to eat, but now it may be the best
restaurant district in the state.
The great old Italian eateries are still there and going strong.
There are also new Italian places along with Spanish, Cajun,
Afghan, Brazilian/Portuguese, Indian and Dominican dining spots,
and they are wonderful, one better than the next. The original
win-win argument is where to go to dinner in the South End.
A number of things are working for the neighborhood. The new
and rehabbed housing on Benton Street helped stop the southward
movement of blight. Many middle-class black and Latino owners
bought in the neighborhood. The influx of hardworking Bosnians
and Albanians didn't hurt. Bike lanes calmed the traffic. There's
finally some off-street parking. Maybe the Little Italy concept
helped, after all.
And at the heart of this revival we find a familiar face,
that of former city councilman and state representative Al
Marotta. Marotta is now the president of the Franklin Avenue
Merchants Association, and he is putting wheels under the group.
Marotta, I should note for the record, could drive you nuts.
As a council member he always had deals going, could never
say no to anybody and never stepped back to look at the big
picture.
But his heart was in the right place. Constituents appreciated
his attention to potholes and streetlights. He could be very
effective.
As I consider his strengths,
they're almost perfect for the head of a neighborhood improvement
group. He's attentive to detail, knows who to call in city
and state government, and he is relentless. He makes a pit
bull look blasé. This
is a guy who took nine years to get a college degree. He can
wear down a brick wall.
Marotta took the job five months ago under two conditions.
He would expand the reach of the organization to include the
other major avenues in the South End, and he'd recruit some
of the bright young second- and third-generation businessmen,
such as Paul Mozzicato and Vin Carbone.
That he needed to do these things speaks to the encrusted
state of the Franklin Avenue Merchants Association before he
took over.
The organization was in the hands of old-guard Italian business
owners who hadn't embraced the other avenues, hadn't reached
out to non-Italian business owners and weren't attracting the
younger people. Much to his credit, Marotta understood that
the organization needs to do all of the above.
There is, imbued in his memory, the picture of what a good
neighborhood is like. He grew up in one, the old East Side,
the lively and colorful neighborhood that was leveled for Constitution
Plaza. His father, an Italian immigrant, sold fruits and vegetables
from pushcarts.
Marotta is trying to bring back the street life characteristic
of the East Side or any good neighborhood. He's been instrumental
in getting police foot patrols back on the avenue. He's published
restaurant brochures that are given to visitors to the city.
He's pushing for more outdoor dining, should winter ever end.
He's working with others to get rid of the practice of driving
across the sidewalk to park in front of buildings, an unfortunate
characteristic of the neighborhood that detracts from the esthetic
and pedestrian environment.
On Mardi Gras and Valentine's Day, Marotta's group had strolling
musicians visit the restaurants, which was hugely popular.
There's more to do, and Marotta is on the case. He's trying
to get a circulator bus to run to the South End from downtown.
He knows the litter problem needs attention, and is working
on it. He's trying get rid of those metal boxes of fliers that
are mostly litter machines. The street could use more flowers;
he's working on that as well.
Marotta is a 69-year-old
with the energy of a teenager. He's got files in the back
seat of his car as he shoots from meeting to meeting. He
told me he'd helped organize a new nonprofit group, the South
Hartford Community Alliance, to promote business and residential
development. When I groaned and asked whether Hartford needed
another nonprofit, he said it did. It brings the whole neighborhood
together, he said, and "we can
go after grants we can't go after now." Same old Al.
Tom Condon is the editor of Place. He can be reached at [email protected].
Reprinted with permission of the Hartford Courant.
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