Archive | May, 2011

20110601-PatchLogo

Pottsgrove Makes Seating Room For More News Outlets

POTTSTOWN PA – It became a bit crowded last week in the press section of the Pottsgrove School District‘s Kauffman Road administrative office conference room. That’s because more members of the press have begun showing up for the Board of School Directors’ meetings.

States with Patch editions (in dark green)

District residents now have not one, not two, but three different and independent sources of Pottsgrove school information on which they might rely.

Sanatoga Post Managing Editor Joe Zlomek and Evan Brandt of The (Pottstown PA) Mercury newspaper – who merits the title “dean of the Pottsgrove reporting corps” – were joined at last Tuesday’s (May 24) meeting by Jamie Richard, representing a new online news service known as “The Pottstown Patch.”

The Pottstown Patch, which launched last week, is the latest in a series of efforts by AOL Corp. (formerly America OnLine) to expand its revenues by selling advertising that accompanies local news content. Supervised by Editor Teresa McMinn, to whom Richard answers, the Pottstown edition intends to cover the borough, the Pottstown and Pottsgrove school districts, Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township and Sanatoga, and occasionally more rural places like West Vincent.

AOL also operates a Limerick Patch (covering Limerick, Royersford, Spring City, and the Spring-Ford School District) and a Perkiomen Valley Patch (covering Collegeville, Schwenksville, Trappe, and the Methacton and Perkiomen Valley school districts), as well as a Phoenixville Patch, Norristown Patch and West Chester Patch. Almost 60 Patch services are up in running in Pennsylvania alone, and others operate in 21 additional states.

More news outlets, of course, mean more choices for news consumers. It’s been an interesting exercise during the past week to compare perspectives on stories generated by The Post, The Mercury, and The Patch when all three cover the same events.

That Pottsgrove has a press section at all surprises some visitors. It’s a six-foot-long white table, accompanied by two chairs, that the administration thoughtfully set aside for media use. Almost 20 years ago directors wrestled with determining how and from what vantage points reporters would be allowed to use recording devices during board deliberations, and decided an official table was the best answer.

The December 1992 district policy that established the press table also allows the board president to control how much camera lighting can be used during meetings.

Members of the media being an ornery lot , the press table is rarely used. Reporters sit with the audience (their theory presumably being they’ll stand out less in a crowd). The table, however, conveniently holds publicly available copies of the board agenda and forms that must be completed by individuals who wish to address the board during time it reserves for comments.

Related (to the Pottsgrove Board of School Directors’ meeting of May 24):

Posted in Business, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Pottsgrove Schools, Pottstown, Sanatoga8 Comments

20110527-CircusTentCollapse-SewardPA

Wind Storm Forces Circus To Cancel Sanatoga Shows

SANATOGA PA – The Sanatoga Fire Company’s hopes for a community event that might attract first-time visitors to the fire hall, and also launch a new annual fund-raiser, have been literally blown away with a Pennsylvania wind storm.

The scheduled June 7-8 (2011; Tuesday and Wednesday) performances of the Lewis and Clark Circus at the fire hall, 2222 E. High St., Pottstown PA – which were heavily promoted with posters throughout greater Pottstown during the past month – have been canceled, fire company officials announced Saturday (May 28) on their website.

Circus workers clean the grounds Thursday in Seward PA

Representatives of the circus, headquartered in Easley SC, called fire company organizers to tell them a wind storm accident that occurred last Thursday (May 26) had knocked down and damaged a tent, and temporarily trapped patrons beneath it, in tiny Seward PA. The circus was conducting performances there on behalf of the Seward Volunteer Fire Company.

The circus will be unable to meet its planned commitment in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township, organizers were told. “There are no plans to reschedule for this year,” according to the website statement.

Seward is located 226 miles northwest of Sanatoga, in Westmoreland County just north of Johnstown.

Five people, including three children, were injured in the accident when Lewis And Clark’s well-recognized red-and-yellow big top tent collapsed during the first of two scheduled shows, according to Columbia SC television station WLTX-TV.

“Numerous strong storms wreaked havoc with roads and homes” across that portion of western Pennsylvania, the report said. Damaging hail of up to 2 inches in diameter was said to have fallen in neighboring Franklin, Schuylkill, Cumberland and Northumberland counties, and the National Weather Service was investigating several funnel cloud reports.

About 50 people were in the tent when the collapse happened, officials said. Seward Volunteer Fire Company Chief Travis Lovejoy told reporters that spectators fled from the toppled structure, and that three people were taken from the scene in ambulances. One adult was struck in the head and hospitalized in intensive care, according to the newscast. Pittsburgh station WPXI-TV reported “several children were hurt and bleeding.”

The tent was designed to withstand winds up to at least 60 mph, a circus spokesman told WPXI. The weather service said the wind gust that took the tent down could have been between 60 and 70 mph.

Sanatoga company officials have not yet indicated whether they will try to schedule the circus during 2012. The circus last performed in Sanatoga during 2010, on the grounds of Sunnybrook Ballroom.

Circus workers photo from WPXI-TV

Posted in Entertainment, Fire, Lower Pottsgrove, Safety, Sanatoga, Social, Weather2 Comments

20110531-Pottstown PA-MemorialService-Herbert (6)

Sanatogans Honor Their Fallen In Memorial Ceremonies

POTTSTOWN PA – Commemorative services, in which Sanatoga’s Brig. Gen. Elmer S. Friedberg American Legion Post 244 again played a significant role, capped Pottstown’s successful Memorial Day 2011 parade through the borough Monday (May 30), ending at the Memorial Park monuments on West King Street.

The solemn ceremonies were sponsored and conducted by the Pottstown Joint Veterans Council, an umbrella organization involving many veterans’ representatives.

Dozens of small American flags (above), each of them topped by a star bearing the name of an honored veteran, created a fluttering carpet across a portion of the park fields as visitors arrived. Entering the park, they also passed a display of military and other vehicles (below), and joined a crowd of other participants in paying tribute to the fallen.

Pottstown’s High School marching band provided musical accompaniment (above) as state Rep. Tom Quigley (below), who represents Lower Pottsgrove, Limerick and Pottstown in the House, was among those offering remarks during the ceremony.

Sanatoga American Legion post members had a busy week preceding their participation in Monday’s tribute, according to Adjutant Billy Worrell.

  • On Saturday (May 21), they installed graveside flags in Pottstown’s Highland Memorial Park Cemetery;
  • Last Sunday (May 22), they were among those helping to recognize a North Coventry resident and Army assault team leader in Iraq who received an award at the township’s Big Woods Festival;
  • On Wednesday (May 25) they welcomed a U.S. Army soldier home to Royersford following a tour of duty in Afghanistan; and
  • On Friday (May 27) they turned out in force to enjoy the annual veterans services conducted by students at St. Mary’s School in Schwenksville.

Photos for The Post by Aimee M. Herbert, Aimee Marie Photography

Posted in Holiday, Military, Pottstown, Sanatoga, Social5 Comments

20110528-MillingAndPavingEquip-Sanatoga

PennDOT’s Buchert Road Repair Work Returns This Week

THOSE STRIPS ARE A SIGN OF PROGRESS – Darker colored asphalt strips (above) evident during the past week on Buchert Road in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township are proof that contractors for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation have been busily repairing the road’s core to prevent further deterioration. Although milling and repaving equipment sat idle Saturday (May 28; below) in a parking lot at Gerald Richards Park, it will be back in use this week as workers attempt to finish the job. They’re already repaired the south lane of Buchert from Charlotte Street east to North Pleasant View Road; now they are working along North Pleasant View Road from East High Street to Buchert. Motorists, beware. The road may be closed to traffic at times, and detoured at others.

Posted in Lower Pottsgrove, Transportation1 Comment

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 Feb. 7-March 18, 2011, was $184,000, the Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper reports. The property is located at 2163 Deer Ridge Dr.

Also making the list were:

  • 854 Duckworth Dr., $106,500;
  • 218 S. Pleasant View Rd., $105,000; and
  • 2604 Allison Dr., $75,000.

The top reported prices were listed Sunday (May 29, 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 $2,600,000, at 1515 Mount Pleasant Rd., Lower Merion PA.

Related:

Photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Business, Lower Pottsgrove, Real Estate1 Comment

20110530-SunnybrookBallroomAnniv-Sunnybrook

Happy Anniversary, Sunnybrook Ballroom; Age 80

ITS ACTUAL ANNIVERSARY IS MAY 31, 1931 – For accuracy’s sake, that’s the day Sanatoga PA’s historic Sunnybrook Ballroom first opened to the public, according to its website, from which the above aerial photo of the large ballroom building and its adjacent pool was taken. For practical purposes, however, most Sunnybook supporters consider the entire Memorial Day weekend as one long Sunnybrook anniversary. The first band to play at the ballroom, on Memorial Day 1931, reportedly was Joe LaFrance and his Bosch Radio Band, advertised as “one of the finest in the country”.

Photo from Sunnybrook Ballroom

Posted in Entertainment, Holiday, Sanatoga2 Comments

20110528-TollingGraphic-Independent

Exec Highway Group To Hear Rt. 422 Tolling As ‘Model’

HARRISBURG PA – The 25-mile stretch of limited-access, four-lane U.S. Route 422 between King of Prussia and Reading PA will be promoted June 6 (2011; Monday) as a potential model for tolling highways across the state in answer to Pennsylvania’s need for increased transportation funding, The Pennsylvania Independent online news service reported Friday (May 27).

The 30-member executive commission, appointed by Gov. Tom Corbett, will see a presentation demonstrating how tolls would work on Route 422 in Montgomery, Chester and Berks counties, The Independent said. The commission is “looking for a way to generate more than $2.5 billion in annual transportation funding in the post-stimulus environment of declining federal spending on infrastructure,” it added.

The commission’s meeting intends to “focus on ways to make transportation spending more efficient and effective, including cost-saving proposals with revenue-raising options,” The Independent quoted state Secretary of Transportation Barry Schoch as saying. “I think it is appropriate for any commission that is examining financing to look at how we are spending the current dollars,” Schoch said.

The article did not report who would make the presentation, but proposals to impose tolls on 422 automotive traffic have been advocated for almost two years by the Philadelphia-based Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC) and affiliated agencies.

A Route 422 Master Plan created by DVRPC identifies the need to relieve the highway’s congestion, and the agency has consistently said tolls may be the best way to raise funds to solve the problem. It also continues to study tolls as a prime revenue-generating option. The master plan itself has been endorsed by Limerick (PA) Township supervisors, rejected by the Pottstown Borough Council, and received no comment from Lower Pottsgrove commissioners.

Related (to U.S. Route 422 Corridor planning):

Graphic from The Pennsylvania Independent

Posted in Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Pottstown, Transportation8 Comments

Holiday Will Change Garbage Collection To Tuesday

Holiday Will Change Garbage Collection To Tuesday

SANATOGA PA -Pick-ups of garbage and recycled items in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township won’t be regular or as normally scheduled during the Memorial Day holiday weekend, township employee Jenifer Corley reported Friday (May 27, 2011) by e-mail.

Collections for next week only have been moved to Tuesday (May 31), and will NOT be conducted Monday.

Trash barrels and recycling bins should be at curbside by Monday night (May 30) for pick up Tuesday morning by crews of Lower Pottsgrove’s waste collection contractor, J.P. Mascaro and Sons of Norristown PA.

The municipal building, 2199 Buchert Rd., and its administrative offices will be closed Monday, too. It reopens for business Tuesday at 8 a.m.

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Business, Lower Pottsgrove2 Comments

Court Decision Could Affect Township Sex Offender Law

Court Decision Could Affect Township Sex Offender Law

HARRISBURG PA – A 2009 law that limited sex offender residency in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township, and which at the time won unanimous approval from the Board of Commissioners, may be invalidated by a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision released Thursday (May 26, 2011) regarding a similar ordinance in Allegheny County.

Facing the justice system.

Local sex offender residency laws might be invalidated by Thursday court decision

The court, in what The Associated Press reported as a “strongly worded, 23-page decision” written by Chief Justice Ronald Castille, said the county ordinance is “pre-empted by state laws that balance public safety and the goal of rehabilitation for sex offenders.” Attorneys quoted by The AP said similarly written laws in 150 municipalities across the state – including Lower Pottsgrove – probably would be affected and challenged.

Nearly 11,000 sex offenders are registered with the state police under Pennsylvania Megan’s Law.

Allegheny County’s prohibition against registered offenders living within 2,500 feet of schools, child-care facilities, community centers, public parks or recreational facilities would isolate them in “localized penal colonies” distant from families and old neighborhoods, The AP said Castille wrote in the unanimous opinion.

The Lower Pottsgrove law bars offender residency in any structure within 1,000 feet of those same locales. “We think these are reasonable restrictions that ensure the public’s safety” but also give offenders the ability to live within township borders, Commissioner Jonathan Spadt said when the local law passed. Spadt promoted his support of the law in campaign materials distributed during primary elections earlier this month.

Allegheny County Solicitor Michael Wojcik, who led its legal team, suggested local ordinances that are less stringent or that cover more rural areas might stand up against scrutiny. “It does not strike them all down,” he told The AP. Lower Pottsgrove’s law conceivably could qualify on both counts; it is less restrictive, and the township is, in part, significantly rural.

An American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania legal representative disagreed with Wojcik. The court “sends a pretty clear message,” Edwin J. Strassburger said. Strassburger worked with other attorneys who sued in federal court in Pittsburgh on behalf of six sex offenders affected by Allegheny County’s ordinance.

In southeastern Pennsylvania, according to The AP:

  • Doylestown Township has had a sex offender residency restriction ordinance in place since 2005. Its police chief said the Bucks County adult probation department regularly contacts the township if a registered sex offender wants to live there, and checks to see if the offender’s residence is outside boundaries established by its ordinance. Township police have never arrested or cited anyone for violation of the ordinance, he added.
  • Hatboro adopted an ordinance in 2006 that prohibited sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or child-care facility, but officials learned about court rulings that they believed invalidated their ordinance and have been following the law, council President Marianne Reymer said.

Related:

Posted in Courts, Lower Pottsgrove, Police1 Comment

20110527-CommutingBrochures-DVRPC

Win In Commuting Survey! (But Not While You Drive)

POTTSTOWN PA – If you’re tired of the speed-up, slow-down, stop-then-go hassle that is a regular feature of commuting on U.S. Route 422, maybe a chance to win one of five $50 Amazon.com gift cards is what you need to perk up your day. The Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission hopes so.

Have you seen these? The DVRPC wants to know

The commission continues to plan the future of the portion of four-lane, limited-access highway that stretches west from King of Prussia to Reading PA. It wants commuters to know more about and consider using “mobility alternatives programs” like public transportation and carpools, so it created a survey to ask drivers for their opinions on the topic. The gift card lottery is being offered an as an incentive to participate.

Survey questions focus on marketing brochures and other components of promotional campaigns intended to encourage commuting alternatives. While not 422-specific, the brochures address some concerns often voiced by motorists: the availability of emergency rides home, environmental consciousness, and time wasted in traffic lines. The creators of those items want respondents to describe how they can be more effective.

They online survey is short; it takes about 5 minutes to complete. Those interested in an opportunity to be one of five respondents who win a gift card for Amazon, one of the world’s largest online retailers, need supply only an e-mail address.

Brochure photos from DVRPC

Posted in Transportation1 Comment

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