Archive | Limerick

20111226-YFrog-ExelonNuclearLimerickOutlets-SeanBonner

Exelon Presents Neighboring Limerick With $150,000 Gift

LIMERICK PA – Exelon Nuclear, which is credited for its financial support of Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township’s summer concert series, on Tuesday (Feb. 7, 2012) delivered a $150,000 donation to its host municipality, neighboring Limerick Township, to pay for programs and facilities of the Limerick and Linfield Fire companies, its police department, and local parks and recreation.

The check, presented to the Board of Supervisors by Limerick Generating Station (LGS) Site Vice President Bill Maguire, represented the fourth installment of a $600,000 Exelon contribution to the township during the past four years.

“Our goal at (LGS) is to be both a leader in our community and in the nuclear industry,” Maguire said. “Exelon employees have been, and will continue to be, deeply involved in the community, and this contribution demonstrates our ongoing commitment to Limerick … and the region.”

Municipal officials welcomed Exelon’s gift. LGS, supervisors’ chairman Kara Shuler said, “is a valuable member of our community and we look forward to having them here for many years.”

Exelon is currently in the process of renewing its nuclear Units 1 and 2 operating licenses for another 20 years. The station is located at 3146 Sanatoga Rd. in Limerick, just east of the Lower Pottsgrove-Limerick townships’ line.

Exelon spokeswoman Dana Melia noted the company also contributes more than $400,000 each year to regional charities and community organizations.

Photo by Sean Bonner via YFrog

Posted in Business, Fire, Limerick, Police, Recreation, Safety, Social, Sports1 Comment

20120202-FeaturedPopulation

Lower Pottsgrove Could Grow 17 Percent … In 30 Years

Lower Pottsgrove leads the population change among Pottsgrove townships during the next 30 years, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission predicts

PHILADELPHIA PA – It took a decade, from the start of the century through 2010, for Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township to grow by 846 people. It may take 15 more years to add another 917, both according to the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission. But watch out beginning in 2025!; the township may have a real growth spurt – 1,141 extra bodies – through 2040.

Those are predictions – or at least educated guesses – about what’s ahead for the township’s population over a 40-year span. They are based in part on U.S. Census data and researchers’ studies, and were released Thursday (Jan. 26, 2012) by the commission, the agency responsible for land use planning guidance in the nine-county greater Philadelphia area.

The 2010 Census in Lower Pottsgrove showed 11,213 people living within its borders, and by 2010 Census the population had grown to 12,059. By 2015, the commission believes, the township will be home to 12,157; by 2020, 12,434; 2025, 12,976; 2030, 13,517; 2035, 13,870; and by 2040, 14,177. That means 2,058, or 17.1 percent more people, will have moved in between 2010 and 2040.

The commission predicts that, due to the recession, DVRPC forecasts slower population growth in the near term, with an increasing rate of growth between 2020 and 2030.

Among Lower Pottsgrove’s municipal neighbors during the same period:

  • Limerick could gain the most people, 5,442, and watch its population rise 30.1 percent.
  • Upper Pottsgrove might anticipate an influx of 2,039 people, up 38.4 percent.
  • Pottstown borough won’t grow by as much or as fast. The commission expects it to add 1,441 people (6.4 percent more) by 2040. And,
  • West Pottsgrove may grow by only 844, or 8.9 percent over 30 years, the forecast said.

“Population forecasts are an essential component of long-range transportation and land use planning,” the agency noted in releasing its results. DVRPC last adopted population forecasts in July 2007 for the period through 2035.

The commission willingly admits its forecasts can go awry.

For example, five years ago it predicted the city of Philadelphia would lose almost 42,000 residents between 2000 and 2010, before seeing its population stabilize after 2030. Instead, the 2010 Census revealed a gain of almost 9,000 city residents. “This positive trend is forecast to continue,” the commission now says, “as young adults continue to be attracted to the urban lifestyle and Philadelphia’s Asian and Latino populations continue to increase.”

Composite map created by The Post from DVRPC data

Posted in Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Montgomery County, Pottstown, Sanatoga, Transportation1 Comment

20120116-KingOfPrussiaPA-RebbieBookSigning

Notebook Worthy: Cutillo’s Gets Noticed For Jazzing It Up

SANATOGA PA – Jottings from a reporter’s notebook:

Refined Music, Refined Atmosphere Too

It was a happy surprise to hear Cutillo’s Restaurant, 2688 E. High St., Sanatoga heading the list of venues and events being promoted Monday (Jan. 16, 2012) by Philadelphia jazz music radio station WRTI-FM. If you haven’t been there lately, Cutillo’s now presents live jazz by regional performers every Saturday from 9 p.m. to midnight in its lounge. Scheduled for Jan. 28 is “Evolution Jazz.”

Valley Forge Touts The Value Of Membership

Those who travel U.S. Route 422 past King of Prussia during the weekday commute can’t help but notice the strides construction crews are making in the renovation of the Valley Forge Conference Center and its adjacent hotel. They will soon become part of the Valley Forge Casino Resort and Spa. Although an opening is several months away, the resort is already selling three-month trial and full-year memberships for dining and entertainment.

An artist's rendering of the casino's interior

Casino access is included with both, naturally.

The gambling license granted by Pennsylvania to Valley Forge forbids casino access to the general public unless they are registered overnight guests at the hotel; visitors attending a convention, meeting or a private function; customers who spend a minimum of $10 in one of the resort’s restaurants, night clubs or retail stores; or who … you guessed it … are resort members.

Three-month trial dining memberships are currently being advertised at $20; entertainment, $30.

The Exeter Chick-fil-a

Fill Your Stomach, And Bring A Jacket, Won’t You?

Chosen 300 Ministries, which operates in Pottstown, will benefit from a coat-and-blanket drive to be held today (Monday, Jan. 16) just west up the road (U.S. Route 422) at the Chick-fil-a Restaurant in Exeter.

The restaurant and WORD-FM Radio are calling this a “Souper Coat Drive,” which ties neatly to one of the store’s newest menu items, Chicken Tortilla Soup. Visitors who donate a new or gently used coat or blanket will receive a thank-you coupon for a serving of Chick-fil-A’s soups. Restaurant operator Shawn Filby reminds you that he offers a “classic Hearty Breast of Chicken Soup” as well.

Chosen 300 is a non-profit that distributes coats, blankets and meals to the homeless and needy not only in Pottstown, but in Philadelphia and Reading as well.

How often can you say “I cut the cheese!” and mean something good?

Rebbie at a book-signing event

Last June (2011), Royersford resident and singer-songwriter-author Kevin Rebbie published a well-received children’s book, illustrated by animator Laura Bluett, called “Mr. Stinkas and The Little Cheese Shop.” Mr. Stinkas has a dog named “Old Bleu,” and they have adventures that we’re not about to spoil by telling you. Suffice it to say, the book is aptly titled.

Part of its appeal, besides being a hoot for kids, is that a portion of the book’s proceeds are donated to a foundation that supports pediatric cancer research. Rebbie’s been busy on a regional promotional circuit since Mr. Stinkas’ debut. He’s been to Wilmington DE, Philadelphia (several times), and King of Prussia through late last month to do interviews and book signings.

Now he’s offering a discounted price ($25, formerly $30; and free shipping) from his website on a package that includes an autographed and personalized copy of the 64-page, full-color book, an accompanying audio CD, and an “I Cut The Cheese” backpack. The charities (there are now three Rebbie supports) still get a cut too.

Editor’s note: Notebook Worthy is a series of occasional articles; find others like it, here.

Photos from Google Images, the Valley Forge Casino and Resort, Chick-fil-a Exeter, and Kevin Rebbie

Posted in Arts, Business, Entertainment, Food, Limerick, People, Recreation, Sanatoga1 Comment

20090409-CvsSanatogaSidewalkRepair (1Edit)

Sanatoga CVS Pharmacy Robbed Of Drugs In Daylight

SANATOGA PA – Police are continuing to investigate a broad-daylight robbery that occurred Tuesday morning (Jan. 3, 2012) inside the CVS Pharmacy at East High Street and Sunnybrook Road, Sanatoga, during which a man who “postured as if he had a gun in his coat pocket” took an undisclosed amount of narcotics and fled the store reportedly two minutes before law enforcers arrived.

No employees or customers were injured during the event, investigators said.

The CVS Pharmacy on East High Street in Sanatoga

Police are hunting for a male subject of indeterminate age, who at the time was concealed by a black, fur-lined coat with its hood pulled up, red gloves, large-framed sunglasses, and a short-brimmed hat.

Video surveillance footage from the store may yield more information as the probe proceeds, but anyone with knowledge of the incident is now being urged to call the Lower Pottsgrove Police Department at 610-326-1508.

The crime unfolded at about 10:30 a.m., according to witness reports gathered by department Det. Joe Campbell and Ofc. Ryan Smith, as the suspect entered the pharmacy area of the store and presented what was described as a “demand note” to the pharmacist and pharmacy technician on duty. It said the suspect was armed, and requested specific narcotics; the names of the drugs, and the quantity taken are not being released.

Pharmacy workers, who told police it looked like the man held a hidden weapon, did as the note ordered. As they piled the drugs into a white CVS-branded bag and handed them over, someone reported the robbery-in-progress.

Police arrived within two speedy minutes of the dispatch, Campbell and Smith reported. The robber, apparently, was quicker. Witnesses claimed he ran from the store, bag in hand, and escaped.

Officers patrolling nearby made an investigative stop shortly afterward of a man walking in the 2000 block of East High Street, but later determined he was not the suspect and released him.

The robber may have been checking out the surrounding area before his act, police noted. Witnesses told them they earlier saw the subject “walking around to the rear of the store, between the Sunnybrook Village townhouse development and the CVS.”

Officers from the Pottstown and Limerick police departments provided assistance at the scene, Campbell and Smith said.

Other coverage:

Posted in Business, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Police, Pottstown, Safety, Sanatoga2 Comments

20111229-PaulAndSkipLevengood-CJsTire

From Inspiration At Township Plant, CJ’s Marks 40th Year

BIRDSBORO PA – A family-owned regional tire and automotive business, which marked its 40th anniversary this year, started from a simple idea that came to its founder as he worked a full-time job in the former Firestone tire plant on Armand Hammer Boulevard in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township.

CJ's Tire And Automotive founder Paul "Skip" Levengood Sr., right, and son Paul Jr.

Today, Birdsboro-based CJ’s Tire & Automotive Services operates 12 retail stores throughout southeastern Pennsylvania; a separate automotive parts franchise, called “Mighty Auto Parts,” serving four counties; and an e-commerce division. Ironically, it also includes a wholesale division that occupies 80,000 square feet of space in a township industrial park that was once home to Firestone itself.

But Paul “Skip” Levengood Sr. says he didn’t envision that kind of growth in spring 1971, when the company began as “C&J Tire.” He had something far more basic in mind: earning a living by treating customers better than he felt he was being treated.

Too many area tire dealerships back then had bad reputations, Levengood said Wednesday (Dec. 28, 2011). He considered himself a victim of some of them. He’d been working as a tire builder in the Firestone plant since the early 1960s, and like everyone else occasionally replaced a tread or two on the family vehicle. Lousy customer service from vendors was a common complaint.

“I knew I could give better service than what I was receiving at these places. I didn’t want to gouge customers and I was tired of being treated poorly,” Levengood said. “So I decided to open my own store.”

He had help, of course. Levengood, his wife Judy, and a partner and his wife, Carol, combined efforts to launch their store – with its name, C&J, taken from the women’s first initials – inside a converted boat shop in Birdsboro.

The early going was rough, even “tumultuous,” Levengood recalled. The four struggled to keep the business afloat. Levengood would work at the tire plant, while his partner operated their retail store. When his shift was over, Levengood headed to the shop and finished the day’s business, often working well into the evening.

In time, although the store was still small, it was “doing a decent business.” However, differences arose in the partnership, Levengood claimed, that took their toll on the operation and its customers. It “couldn’t survive with a split personality,” he figured, and made an offer to buy out his partner.

It was a barely affordable proposition, according to Levengood, that “took every dollar” the couple had. So in addition to the Firestone job and running the shop, he picked up additional hours as a bouncer at a local night club. He and Judy spent nights and weekends managing the tire inventory, paying the bills, and balancing their books.

More adversity struck shortly after the buyout was completed. Burglars ransacked the fledgling business in the middle of the night, Levengood said, stripping the store of most of its assets and just about every tire in inventory. That forced him to work “creatively” with suppliers, he joked.

The business survived, even thrived, and by 1973 Levengood reports he left his job at Firestone and immersed himself full-time into C&J Tire. Slightly more than a year later, the store celebrated its first year “in the black.”

In 1991, C&J Tire evolved into CJ’s Tire & Automotive, and Levengood opened a second location in West Lawn PA, outside Reading. That was followed with locations in New Holland (1993), and Lititz (1994). The wholesale division was also taking root as a regional tire distributor. More family members got involved, too.

“Tires are a commodity, so it’s up to us to show our customers how and why we’re different,” explains son Paul Levengood Jr. “Our formula is really pretty simple. We emphasize that it’s not about who is right, it’s about what is right. Taking care of the customer, hiring people with very high morals, and treating both customers and employees like they are family is what we are all about.”

From just four employees in 1971, CJ’s now employs more than 200 full and part-time sales people, tire and auto technicians, managers and administrative staffers.

As it looks ahead to 2012, the Levengoods said their company plans to open another two retail stores by June; locally, it already operates stores in Limerick, North Coventry, Kimberton and, naturally, Birdsboro. It’s also re-styling several showrooms to make them more functional and comfortable, revising its websites, and taking a new approach to marketing.

All of it, the elder Levengood noted, is to ensure that people who patronize his business feel like they got value for their money … the same feeling he craved four decades ago.

Posted in Business, Employment, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, People, Pottstown5 Comments

Postponements, Stays Good News In Local Foreclosures

Postponements, Stays Good News In Local Foreclosures

NORRISTOWN PA – Residential foreclosures nationally seem poised to rise again, according to Reuters News Service. It said banks moved more aggressively in the third quarter of 2011 and the number of new home foreclosures jumped by more than 21 percent over the previous three-month period.

Things may be slightly better, though, for some home owners in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township and elsewhere locally who expected to face foreclosure this week.

Seven of nine foreclosure sales of properties within the township, which were scheduled for disposition Wednesday (Dec. 28, 2012) in Norristown by Montgomery County (PA) Sheriff Eileen Whalon Behr, have been stayed, interrupted by bankruptcy filings, or otherwise postponed to later dates.

Those often are signs of lenders trying to work with owners to keep them in their homes, but they may also be due to holiday generosity.

  • Postponed until at least Jan. 25 (2012) were proposed sales of 1383 Oakdale Dr., 772 Gabriel Ct., 3808 Walnut Ridge Estates, and 1612 N. Keim St.
  • Postponed until Feb. 29 were proposed sales of 2807 Walnut Ridge Estates, and 2303 Walnut Ridge Estates.
  • The proposed sale of 1560 Potter Dr. was stayed.
  • The proposed sale of 1912 N. Charlotte St. is uncertain; the sheriff’s website has it marked as “Postponed to 12/28/2011;” and the listing of 19 Pebble Beach Ln. is marked as “For Sale 12/28/2011.”

The combined properties represent a total of more than $1.8 million in outstanding debt, according to the website.

Similarly, proposed sales of six properties in Limerick Township all were postponed, the sheriff reported; and of 34 properties scheduled for proposed sale in the borough of Pottstown, 30 were postponed or stayed.

Reuters, in its Dec. 21 (2011) story, noted that “in the final months of 2010 some big lenders, including Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo, suspended foreclosure proceedings as they responded to criticism over shoddy paperwork used to support foreclosures.” Those reviews have now been completed, Reuters added, and so the pace of foreclosures is again “picking up.”

It cited an Office of the Comptroller of the Currency report that claimed “the large increase in new foreclosures also occurred because banks have ‘exhausted alternatives to foreclosure for the large inventory of seriously delinquent mortgages working through’ the system.”

Photo from Google Images

Posted in Business, Courts, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Montgomery County, Personal Finance, Pottstown, Real Estate3 Comments

Following The Holiday, Blood Products Urgently Needed

Following The Holiday, Blood Products Urgently Needed

Blood drives ahead

POTTSTOWN PA – The emergency need for blood products always seems greatest around the holidays. That’s why, following the winter vacation respite, blood collection drives begin today (Monday, Dec. 26, 2011) and continue through Jan. 6 (2012) in Pottstown, Limerick and Gilbertsville PA, conducted by the Miller-Keystone Blood Center.

Drives are scheduled for:

  • Monday (Dec. 26) from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Pottstown YMCA, 724 North Adams Street, Pottstown;
  • Wednesday (Dec. 28) from 2-7 p.m. at St. James United Church of Christ, 321 S. Limerick Rd., Limerick;
  • Thursday (Dec. 29) from 2-7 p.m. at Lowe’s, 1136 Town Square Rd., Pottstown;
  • Jan. 3 (Tuesday) from 4:30-7:30 p.m. at the Boyertown YMCA, 3065 N. Charlotte St., Gilbertsville; and
  • Jan. 6 (Friday) from 2-7 p.m. at Hope Community Church, 2732 Charlotte St., Gilbertsville.

Appointments are required and may be made by calling the blood bank at 610-926-6060.

Photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Health, Limerick, Social5 Comments

Sanatoga Turkey Hill Among Three Robberies Sunday

Sanatoga Turkey Hill Among Three Robberies Sunday

Turkey Hill

SANATOGA PA – The Turkey Hill convenience store on East High Street at Rupert Road in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township was one of three retail locations robbed at knife-point Sunday (Dec. 18, 2011) at about 3:30 a.m., The (Pottstown PA) Mercury newspaper reported Tuesday (Dec. 20). No one was injured in the township incident, during which Lower Pottsgrove police said the robber got away with less than $200.

Also robbed in Sunday’s early morning hours were stores in Limerick Township and Phoenixville Borough. Police consider them related, The Mercury reported, because all seem to involve the same individual or methods, occurred within close time and proximity of each other, and were near exits to U.S. Route 422. They also may be related to a recent robbery in Bally, according to police.

Police in several departments continue to investigate, and are cooperating in their cases. No suspects have been announced.

Posted in Business, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Police, Safety, Sanatoga3 Comments

Gerlach May Represent Township In Redrawn 6th District

Gerlach May Represent Township In Redrawn 6th District

POTTSTOWN PA – A final 26-24 vote Wednesday night (Dec. 14,2011) in the Pennsylvania Senate confirmed months of work by legislators who created a new decennial map of the state’s congressional districts, which The Pennsylvania Independent online news service said had been “drawn in behind-closed-door meetings,” unveiled only a day earlier (Tuesday, Dec. 13), and conducted without input from the public or the state legislature’s Democrat minority.

Rep. Jim Gerlach

The process “has reignited a debate about the proper way to draw new districts,” The Independent reported.

The new maps must now be approved by the state House of Representatives, which is scheduled to vote on the measure Monday (Dec. 19)

Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township is significantly affected by the redistricting. It has been represented for the past 10 years by Republican Congressman Charlie Dent, whose 15th District primarily covered the Lehigh Valley. If the new maps are approved, as is expected, the township would be consolidated with the borough of Pottstown, and Upper and West Pottsgrove townships into a re-configured 6th District represented by Republican Rep. Jim Gerlach.

Gerlach’s district already includes Limerick Township.

Representation by one congressman of so many contiguous municipalities is seen as a boon for local governments and politicians who oversee them and, by extension, their constituents. Area observers believe uniting under a greater Pottstown banner in a single district better focuses municipal interests at the federal level on consensus issues like improvements to U.S. Route 422 and economic development.

On the other hand, it also means Lower Pottsgrove, which had been working with Dent’s office, would begin somewhat anew with Gerlach … even though local officials know and have collaborated with him before.

New congressional districts must be redrawn every decade following the national census to reflect shifts in population, but every state undertakes that process in their own way. Pennsylvania Democrats charged Wednesday that the controlling Republican majority unfairly chopped and reassembled districts in puzzle-like fashion for their own electoral advantage.

Other coverage:

Posted in Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Politics, Pottstown1 Comment

Man Charged With Assault In Township Incident Sunday

Man Charged With Assault In Township Incident Sunday

SANATOGA PA – A Limerick PA man was arrested Sunday morning (Dec. 11, 2011) and charged with aggravated assault and other offenses after police alleged he damaged the glass window of a Tanglewood Court home, fought with people nearby, threatened a young boy, and fled the area.

Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township police investigating Ofc. David Slothower said Chad M. Cook, no age given, of West Ridge Pike, Limerick PA, was arrested following the report of a disturbance Sunday shortly after 3 a.m.

A resident of the home claimed Cook had thrown a real estate sign through its picture window, and that the glass had stuck a person sitting on a couch inside. An argument followed outside, Slothower reported, during which Cook allegedly made threats against a 4-year-old boy and bit one person on the forearm in a struggle.

Cook was reported to have left the scene, but later was located and taken into custody by Limerick (PA) Township police. He was charged with aggravated assault, terroristic threats, simple assault, recklessly endangering another person, and related charges, Slothower said. His bail was set at $35,000 cash following an arraignment, the officer added.

A preliminary hearing on the charges has been set for Dec. 21 (Wednesday) at 11 a.m.; Slothower’s report did not specify in which district court it would be held.

Other coverage:

Photo from Clipart.com

Posted in Courts, Limerick, Lower Pottsgrove, Police3 Comments

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