Archive | January, 2011

Still Time In Pottsgrove For Budget Volunteers To Enlist

Still Time In Pottsgrove For Budget Volunteers To Enlist

POTTSTOWN PA – The more the merrier, Pottsgrove School District Superintendent Dr. Bradley Landis figures.

The district Community Budget Task Force officially gets under way Tuesday (Feb. 1, 2011) with an introductory meeting at 7 p.m. in the cafeteria of Pottsgrove High School, 1345 Kauffman Rd., Pottstown PA. It’s being organized to provide public guidance on managing the district’s preliminary $58.5 million spending plan for 2011-’12, and already has more than 50 volunteers.

There’s room for others, Landis said in an e-mail distributed last week. All interested individuals need to do, he added, is show up.

“Many community members, parents and staff members have already signed up … The district invites any additional community members, parents and staff members who wish to participate to the meeting,” Landis wrote.

Members of the district Board of School Directors seemed pleasantly surprised when, during their Jan. 18 meeting, Landis reported the call for volunteers issued during November (2010) had yielded enough participants for eight to nine members each on several sub-committees. They are expected to review costs for energy and facilities, student transportation, educational programs and services, technology, and extracurricular activities.

Every sub-committee also will include a school board member and a district administrator. Their presence, directors said, is not to steer the discussion but to help explain why – primarily due to state and federal regulations – some district expenses can’t be cut. They’ll also ensure each group gets information it requests or needs to conduct its analysis.

Directors openly hope volunteers identify specific items or areas that reflect what board member April Kontostathis labeled as the “community appetite” for budget-cutting. Although the preliminary budget currently indicates a deficit of $1.2 million, Landis – at the board’s direction – will ask sub-committees to find about five times as much, or $6 million, in potential reductions.

Quietly, though, directors acknowledge the task force presents two political risks.

The first is the appearance that the school board is abdicating part of the governance responsibility for which directors were elected to a non-elected public assembly.

Directors should force cuts themselves, some critics already claim, or at least demand the administration recommend them. Supporters, on the other hand, see the task force as both a way to obtain taxpayer input and build consensus for what is anticipated to be a potentially painful process in which programs or amenities are discarded as unaffordable.

The second is that directors may anger voters by choosing, for even legitimate reasons, to overrule, ignore or delay task force suggestions.

Board member Nancy Landes and others have repeatedly issued a reminder that directors are looking for guidance only, and that they alone will have the final say on what, when, and how budget cuts are implemented. Detractors contend that’s a dictatorial stand. There are, however, mandated programs – special education tops the list – that directors have no ability to change even if the public overwhelmingly favors reducing them.

A state limit, called the Act 1 index, on the amount by which Pottsgrove may raise property taxes under next year’s budget is set at 1.8 percent, or about $75 on the average value of a district home. Special permissions, called exceptions, that the state might approve for Pottsgrove could double the increase to a maximum of 3.6 percent, according to Business Administrator David Nester. Last year’s taxes, by comparison, rose 4.4 percent.

To eliminate the deficit without budget cuts, Nester estimates, taxes must rise as much as 5.2 percent or $215 per average home. Every director wants to avoid that kind of hike, as well as the public referendum required to impose it. Most feel like board member Philip Keogh: “It’s going to be extremely difficult, I believe, to keep at 1.8 percent,” he said Jan. 18, “but I’d like to see us stay closer to that than go higher.”

The task force, no matter how many members it ends up with, has substantial work ahead. It will be asked to report, by April 12 (2011), on what cuts it recommends “while protecting and maintaining the integrity of classroom instruction,” Landis wrote, and what their impact may be, as well as what new revenue sources it may have found.

Related (to the Pottsgrove School District 2011-2012 budget):

Related (to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ meeting of Jan. 18):

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Personal Finance, Pottsgrove Schools3 Comments

What They Sold For

What They Sold For

Thay paid how much?

POTTSTOWN PA – The top price paid for real estate within Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township from Aug. 20-Oct. 26, 2010, was $285,000, the Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper reports. The property is located at 832 Sunnybrook Rd.

A second property, at 228 Barbara Way, sold for $225,000.

This week’s top reported prices were listed Sunday (Jan. 30, 2011) in “The Top 50,” the newspaper’s weekly review of highest prices paid for real estate sold within the city of Philadelphia and townships in its surrounding counties.

During the same period, the top real estate sales price in

Across all of Montgomery County, the highest-priced property sold during the period went for $1,725,000, at 1050 Sentry Ln., Lower Merion PA.

Related:

Photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Business, Lower Pottsgrove, Real Estate2 Comments

College Plans Pottstown Programs Open House

College Plans Pottstown Programs Open House

North Hall on MCCC's Pottstown campus.

POTTSTOWN PA – An open house to introduce greater Pottstown area residents to professional development and information technology career programs at Montgomery County Community College will be held Feb. 15 (2011; Tuesday) from 5-8 p.m. in the North Hall art gallery of the college’s West campus, 16 High St., Pottstown PA.

Participants will learn about college offerings that include health careers, small business programs, CISCO authorized training, computerized accounting, Microsoft Office training, digital design, computer aided drafting and design, green building programs, construction technology, ServSafe food handling and water treatment operations.

Advance registration is encouraged. Pre-registration is available online, here.

Posted in Education, Pottstown1 Comment

Pottsgrove Falcons Sports For Jan. 31-Feb. 7, 2011

Pottsgrove Falcons Sports For Jan. 31-Feb. 7, 2011

POTTSTOWN PA – On the Pottsgrove School District sports schedule for today (Monday, Jan. 31, 2011) through next Monday (Feb. 7, 2011):

Monday (Today, Jan. 31)

  • Boys 8th Basketball @ Owen J Roberts, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls 8th Basketball vs. Owen J Roberts, 3:30 p.m.
  • Boys 7th Basketball @ Owen J Roberts, 4:30 p.m.
  • Girls 7th Basketball vs. Owen J Roberts, 4:30 p.m.

Tuesday, Feb. 1

  • Boys Freshman Basketball vs. Perkiomen Valley, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls Freshman Basketball @ Perkiomen Valley, 3:30 p.m.
  • Boys 8th Basketball @ Perkiomen Valley West, 3:30 p.m.
  • Coed Varsity Swimming vs. Phoenixville, 3:45 p.m.
  • Boys 7th Basketball @ Perkiomen Valley West, 4:30 p.m.
  • Boys Junior Varsity Basketball vs. Phoenixville, 6 p.m.
  • Girls Junior Varsity Basketball @ Phoenixville, 6 p.m.
  • Boys Varsity Basketball vs. Phoenixville, 7:30 p.m.
  • Girls Varsity Basketball @ Phoenixville, 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday, Feb. 2

  • Boys Freshman Basketball @ Boyertown East, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls Freshman Basketball vs. Boyertown West, 3:30 p.m.
  • Boys Middle School Wrestling @ Pottstown, 3:30 p.m.
  • Coed Varsity Indoor Track, location TBA, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls Junior Varsity Basketball @ Coatesville Area HS, 6 p.m.
  • Boys Varsity Wrestling vs. Upper Perkiomen, 6:30 p.m.
  • Girls Varsity Basketball @ Coatesville Area HS, 7:30 p.m.

Thursday, Feb. 3

  • Boys Freshman Basketball @ Phoenixville, 3:30 p.m.
  • Boys 8th Basketball @ Arcola Intermediate School, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls 8th Basketball vs. Arcola Intermediate School, 3:30 p.m.
  • Coed Varsity Swimming vs. Exeter, 3:45 p.m.
  • Boys 7th Basketball @ Arcola Intermediate School, 4:30 p.m.
  • Girls 7th Basketball vs. Arcola Intermediate School, 4:30 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 4

  • None scheduled

Saturday, Feb 5

  • Boys Varsity Wrestling vs. Perkiomen Valley, 10 a.m.
  • Girls Junior Varsity Basketball vs. Pope John Paul ll High School, 1 p.m.
  • Girls Varsity Basketball vs. Pope John Paul ll High, 2:30 p.m.
  • Boys Junior Varsity Basketball @ Pope John Paul ll High School, 6 p.m.
  • Boys Varsity Basketball @ Pope John Paul ll High School, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Feb. 6

  • None scheduled

Monday, Feb. 7

  • Girls Freshman Basketball vs. Boyertown East, 3:30 p.m.
  • Boys Junior Varsity Basketball vs. Owen J Roberts, 6 p.m.
  • Girls Junior Varsity Basketball @ Owen J Roberts, 6 p.m.
  • Boys Varsity Basketball vs. Owen J Roberts, 7:30 p.m.
  • Girls Varsity Basketball @ Owen J Roberts, 7:30 p.m.

Schedules from HighSchoolSports.net; photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Pottsgrove Schools, Sports1 Comment

20110131-WashingHands-Sanatoga

Safe Food Handler Certification Course Next Month

CREAMERY PA – A ServSafe safe food handler certification course, sponsored by the National Restaurant Association, will be conducted Feb. 8-9 (2011; Tuesday and Wednesday) by Montgomery County Penn State Cooperative Extension in its offices at 1015 Bridge Rd., Creamery PA.

Proper food handling tops the ServSafe lessons.

ServSafe is a Health Department-approved food safety and sanitation course that is required for all food service establishments located in the county. Certification books are offered in a wide variety of languages including English, Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and French Canadian.

Cooperative Extension also is offering a Feb. 15 re-certification course that is a review and update of food safety principles covered in the initial certification. Current certified food safety and sanitation managers in the county must complete a re-certification course every three years.

For more information on either course, call Food Safety Educator Mandel Smith at 610-489-4315.

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Business, Education, Food, Montgomery CountyComments Off

Poll Claims Public Opposes Tuition Vouchers

Poll Claims Public Opposes Tuition Vouchers

HARRISBURG PA – About two of three, or 67 percent, of recently polled Pennsylvanians oppose giving public money – in what were described as “taxpayer-funded tuition vouchers” – to parents so they can send their children to schools other than those in the school district where they live, the Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA) claimed Wednesday (Jan. 26, 2011).

Making tuition vouchers available is among the campaign promises made by newly inaugurated Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett. A voucher system is being fought by PSBA and many of its members, which include the Pottsgrove School District Board of School Directors.

In the poll of 805 state residents, designed by Terry Madonna Opinion Research, “only a small minority (13.7 percent)” of those polled “strongly favor taxpayer-funded tuition vouchers,” PSBA said. Most Pennsylvanians age 55 or older, oppose vouchers, and 51 percent “strongly oppose them,” it added.

More than 70 percent of individuals surveyed under the age of 34, strongly or somewhat oppose tuition vouchers, more so than any other respondent age group, according to PSBA. Two-thirds of those polled also oppose state law that requires school districts to pay the tuition of students attending charter and cyber-charter schools, it said.

PSBA is a non-profit statewide association of public school founded in 1895.

Related (to education tuition vouchers):

Posted in Education, Politics, Pottsgrove Schools3 Comments

Blasting A Possibility, But Not Yet, At Ringing Rocks

Blasting A Possibility, But Not Yet, At Ringing Rocks

POTTSTOWN PA – Explosive blasting has not yet been authorized, but may be an option, in dislodging bedrock beneath and around the Pottsgrove School District‘s Ringing Rocks Elementary School, as the building on Kauffman Road, Pottstown PA, continues to be expanded and renovated.

Demolition work late last year at Ringing Rocks.

District Clerk of the Works Tom McGrady, hired to oversee the project on Pottsgrove’s behalf, said last week its site sub-contractor was “pushing for blasting” because it had already damaged several pieces of equipment trying to move underlying rock. “Essentially, they’re frustrated,” he said of the excavation crew.

The subcontractor, under the direction of general contractor E.R. Stuebner Inc., has the contractual ability to use dynamite or other explosives to complete its work, McGrady acknowledged.

The district Board of School Directors, which learned of the situation during its Jan. 18 meeting, demanded to be notified before any use of explosives was scheduled.

The problem, district Business Administrator David Nester said, is that Ringing Rocks Elementary was built into the rock-laden face of the Kauffman Road hillside. The rock shelf extends north, eventually reaching Lower Pottsgrove’s famed sub-volcanic sonorous rocks that make a ringing sound when struck by a hammer. The school is named for them.

Difficulty in removing that rock, and other unsuitable material, to pour concrete footings and foundation components for the school’s $15.6 million reconstruction was anticipated, Nester said, and challenging. The use of explosives may eventually be necessary, he conceded, and because it is allowed under contract may also be out of the district’s hands.

“I can’t imagine neighboring residents want that,” board President Michael Neiffer said. Neither, it seemed, did other board members, several of whom shook their heads during the discussion. Firmly objecting to blasting “is a stance we have to take” with the contractors, Director Fred Remelius added.

Stuebner officials and McGrady are urging the subcontractor to keep at the excavation using other methods, but McGrady added that state agencies had already issued the required permits should blasting be needed. “If done properly,” he said, “it shouldn’t be an issue.”

“The public relations aspect of it falls to us, though,” Nester said. Neighboring property owners would have to be contacted and notified, as would the district’s insurance carrier. It is unlikely, Nester added, that the district would be insured against any adjacent property damage that might arise from the use of explosives.

McGrady has already ordered what he described as a “full seismic work-up” of the affected area. Until it is received and examined, he said, “nothing can be done by anyone yet.”

Related (to Ringing Rocks Elementary School renovations):

Related (to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ meeting of Jan. 18):

Posted in Business, Pottsgrove Schools1 Comment

20110128-KaraokeSunnybrook

Take Your Chances For A Discount At Chummy’s

SANATOGA PA – Here’s an opportunity to test the power of networking, enjoy a late-night treat, and possibly save some money this weekend at the new Chummy’s Tavern in Sunnybrook Ballroom, 50 Sunnybrook Rd., Pottstown PA.

Sing your lungs out, karaoke fans

The in-house, limited-menu restaurant and bar opened last November (2010) at Sunnybrook, the decades-old former Big Band venue that its non-profit foundation has re-purposed as a local concert, meetings and events center. Sunnybrook Foundation officials describe Chummy’s as a place that’s “very cozy and features great specialty drinks, such as the Sunnytini, and the best happy hour prices in town.”

Chummy’s has a marketing problem, though. Many area residents don’t yet know it exists.

The tavern currently operates only Thursdays through Sundays from 5-11 p.m., and offers a weekly karaoke party Thursdays at 8 p.m. and musical entertainment Fridays. Disc jockey Bruce Miller is scheduled there tonight (Friday, Jan. 28, 2011) from 8-11 p.m. to play recorded hits from the 1950s, 60s, 70s and 80s.

The Foundation earlier this month (Jan. 8) circulated a message to members of its e-mail list, offering them a $5 discount on a food and beverage order of $15 or more purchased during the month of January. This weekend represents the last chance the offer will be valid. If you received but haven’t taken advantage of it, now’s the time.

If you’re not on Sunnybrook’s list, you can sign up for free, here. It’s a reasonable bet a similar offers could be made in the future.

If you’re adventurous, you might even wander into Chummy’s tonight, Saturday or Sunday; tell management you read about its offer in The Post, provide your e-mail address, and before you place an order ask if you can get the discount too, at the last minute. Be forewarned: this proposal is not authorized by Sunnybrook, and they might say “no,” but hey, it can’t hurt to inquire.

While you’re there, find out what a “Sunnytini” is. We have no idea.

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Business, Entertainment, Sanatoga, Social1 Comment

20110128-HipPlacesLogo

Pottstown Scenic Girls Ride Airwaves, Expand Franchise

Gina Stango, left, and Janet Flack, the "Scenic Girls" in Pottstown

POTTSTOWN PA – Pottstown is still hip, Janet Flack and Gina Stango proclaim, but greater Pottstown – a wider area encompassing parts of western Montgomery, eastern Berks, and northern Chester counties – well, that may be even hipper.

Flack, an agent with Keller Williams Realty Group in Collegeville PA, and Stango, electronic media manager for Village Productions Inc. and the Tri-County Area Performing Arts Center in Pottstown, regularly strut out their alter egos in public as the creative forces behind “Janet’s and Gina’s Hip Places To Be Scene.” For almost a year it’s been an increasingly popular Facebook page devoted to fun things to do, see, and be a part of, primarily within the borough.

All things change, however, and beginning this afternoon, so will “Hip Places.”

It’s name has been altered slightly, for starters. When the women opened on Facebook nine months ago, the words “In Pottstown” were prominent at the tail end of their page’s title. That emphasis will wane, with reason.

Flack and Stango are broadening their entertainment franchise by taking it to the radio. Their first hour-long, weekly Hip Places broadcast launches at 4 p.m. today on WPAZ-AM 1370, the revitalized community station that returned to Pottstown’s airwaves earlier this month. The pair are scheduled to warble their way to stardom every Friday from 4-5 in a program that, they promise, features plenty of guests and give-aways.

Their coverage area is expanding too. Because WPAZ’s signal reaches an audience bigger than only Pottstown, the women have decided the areas they explore for places to review and recommend should grow too. The move to a wider stage “was talked about” when the Facebook page first debuted, the women said in an announcement e-mail Thursday, “but wasn’t taken into consideration” until WPAZ offered a time slot for a show.

So they’ll venture now beyond the borough’s borders, “shaking things up in the area,” they said, with appearances on the web, on radio, and maybe soon on television. To date their Facebook page boasts of more than a thousand fans, and more than 500 users keep up with them on Twitter, the social messaging media.

Posted in Business, Entertainment, Pottstown, Social1 Comment

20110106-FrustratedStudent-GoogleImages

West Pottsgrove School Re-Schedules Study Workshop

STOWE PA – A workshop for parents to instill better study-at-home skills in their children, which was planned for yesterday (Thursday, Jan. 27, 2011) but was canceled by inclement weather, has been re-scheduled for next Thursday (Feb. 3) at 6:45 p.m. in the library of the Pottsgrove School District‘s West Pottsgrove Elementary School, 25 Grosstown Rd., Stowe PA.

Avoid this.

“Studying is actually a skill that must be taught and a habit that must be built,” West Pottsgrove Principal Ruth Fisher wrote recently in an e-mail, even though, she added, “we all like to think children know how to study or review material that they have learned.” The workshop intends to show ways to increase effective study habits.

The session, Fisher noted, is open to all interested district parents and relatives. The more the better, she figures: “You will help … children master the skill of successful studying and will be supporting (their) success through school and beyond,” Fisher wrote.

West Pottsgrove students will be sent home next Monday (Jan. 31) with paper invitations to the workshop. Advance reservations are requested. Those who do not receive an invitation, or who want more information, should call the school at 610-323-6510.

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Education, Pottsgrove Schools2 Comments

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