Archive | April, 2011

20110420-Gerontology-GoogleImages

College Updates Human Services Course Offerings

POTTSTOWN PA – Montgomery County Community College has begun offering new concentrations in its Human Services degree program, the college announced Thursday (April 14, 2011).

Students can now earn their associate degree in applied science under one comprehensive Human Services program. They also have the option of selecting three areas of concentration: addictions, gerontology, and child, youth and family services.

Students, who already have their degree or who work in the field and want to update their skills, may opt to enroll in certificate programs in human services, addictions or gerontology.

The college revamped the program so it’s courses focus more on professional skill development, spokeswoman Alana Mauger said.

The number of jobs in the Human Services field is expected to grow by 23 percent during the next several years, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 2008, social and human service assistants held more than 352,000 jobs nationwide.

More than 65 percent of the people employed in this field are working in the health care and social assistance areas.

Posted in Education, Employment, Montgomery County, Pottstown3 Comments

Power Uprating, Like That In Limerick, On The Rise

Power Uprating, Like That In Limerick, On The Rise

LOS ANGELES CA – The increased practice of uprating nuclear power generators in the United States, such as the uprate approved earlier this month for Exelon Nuclear’s Limerick Generating Station in Limerick PA, has expanded the nation’s nuclear capacity without financial risks, public anxiety and political obstacles, The Los Angeles Times newspaper reported Sunday (April 17, 2011). It has, however, spurred debate over the safety of pushing aging equipment beyond original specifications.

Limerick Generating Station

“The power boosts come from more potent fuel rods in the reactor core and, sometimes, more highly enriched uranium. As a result, the nuclear reactions generate more heat, which boils more water into steam to drive the turbines that make electricity,” The Times said.

The Limerick facility won approval last Monday (April 11, 2011) from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a 1.65-percent uprate from both of its two reactors. Such “tiny uprates have long been common,” according to The Times. But nuclear watchdogs and the commission’s own safety advisory panel “have expressed concern over larger boosts — some by up to 20 percent — that the NRC began approving in 1998. Twenty of the nation’s 104 reactors have undergone these “extended power uprates,” it reported.

Related:

Posted in Business, Limerick, Safety5 Comments

Township Planners Were In And Out In 2 Minutes Flat

Township Planners Were In And Out In 2 Minutes Flat

SANATOGA PA – “It took you longer to get here than it will take us to finish this,” Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township Planning Commission member Ronald Dinnocenti bellowed, and laughed as a visitor walked Monday (April 18, 2011) into the municipal building, 2199 Buchert Rd., Pottstown PA, for the board’s monthly meeting.

He was right.

Commissioners opened for business at 6:32 p.m. They adjourned at 6:34 p.m. Two minutes has got to be a record, board Chairman Frank Cebular guessed.

Why so quick? Only three items were on the agenda: approve the minutes of the board’s Feb. 22 meeting (that took longest, because Dinnocenti had to read them); approve a grading permit for a project in Sanatoga village; and approve a motion to adjourn.

The permit allows grading to begin for construction of a medical office building and adjacent parking lot at 500 Heritage Dr., proposed earlier this year by Smith Lignelli LLC on a vacant parcel located across the street from offices of Cappelletti Pinter and Co. The project was already approved by the planners, and also last month by the township Board of Commissioners.

The grading conforms with the accepted plans, Assistant Manager Alyson Elliott said.

Commission Vice Chairman Nicholas Hiriak and commissioner Anthony Cherico were absent, and missed all the action.

Related:

Posted in Business, Lower Pottsgrove, Real Estate1 Comment

20110419-ShantzBaseballCard-HistSoc

Shantz’s Mound Presence Made Sanatoga ‘Pheverous’

Former major league pitcher Bobby Shantz of Sanatoga, in an autographed photo.

By Beth Scherer
of the Lower Pottsgrove Historical Society,
for The Sanatoga Post

Shantz at last year's Historical Society Strawberry Festival.

SANATOGA PA – Take us out to the ball game!

Spring is in the air, flowers are blooming, and the sights and sounds of baseball are in full swing. Philadelphia Phillies‘ “Phever” is back … despite the team’s 6-3 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers in a 12-inning game Monday night (April 18, 2011) at Citizens Bank Park.

With the excitement (and certainly not the loss) in mind, it’s time to recount the exploits of Bobby Shantz, Sanatoga’s own contribution to the roster of former Philadelphia pro pitchers.

... and on a Yankees' baseball card

Shantz grew up on Saylor’s Avenue in Sanatoga, and started his baseball career playing with the Sanatoga Pee Wees. In 1949 he began pitching with the Philadelphia Athletics. He stayed with Philadelphia until ’55, when he moved to the Kansas City team. After pitching for the New York Yankees (“Boo! Hiss!”), Pittsburgh Pirates, Houston Colt .45s and the St. Louis Cardinals, he closed out his career after 16 years back home in Philadelphia.

Some Shantz notables:

  • He was the 1952 American League Most Valuable Player;
  • He played in the ’51, ’52, and ’57 All-Star games; and
  • He pitched with the Yankees in three World Series games.

In recognizing his baseball career, Pottstown High School dedicated and named an athletic field in his honor during 2007.

Editor’s note: The Lower Pottsgrove Historical Society was formed in 1985 to share the heritage of Lower Pottsgrove Township with its residents. It meets on the second Wednesday of every month at its museum and offices in the former Sanatoga Chapel, 2341 E. High St., Sanatoga PA. Author and society member Beth Scherer writes about Lower Pottsgrove history monthly for The Post.

Photos from Carol Isett of the historical society

Posted in Lower Pottsgrove, Pottstown, Recreation, Sanatoga, Sports1 Comment

20110419-McDonaldsEmployee-McDonalds

You’re Interviewing At McDonald’s Today? Some Advice

A smiling McDonald's employee

POTTSTOWN PA – The Big Hiring Rush is officially on.

Today (Tuesday, April 19, 2011) is “National Hiring Day” for the McDonald’s Restaurant chain at its stores across the country. The company says it expects up to 50,000 people will be accepted for employment. Locally, according to its careers web pages, job vacancies are waiting to be filled in Pottstown, Royersford, Douglassville, Collegeville, Phoenixville, Gilbertsville and Harleysville.

What’s the best way to make an favorable impression with interviewers? McDonald’s itself offers some answers, on an “Interview Tips” section of its website. Among its suggestions:

  • “Be ready to answer the question, Why do you want to work here?;”
  • “Make your interview on time;” and
  • ‘”Tell why you’re perfect for the position.”

Readers of the About.com website have offered their successful answers (meaning, they eventually got hired) to interviewers’ questions, here.

Some other advice, culled from readers (identified by pseudonym) at StraightDope.com:

  • “I filled out an application and gave it to the manager, who spent about 5 seconds looking it over and said “When can you start?” I said, ‘Now.’ He said, ‘Come on back.’ And that was that. I ended up working there for a year and half.” (Rigamarole)
  • “Show up on time, pay attention to the training and you’ll be the star of the place. One thing about McDonald’s is they have a policy of promoting from within, so if you wanted to you could rise up in the company to a corporate job eventually. (MadMonk28)
  • “For the interview, just be pleasant and let them know you are willing to work hard. Relax and be yourself.” (engineer_comp_geek)

Photo from McDonald’s

Posted in Business, Employment, Pottstown1 Comment

20110419-CapitalWashingtonDC-PaIndependent

Pension Burden At Local Schools Now National Topic

WASHINGTON DC – Pennsylvania’s failure to adequately fund its employee pensions, including that for teachers to which the Pottsgrove School District and others contribute an increasing amount of money annually, was among topics of conversation last week (April 14-15, 2011) during meetings of the National Conference of State Legislatures, The Pennsylvania Independent online news service reported Monday (April 18, 2011).

Pennsylvania came in for criticism under a discussion of problems with pension funds experienced by many states, The Independent said. Its Public School Employees Retirement System (PSERS), has a funded ratio — the calculation of assets divided by liabilities — of 79.2 percent … 20 percent less than what it owes to retirees.

Economist Andrew Biggs, a panelist at the meetings, acknowledged states like Pennsylvania “have excessive risk and bad accounting that hides that risk … The problem is, taxpayers have to make up the difference” when things go wrong, he added.

That’s what’s happening in part in Pottsgrove, Spring-Ford, Pottstown and other local school districts. Their contributions to PSERS have ballooned in recent years to cover the fund’s investment shortfalls. That adds significantly to local tax burdens, Pottsgrove Business Administrator David Nester has said.

Posted in Education, Politics, Pottsgrove Schools2 Comments

20110419-PulitzerPrize-Pulitzer

News Service Wins Pulitzer Prize For Online-Only Work

The Pulitzer Prize

NEW YORK NY – ProPublica, the non-profit online national news service with which The Sanatoga Post began working in July 2009 to track federal stimulus funding used in local highway projects, has won a 2011 Pulitzer Prize for a second consecutive year, it was announced Monday (April 18, 2011).

ProPublica reporters Jesse Eisinger and Jake Bernstein were awarded a Pulitzer for National Reporting for stories on how some Wall Street bankers at first delayed and then worsened the nation’s financial crisis. It marks the first time the prize has been given for a body of work not published in print.

The Pulitzer Prizes are considered journalism’s highest honors. The (Pottstown PA) Mercury newspaper also has twice been a Pulitzer recipient.

Posted in Business, News, Personal Finance, Pottstown1 Comment

20110418-SimplifiedChinese’Learning’

Pottsgrove Chinese Language Students Face Cuts Again

POTTSTOWN PA – For 36 Pottsgrove High School students, “Xuéxí” – a phonetic translation of the simplified Chinese word (seen at left) for “learning” – seems to become more complicated every year.

District Assistant Superintendent Shellie Feola delivered the budget task force Educational Programs Committee report Tuesday to the Pottsgrove school board

The students have been involved since January (2011) in an online, or “cyber,” school program to learn the Mandarin Chinese language, because the Pottsgrove School District couldn’t hire a suitable substitute teacher. Its only Mandarin expert quit her job last December (2010) after budget cuts of the previous year reduced her full-time hours by two-thirds.

Now the district Community Budget Task Force has proposed eliminating Mandarin entirely as a course offering, to save $23,661 of a roughly $2 million deficit in the district’s preliminary 2011-2012 budget. Meanwhile it also is promoting establishment of a cyber-charter school, ironically similar to the online Mandarin program already in use, as a possible way to bring disgruntled district families back to the Pottsgrove fold.

The district under Pennsylvania law must pay cyber-charters an average of $7,000 annually for each student whose families are somehow unhappy with Pottsgrove’s classroom experience and opt instead to go online. The task force suggested a district cyber-charter might initially attract 10 students. But it would need time to set up a program, members acknowledged, and did not attach any cost estimates for its creation.

Both the Mandarin and cyber-charter school recommendations are products of the task force Educational Programs Committee. It and five other committees of volunteers delivered cost reduction and revenue-raising suggestions last Tuesday (April 12, 2011) to the Board of School Directors, after researching and weighing options since February.

Cumulatively, the committees’ suggestions could close the deficit gap by about $1 million. There may be more, too, in savings explored but to which not all committees’ members could agree and therefore were not included in their reports.

If approved, cuts to the Mandarin program would represent its students’ second consecutive year of sacrifice to help balance district books. Such sacrifices are inevitable, observers contend, under a poor economy in which federal and state education funds are shrinking and always-despised district tax increases can’t be afforded, much less tolerated.

Of the 36, 29 students are taking Mandarin 2, a beyond-entry-level course, and seven others are taking more advanced Mandarin 3, high school principal Chris Shaffer told school board members on Jan. 11. His teacher had already submitted her resignation; the district had $11,134 remaining in its 2010-2011 budget for Mandarin education; and no acceptable substitute was available, he added.

As an option, Shaffer suggested the high school contract with “My Chinese 360,” an online Mandarin program approved for grades K-12. It uses certified language teachers in the U.S. and China and what it calls “innovative educational technologies to connect with American students in real-time, creating a virtual classroom experience.”

That’s the same sort of attractive experience the Educational Programs Committee hopes Pottsgrove could provide in a cyber-charter school.

School board members liked Shaffer’s idea, and agreed. The cost for My Chinese 360 for the remainder of the school year: $8,966. “The administration should be applauded for finding this kind of alternative,” director April Kontostathis said at the time.

Whether the alternative exists over the next 12 months will also be up to the board. Mandarin students could think of the decision, whatever it is, as another “Xuéxí” opportunity.

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

Related (to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ April 12 meeting):

Feola photo for The Post by Aimee M. Herbert, Aimee Marie Photography

Posted in Education, Pottsgrove Schools2 Comments

PennDOT Sets 422 Lane Closings Monday, Wednesday

PennDOT Sets 422 Lane Closings Monday, Wednesday

POTTSTOWN PA – Eastbound traffic on U.S. Route 422 between Armand Hammer Boulevard and Evergreen Road in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township will be limited Wednesday (April 20, 2011) from 9 a.m. to noon to the left lane only, as a Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) contractor closes the right lane for a bridge inspection.

Similarly, the westbound right lane in the same area will be closed Wednesday from noon to 3 p.m. Both closings, however, are dependent on the weather.

The one-day lane closings are part of three days of minor interruptions on 422, PennDOT said. It also:

  • Intends to close one 422 westbound lane today (Monday, April 18) from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. between the Oaks and Route 29 interchanges in Upper Providence Township, for bridge joint replacement; and
  • Closed one eastbound lane Sunday (April 17) from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., also between Route 29 and Oaks for joint work.

PennDOT said the work is part of its $4.1 million project to repair and replace bridge joints on highways across the Philadelphia region.  A.P. Construction Inc. of Blackwood, N.J., is the general contractor on the fully state-financed project, which is expected to be completed by June 2012.

Posted in Lower Pottsgrove, Safety, Transportation4 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 Dec. 9, 2010-Jan. 31, 2011, was $264,000, the Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper reports. The property is located at 116 Danny Rd.

  • A second property, at 2634 Allison Dr., sold for $154,000.

The top reported prices were listed Sunday (April 17, 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 $1,999,000, at 204 Booth Ln., Lower Merion PA.

Related:

Photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Business, Lower Pottsgrove, Real Estate1 Comment

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