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The Iron Under Ground

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Don’t be surprised if your street gets torn up next year.

Tuesday night, the Pottstown Borough Authority approved plans to conduct $2.9 million worth of sewer line replacements in 2014.

The decision comes on top of a previously approved plan to conduct $2.4 million in water line replacements in 2014 as well.

“We have to get on top of replacing our underground infrastructure,” said Authority Vice Chairman David Renn.  “If we let things go on as they are unchanged, eventually the whole system would collapse.”

Public Works Director Doug Yerger noted that “we are using pipes that were put in place in the early 1900s. There were pipes here before there were treatment plants.”

Chairman Tom Carroll said the authority is trying to hold off on incurring more debt and pay for repairs, upgrades and maintenance without borrowing.

“This is my sixth year on the authority and when I started, we were doing a lot of borrowing and people were saying money way cheap,” Carroll said. “But I kept looking at the interest we were paying and thinking money may be cheap, but not as cheap as not borrowing at all.”

Renn pointed out that 40 percent of the authority’s sewer budget goes toward bond payments.
“When 40 percent of your budget is debt, that’s terrible,” Renn said.

The authority pays $3 million a year toward re-paying bonds, an obligation that will continue until 2023, said Finance Director Janice Lee.

Instead, said Carroll, it is better for the authority to move ahead with needed replacement and pay for them as they go. That may require rate increases.

The finance office anticipates the sewer fund will end the year with $6 million in cash. However, by the time the five-year capital plan is completed, that cash will have dwindled to $2.3 million in the sewer fund, Carroll said.

Overall, that capital plan calls for 28 pipe replacement projects.

Tom Weld from BCM Engineering told the authority board that planning for the specific water and sewer projects for 2013 would be completed by January and would take 12 to 15 months to complete.

Bids would go out in the winter, so contractors looking to plan for spring work would likely give a better price, Weld said.

When possible, projects would be arranged to water and sewer pipe replacements can occur on the same street to avoid having to re-pave a street twice, he said.


Look! Down in the Sewer! It's a Worm! No, its a Mole! No, it's FATBERG!

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Ewww.

Having just yesterday posted about Pottstown's plans to replace aging water and sewer lines, I came across this little item which should serve as a reminder that what we don't see can still hurt us, or at least gross us out.

Ladies and gentleman, courtesy of NPR, CNN and the BBC, I present "FATBERG!"

A " 'bus-sized lump' of food fat mixed with wet wipes" has been removed from a southwest London sewer, the BBC says.
The 15-ton behemoth was the largest "congealed lump of lard" ever found in the Thames Water sewage system, supervisor Gordon Hailwood says in a statement. Nearby residents were reporting that their toilets wouldn't flush because the system was so clogged. It took three weeks to hack the monster into pieces and haul them away in "heavy duty lorries," Hailwood also said.
If you have a strong stomach, here is video from CNN:



In case you are wondering about what this has to do with Pottstown, there actually is a connection.

Pottstown has something called a F.O.G. ordinance, which prohibits the dumping of fats, oils and grease into the sewer system.

Now, you longer need to ask why.

This Saturday in (Space Again) Science

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Once again, our eyes turn to the stars for our (mostly) weekly feature we like to call 

This Saturday in Science


However, although our gaze is fixed skyward at a vastness too large to comprehend, we'll once again find the interconnectedness that affects us all, thus showing that the most vast and the most-micro are often one in the same.
Mount Sharp, on Mars, is where the rover Curiosity is headed.

Let's begin by wishing the Mars rover Curiosity a happy birthday.

Although a year on Mars (if you define a year by how long it takes to orbit the sun) is shorter than an
earth year, we have enough confusion in our lives. So we're sticking with earth time for this one.

Not exactly a speed demon, Curiosity is mid-way through a journey to the 18,000-foot Mount Sharp, where it is hoped clues to the planet's early days can be found.

It's only 4.4 miles away, but with AAA service station thousands of miles away, the drivers of the rover are taking it super slow -- to the tune of 100 yards per day.

According to NASA, Curiosity has already traveled more than a mile, taken more than 36,700 images and fired 75,000 laser shots to analyze rocks and soil.

The New York Times tells us more from this Aug. 5 article:
The rover, roughly the size of a car, ended up right where it had been aimed — within Gale Crater, a 96-mile-wide scar from an asteroid impact at least 3.5 billion years ago. In that time layers of sediment filled much of the crater, which were then somehow carved away, leaving Mount Sharp at the center.
There was no room for a birthday cake on Curiosity...
Observations from orbit pointed to the presence of clay minerals at the base of the mountain, named in honor of Robert P. Sharp, a prominent geologist and Mars expert. Because clays form in water that has a neutral pH, that made Gale Crater a promising place to look for signs that Mars could have once been hospitable for life.
Before it headed toward Mount Sharp, Dr. John P. Grotzinger’s team decided to send Curiosity on a detour to investigate terrain that looked to be an intriguing confluence of three different rock types. Along the way, Curiosity spotted what looked like an ancient streambed. At the site, in the first rock it drilled on Feb. 8 (Sol 182), it struck the jackpot — clays.
This rock in this part of Mars formed in watery conditions that were surprisingly Earthlike. “Unquestionably, Mars was a habitable planet in its ancient past,” Dr. Grotzinger said. Curiosity, however, does not have instruments that can directly search for life, past or present.
You can track Curiosity's daily path by clicking here.

This is one asteroid capture method NASA is exploring...
Another one of NASA's ambitious projects has to do with capturing near-by asteroids and putting them within hand reach in orbit around the moon.

We first told you about it in this April 13 post.

When the agency asked for suggestions, America responded with more than 400 proposals from private companies, non-profit groups and international organizations.

As Yahoo News reported in this July 26th article: 
The NASA asteroid retrieval mission aims to send a robotic spacecraft out to a near-Earth asteroid, snare it with a "space lasso" and tow it back to a parking orbit near the moon so it can be explored by astronauts.
The asteroid mission is NASA's way of pursuing the goal set by President Barack Obama that called on NASA to send a manned mission to a near-Earth asteroid by 2025, and then aim for a Mars flight in the 2030s.
On June 18, NASA also unveiled its Asteroid Grand Challenge, an effort to find and identify all of the asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth, as well as develop ideas to defend the planet against potential impacts. The effort is one of several national "grand challenges" announced by the Obama Administration and other government agencies in recent weeks to spur scientific progress and innovation.
And of course you can't talk about asteroids without thinking of the big one that crashed into earth and wiped out the dinosaurs.

That was one big boom
Now, the latest evidence by paleontologists indicates that the species living in fresh water fare much better than their brethren in the salty seas, not to mention land-lubbing species.

In this July 26 article from Yahoo News, we discover that because the fresh-water species were used to a freezing-thawing cycle, they were better able to adapt to the premature winter that arrived when a cloud of dust from the impact cut off sunlight for a very long time.

The disaster, which killed off at least 75 percent of all species on Earth, including all dinosaurs except for birds, was apparently triggered by a cosmic impact that occurred in what is now Mexico about 65 million years ago.

Water would have helped shelter life in rivers and lakes, as well as the seas and oceans, from the initial blast of heat from the cosmic impact. However, the giant extraterrestrial collision set fire to Earth's surface, darkening the sky with dust and ash that cooled the planet.
The resulting "impact winter" and its lack of sunlight would have crippled both freshwater and marine food chains by killing off microscopic photosynthetic organisms known as phytoplankton that are at the base of the marine and freshwater food chains.
Many a dinosaur dinner was interrupted on that fateful day....
Intriguingly, while marine communities were devastated by the mass extinction, losing 50 percent of their species, geophysicist Douglas Robertson at the University of Colorado at Boulder and his colleagues looked at a database of western North America fossils and discovered freshwater ones there survived relatively unscathed, losing only about 10 percent of their species.
The researchers note that freshwater organisms, unlike marine life, are used to annual freezes that ice over inland waters, severely limiting their oxygen supplies. As such, freshwater communities might have better endured the low oxygen levels in the wake of the death of photosynthetic life following an impact winter.
Speaking of the questions of life, it is often amazing how answers to really big questions are found in tiny places.

Conversely, answers to questions about really small things, we're talking sub-atomic here, are sometimes found in the vastness of space.

Consider this July 30 article from National Public Radio which reports on how the apparent
Black holes and quantum entanglement,
we're all connected, big and small.
connection between certain sub-atomic particles was discovered by studying black holes.

The first concept to wrap your head around is something called "quantum entanglement," which, by the way, would be a great name for a rock band.

NPR's Adam Frank explained it like this:
One of the deepest mysteries of quantum physics, however, is called entanglement— the ability of two widely separated quantum systems to instantaneously affect each other. Make a measurement on one member of an "entangled" pair of electrons and its twin, stationed, perhaps, at the other side of Universe will instantly be forced to change its own behavior.
 So, Star Trek aficionados are already saying to themselves "I know where this is going" -- and they're right.

Physicist Mark Van Raamsdook has recently argued that entanglement wasn't just another wacky, unexplained, throw-your-hands-in-air quantum effect, but a clue to the fundamental structure of space and time.

Juan Maldacena and Leonard Susskind recently published a paper which showed:

How a pair of black holes could be created with a wormhole strung between them. For those of you not watching too many science fiction movies, a wormhole is a kind of tunnel in space-time that can quickly connect two widely separated regions of the Universe (they are formally called Einstein-Rosen bridges).
That expression "widely separated regions of the Universe" is the key, since it also appeared in the explanation a few paragraphs ago of entanglement. What Maldacena and Susskind showed was that their black holes + wormhole system was also an entangled quantum system of space-time.
Cool huh?

The study's authors thought so too.

Maybe that's why they titled it: "Cool Horizons for Entangled Black Holes."

Well that's it for this week folks.

Remember to watch this blog for more science.

Of Cycles and Cemeteries

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The Cycles and Cemetery ride will begin at Montgomery Cemetery,
just outside Norristown, where two Civil War generals are buried.
Bicycle riders fond of history (or the supernatural) can take a ride along the Schuylkill River Trail Sept. 21 and go through the gates of two historic cemeteries where they can visit the gravesites of Civil War notables, including Gettysburg Generals Meade and Hancock.

The Schuylkill River Heritage Area is hosting the second ride in the Schuylkill River Trail Bike Tour Series. 

The Cycles and Cemeteries Ride will take cyclists along the Schuylkill River Trail from Norristown to East Falls, with visits to Montgomery Cemetery in West Norriton and Laurel Hill Cemetery in East Falls.

The ride along the trail incorporates a unique mix of cycling and history, with guided tours of two historic cemeteries where Civil War notables are buried

Ride options include 14 and 28-mile distances, and all participants can take guided or self-guided tours of the cemeteries on foot.

The cost for the Cycles and Cemeteries Ride is $35 per person before Sept. 5, and $40 after that date. 

To secure a spot on the shuttle for you and your bike you must pre-register and pay an additional $10. 
Non-riding friends and family members of participants can opt to purchase lunch and cemetery tours for $15 prior to the event. Registration closes Sept. 18. 

You cannot join the ride on the day. Event is rain or shine and limited to 250 riders.

Price includes lunch, well-marked route, cemetery tours and refreshments. Free t-shirts are included for all who register by Sept. 5. All proceeds benefit the Schuylkill River Heritage Area, Laurel Hill Cemetery and Montgomery Cemetery.

The Schuylkill River Trail Bike Tour Series is a three-year series of annual rides that was introduced by the Schuylkill River Heritage Area last year. Each fall, a different section of trail is featured. 

All the rides are intended to raise awareness of the connections that can be made from Schuylkill River Trail to regional historic sites.
Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock

The Cycles and Cemeteries Ride is being held in partnership with Laurel Hill Cemetery and Montgomery Cemetery. 

The event will begin at Montgomery Cemetery, where, prior to the ride, participants can visit four interpretive stations with information on Civil War Generals Hancock and Zook, Civil War nurses and the Grand Army of the Republic.

Cyclists will then pedal 14-miles to Laurel Hill Cemetery in East Falls where lunch will be served. 

A Civil War documentary video will be screened marking the 150th anniversary of the events of 1863 leading up to and following the Battle of Gettysburg. 

Guided and self-guided tours will take participants to the gravesites of the many notables featured in the video, including Gettysburg General George Meade.
Maj. General George C. Meade

Participants can choose to ride back to Montgomery Cemetery, take a bike/passenger shuttle back to their cars, or provide their own transportation from the Laurel Hill Cemetery. 

The Cycles and Cemeteries Ride is the second ride in the bike tour series. The first, the Rails and River Towns Ride, was held last fall and took over 100 cyclists along the trail from Pottstown to Birdsboro, with historic walking tours of two villages.

The final ride planned is the 2014 National Parks of the Schuylkill River Heritage Area Ride, a two-day event that will take cyclists to three national parks: Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site, Valley Forge National Historical Park and Independence National Historical Park.

“Our goal in establishing the Schuylkill River Trail Bike Tour Series is to show people that they can travel along the trail to connect to visitor sites and regional history,” said Kurt Zwikl, executive director of the Schuylkill River Heritage Area. 

“Cyclists who participate in the Cycles and Cemeteries Ride will not only experience an enjoyable ride along the Schuylkill River Trail, but they will be introduced to some fascinating local history,” Zwikl said.

Ride support and complimentary pre-ride bicycle safety checks will be provided by TriCounty Bicycles, of Pottstown. Due to the width of the trail, no bicycle trailers will be permitted. 

To learn more visit www.schuylkillriver.org. Register online at: http://srhabikeride.eventbrite.com/.

Proud to be from Pottstown (Part III)

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Some of this year's award-winning middle school students who were asked to write about why they are proud to be from Pottstown.



Here it is, the post you have all been waiting for -- the third in our (John Armato's) three-part series of student essays whose subject was their pride in their hometown.

As we wrote about in the first installment on July 25, the contest was sponsored by Bruce and Martha Graham who own the local McDonald's franchises.

Following are the expressions of “Pottstown Pride” from Pottstown Middle School sixth, seventh, and eighth grade award winners:

Megan Weller– Grade 6 – I’m proud of my community. We help the homeless and less fortunate get back on their feet. Some towns don’t care about other people and worry only about themselves unlike Pottstown. I am also proud of my community because we support local businesses. I am proud of Pottstown Middle School because we have a clean environment. Our principal, staff, and students work very hard to keep it this way. One day in the future after we graduate from high school, we will be able to go to college and then get a promising and successful job. I am proud of myself because of all of the life lessons I have learned here. I have learned to always be respectful and friendly to others.

Emily Jerdon– Grade 7 – In our community we have many kind people and families. Pottstown is a very family-oriented community. We host major annual holiday parades and on High Street from May through September there is a car show on the first Saturday on every month. I am proud of my school because it offers a quality environment for students to learn. The middle school provides an afterschool program that allows students to work on homework, get extra help if needed, and do other fun activities. They then transport you home and it is all free. I am proud of myself because I have kept my grades up and have made high honors since fourth grade and have been accepted into the National Junior Honor Society. I am proud of our music program that I have been a part of since fourth grade and now I am the captain of the basketball cheerleading squad.

Randall Jackson– Grade 8 – Pottstown is a small town, but the people in our community want us to be all that we can possibly be. They offer up organizations to help people get a better education and be more successful. Our community has a college that we can go to and a library that provides us with information. We have donations that go to our school so that we can buy more advanced technology like SmartBoards and laptops. There are many special trips that we can take to help improve our understanding of our community. I am proud of all these things and I am proud of the fact that I possess a good sense of humor and really don’t get annoyed. I am usually in a good mood and am always willing to show my pride.

Free Job Search Help Now at the Library

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Pottstown Regional Public Library has announced online access to free expert job coaching through Brainfuse JobNow on the library’s website.

Patrons can access this service from public computers in the library or from home, and connect one-on-one to a trained job coach. 

The JobNow service offers personality assessments for patrons just beginning their job search as well as resume and cover letter templates and examples, live interview practice, online resources, local job search websites, and more.

Any Pottstown Regional Public Library cardholder can access JobNow. 

Live coaching with a carefully-selected and fully-qualified job coach is available seven days a week from 2 p.m until 11 p.m. Live sessions can be conducted in English or Spanish. 

All other JobNow resources are available 24/7.

JobNow provides library patrons with a host of services to help in every step of the job search process. 

The job coaches are available to help patrons with any and all job search-related questions. In addition to helping beginning job seekers pinpoint their desired career field, coaches can also provide constructive suggestions on resumes, help write a professional cover letter, and give live interview practice and feedback.

If you do not have time for a live session, simply submit your resume at any time of day through the Resume Lab and a job coach will send it back to you generally within 1 business day with detailed feedback and suggestions for improvement.

The JobNow service also comes with an extensive collection of resources, including resume/cover letter templates, interview tips, general sample interview questions, industry-specific sample interview questions, and a diverse array of online resources and links.

JobNow also includes the Adult Learning Center which offers test preparation (including GED and U.S. Citizenship), an expert writing lab, study tools, and a unique academic skills center featuring live, online tutors.

JobNow joins HelpNow as services that are available for free on the Pottstown Regional Public Library’s website. 

HelpNow was added in September 2012. 

Over 1,400 sessions of homework help have been held in the past 11 months. Trained and certified teachers are available for Math, English, Social Studies, and Science. All that is required is a Pottstown Regional Public Library card.

Gerlach Urged to Help Prevent Gun Violence

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Photo provided by OFA
Activists outside U.S. Rep Jim Gerlach's Trappe office last week, urging him to support legislation to end gun violence.

Activists marched in front of U.S. Rep. Jim Gerlach's Trappe office last week in an attempt to send a message to Washington, D.C. about gun violence.

"Supporters of gun violence prevention have not forgotten about Sandy Hook or Aurora, Tucson or Virginia Tech, and they won't let leaders in Washington forget that they can act to make our
Jim Gerlach
communities safer," read a release issued by Organizing for Action, which describes itself as a non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to advancing the policies that the American people voted for in 2012.

"Congress has the opportunity to pass legislation that the overwhelming majority of Americans support to make our neighborhoods safer by keeping guns out of the hands of dangerous people. If that's not enough--if the will of the American people and the voices of the families affected by all these tragedies aren't enough--what will it take?" the release noted.

The group said its events in Pennsylvania were inspired by the "Hands Across America" campaign of 1986 – in which millions of Americans joined hands in a display of social justice. 

At a predetermined moment on Wednesday, all OFA-PA volunteers joined hands to symbolize solidarity in the effort to advance gun violence prevention policies.

"Rep. Jim Gerlach can be a part of the solution by co-sponsoring H.R. 1565 (the Public Safety and Second Amendment Rights Protection Act of 2013) and making sure this bipartisan gun violence prevention bill moves forward in Congress," the release noted.

Asked for comment on the action, Gerlach's office provided the following statement from the congressman:

“Since the 113th Congress convened in January, more than 50 firearms-related bills have been introduced in the House and are pending before the House Committee on the Judiciary. While I am not a Member of that Committee, I look forward to seeing the end product of the Committee’s work with regard to firearms legislation, including sensible solutions to effectively stop firearms from getting into the hands of criminals and those who lack the mental capacity to safely and responsibly own and use firearms without unreasonably restricting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens.”

As a grassroots funded social advocacy group, OFA is committed to tipping the scales of power back to the American people instead of special interests in Washington, according to the release. 

OFA is working to advance policies like job creation, strengthening the middle class, gun violence prevention, comprehensive immigration reform and measures combating climate change that a majority of the American people support. 

For more information, click on www.barackobama.com

Superintendents Now Goal-Oriented

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It's a known fact that in Pennsylvania, school superintendents are generally the highest paid
Sparagana
employees of a public school district.

That's not so surprising when you consider that they are, in essence, the CEO's of organizations with multi-million-dollar budgets.

But until this year, it was generally up to an individual school board to exercise oversight.

Performance reviews and goal-setting has been spotty at best.

But things have changed.

According to this Feb. 4 report in The Times-Tribune of Scranton: "Part of the state budget enacted for 2012-13 called for the evaluations of school superintendents. Boards and superintendents are required to develop performance standards, and those standards are to be posted on the district's website. After the superintendent is evaluated, the district must post on its website whether the superintendent met the performance standards."

Which means that Pottstown Schools Superintendent Jeff Sparagana will be evaluated based on his and the district's performance in achieving a set of goals, which were adopted at the Aug. 19 school board meeting.

I have uploaded the full list of those goals to Document Cloud and you can click here to read them all.

The goals are divided into categories which include: continuous improvement planning, curriculum development, instruction, community, district operations, fiscal management, project oversight and school safety.

For those of you who don't want to read the six-page list, here is a sampling:
  • Aligning curriculum with "PA Common Core Standards;"
  • PSD makes Adequate Yearly Progress under the federal No Child Left Behind guidelines;
  • Promoting a system within the district "that seeks to engage each member of the district community, promotes, enhances and sustains a shared vision, positive school climate and ensures family and support for student participation in the learning process;
  • Common email, global connect, text messaging and E-alert system in all schools;
  • Effective and efficient use of the district web site to communication information and issues regarding district operations to the school board and community;
There are several categories related to re-districting and the construction projects, the closing of Edgewood.

Another goal is to craft a budget "that maintains all programming and provides for redistricting."

****

On another subject, the school board also re-appointed Stephen Kalis as district solicitor.

He will be paid $185 per hour, a rate that has remained unchanged for the last four years he has held the post.

Mirror Mirror on the Mountain

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"What's this?" you scream as you read the headline.

"Where is my beloved This Saturday in Science? It's Saturday!"

Relax oh excitable reader, it's right here in front of your nose.

We begin this week's session with a Norwegian town where placing mirrors on mountains has more to do with human mental and physiological health than with vainglorious mountains.

According to this July 19 article in Time, the mirrors are necessary to give the people of Rjukan access to sunlight, which, for five months each year, refuses to shine into the deep valley where their city is located.

A solar-powered sensor tracks the path of the sun and ensures the town is always soaked in natural light. Helicopters installed the mirrors earlier this month, and the first tests will begin in September.

In case you're wondering why we need sunlight, allow the folks at Scientific American to explain it:
The association between darkness and depression is well established. Now a March study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals for the first time the profound changes that light deprivation causes in the brain.
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Neuroscientists at the University of Pennsylvania kept rats in the dark for six weeks. The animals not only exhibited depressive behavior but also suffered damage in brain regions known to be underactive in humans during depression. The researchers observed neurons that produce norepi­nephrine, dopamine and serotonin—common neurotransmitters involved in emotion, pleasure and cognition—in the process of dying. This neuronal death, which was accompanied in some areas by compromised synaptic connections, may be the mechanism underlying the darkness-related blues of seasonal affective disorder.
We move on now to another chapter in the sunlight department, all the way over to China in fact.

There, we find, that unlike in the (Drill Baby Drill!) United States, China is taking advantage of low prices in the solar equipment market to go on a buying spree.

This, thanks to Grist and Reuters:
The government has announced plans to add 10 gigawatts of solar capacity each year for three years. That would take advantage of cheap prices and help the country’s manufacturers move product in a difficult market. From Reuters:
China aims to more than quadruple solar power generating capacity to 35 gigawatts by 2015 in an apparent bid to ease a massive glut in the domestic solar panel industry.
Speaking of energy policy, we all know (or at least we hope you know) that the use of fossil fuels is doing nothing good for the environment.

In addition to being a driver of climate change, the oil and gas industry is now the target of a lawsuit that charges the drilling and dredging the industry requires has left New Orleans less protected from natural disasters.

(Can you say "Katrina?")

According to the on-line Louisiana publication called The Lens, the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority has filed a suit against more than 100 oil and gas companies for contributing to the disappearance of Louisiana’s wetlands. The lawsuit argues that decades of drilling, dredging and extracting has destroyed wetlands that once provided a cushion against hurricane storm surge.
The area in red shows the wetlands that have been lost.

Three New Orleans-area law firms spent thousands of hours researching how to do something that many have talked about, but never tried — hold oil and gas companies accountable for increasing the flood risk to the metro area by destroying coastal wetlands.

The Flood Protection Authority claims that decades of drilling, dredging and extraction destroyed wetlands that once provided a cushion against hurricane storm surge. With that cushion reduced, storm surge has increased in the parishes under its jurisdiction, leading to a higher risk of flooding.

As a result, the Flood Protection Authority says it has to spend more to protect people and property in the metro area.

Good luck on that one fellas.

Is he using sound waves?
And finally, everyone knows that sound can move objects -- like when you get up out of your chair to tell your teenager to "TURN THAT DOWN!" even though you swore you would never do that....

Well know, instead of just knocking that half-empty beer off the stereo speaker, sound may be used to move objects on a more constructive way.

As The Washington Post reported in July, scientists in Switzerland have managed to perform a number of controlled operations using only soundwaves as the energy source.
The breakthrough in acoustic levitation will allow scientists to unlock “a huge amount of applications for this very powerful method,” including in pharmaceutical and electronics manufacturing, said author and mechanical engineer Dimos Poulikakos of ETH Zurich, a science and technology university in Switzerland.
Poulikakos’s team performed a number of midair experiments, such as combining water droplets or chemical solutions, inserting DNA into cells and even making a tiny portion of instant coffee. They also levitated a wooden toothpick — something that had never been done before — while rotating it and moving it forward and backward.
Sound waves exert pressure when they hit a surface, but the effects are usually too small to notice. But if the intensity is cranked up high enough, sound has the ability to counteract the effects of gravity.
Poulikakos and his colleagues used levels of about 160 decibels; that’s louder than
standing near a rocket launch and is enough to rupture a human eardrum. But they were able to work without ear protection.
They took advantage of the fact that the frequency of sound — the physical property that gives it a pitch — also matters. Using 24,000 hertz (Hz), a level comparable to a dog whistle, they were unaffected by the noise. The upper range of human hearing is about 20,000 Hz.
Their levitation device looks something like a chessboard, with each penny-size square emitting its own sound. A large, clear plastic plate is placed a small distance above the chessboard to reflect the sound; if the sounds waves are strong enough, objects can hover and move around within the space.
We've all heard about "mag-lev" trains, levitating trains through magnetism and allowing them to move friction free. Now, it SOUNDS like there may be another method....

(Did you get it? "Sounds like.." I crack myself up....)

Your Chance to Talk Property Taxes, Education Funding

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South Hall of Montgomery County Community College's 

West Campus
The House Democratic Policy Committee will hold a public hearing to discuss property taxes and “education funding cuts” at 2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 9 at the Montgomery County Community College’s West Campus South Hall on College Drive.

“The committee will hear from stakeholders — including school board members, superintendents, education advocates and the AARP — who will discuss education funding cuts and their impact on property taxes,” according to information posted on the Facebook page of state Rep. Mark Painter, D-146th Dist.

“Since 2010-11, the average classroom in Pennsylvania public schools has lost $11,575 in annual funding, and the poorest school districts have lost more than $20,000,” Painter posted.

“I remain disappointed that the overall state budget failed to adequately or fully fund public
Mark Painter
education as a whole. While the state legislature completed the budget process in early July, sadly, it did not restore the $1 billion in education funding cuts that Gov. Tom Corbett has delivered and retained in his last two budget cycles,” Painter said in his post.

“Children and their families are adversely affected when school districts are underfunded. This lack of funding, which has been a hallmark of the state budgets under Gov. Corbett, causes many school districts to make hard choices. I don’t support teacher lay-offs or cuts in vital programs such as music and art while property taxes continue to rise,” Painter wrote. “This double-edged sword of diminishing educational programs and rising taxes is unsustainable.”

We're Number 1! (And Not in a Good Way)

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Pottstown's sewer system tops the Pennsylvania list for worst sewer systems for storm water infiltration.

That's what Pottstown Borough Authority Vice Chairman David Renn told borough council during the Wednesday night work session.

In other words, he said, the Wastewater Treatment Plant on Industrial Boulevard sees the largest increase between average sewage flow and maximum sewage flow during rainstorms of any other plant in Pennsylvania.

"Our average to maximum flow is the worst sewer plant in the Commonwealth during a storm," Renn said.

Stormwater inflow is a sewer system problem for two reasons.
Storm and groundwater can enter the 
sanitary sewer through cracked pipes.

First, it costs the system money to treat more water and stormwater, which starts out clean, does not need to be treated.

Second, the sudden influx of water strains the system and can lead to overflow at the plant.

That costs ratepayers money in federal and state government fines and can also pollute the Schuylkill and its tributaries with untreated sewage.

That's a bad thing because the Schuylkill is a drinking water source for more than one million people downstream of Pottstown.

Renn made the remark during conversation about the borough authority's request to council last month to increase the base sewer rate by $5 this year; as was done last year.
Aerial view of the Pottstown
Wastewater Treatment plant.

At its August meeting, the authority voted to request that council adopt an increase of $5 per quarter for the base rate, and an additional 20 cents per 1,000 cubic feet of water used.

The increase works out to about $30 per year for the average household, Renn told council.

When combined with the increase council approved last year, the requested increase in October would bring the average homeowner’s bill from $99.70 in 2011 to $115.70 in 2013, an increase of eight percent over the two-year period.

The authority is also asking that council approve an 8 percent increase this year in the sewer rate charged to commercial properties.

Although the authority can raise water rates without council’s authority, because it owns the water system outright, the sewer system operates differently, with the borough owning the system and contracting with the authority to operate it.

As a result, only borough council can change sewer rates.

Council is scheduled to vote on the request at its Sept. 9 meeting.

Renn's remark about the influx of stormwater to the system was meant to highlight the need to replace aging sewer pipes, some of which, Public Works Director Doug Yerger said, are clay and may be more than 100 years old.

"The ultimate goal is to attack the I and I," said Renn.

Stormwater intrusion into the sewer system -- known as "I and I" for "inflow and infiltration" -- "is all because of old pipes," which are often cracked or broken and allow groundwater and rainwater into the system, Renn said.

"Sewer pipe replacement is greatly needed throughout the borough," he said.

Renn added, "sump pumps are also a problem. People have them empty into basement drains that are hooked into the sanitary sewer. We find them and make them disconnect them and then when we leave, they hook it back up," Renn said.

By raising rates last year and this year, the authority hopes to fund ongoing capital improvements both to the plant and to the piping system without having to borrow money, which costs additional money in interest payments.

"We think paying as we go with small rate increases is better than borrowing," Renn told council.

The authority’s sewer debt load is already 40 percent of the sewer budget.
The idea seems to have support from several council members.

Borough Council President Stephen Toroney said "we used to do these repairs on an emergency basis, which is always more expensive. Now we're doing it on a preventative basis."

Council Vice President Jeff Chomnuk, who is also a member of the authority board with Renn, said an additional advantage is that the sewer pipe work often results in "getting roads re-paved."






Borough Starts Climbing a $27 Million Mountain

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The borough is getting started on setting aside money each year to cover a whopping $27 million obligation to pay for medical and other benefit costs for current and future police retirees.

Wednesday night, council was briefed on the proposal to set aside $250,000 per year for what the council agenda labeled opaquely as "OPEB," which, according to Borough Manager Mark Flanders, stands for "other post employment benefits."

The official vote will occur at Monday night's council meeting, which begins at 7 p.m. and is the meeting at which the public is allowed to comment.
Mark Flanders says it will not take 108 years to fund the
$27 million 

police retirement health cost liability.

These potential costs are not retirement payments, but rather for medical benefits for retirees, both current and future.

Getting a handle on the total potential cost of obligation itself is no easy task, said Flanders.

"This is a moving target that fluctuates; based on actual retirements (as opposed to people leaving before retirement) and mortality rates," he wrote in an e-mail replying to a Mercury query.

According to Finance Director Janice Lee, the amount of an individual retiree's medical costs "varies according to what contract the employee retired under" as well as what medical benefits are actually sought.

For example, a retiree who needs treatments for cancer will cost more than one who requires less expensive medical services.

"It's not the same for all," Lee wrote in an e-mail response to The Mercury.

Even the $27 million liability is an estimate at best, based on actuarial estimates for the variables mentioned.

As a result, the administration demurred to give an estimate for how long the borough will need to set the $250,000 aside annually before the liability is considered funded.
Pottstown Borough Hall

However, Flanders agreed that an estimate of 108 years -- which is the time it would take when $250,000 is divided evenly into $27 million -- is "certainly not" accurate.

Nevertheless, the obligation is nothing to sneeze at when one considers that it is just under half the size of the $40 million 2013 budget.

Funding this obligation, or "liability," depending on what terminology you use, "was part of the EIP recommendations," said Borough Council President Stephen Toroney.

He was referring to the state-funded consultant report in 2008 that outlined measures the borough needed to take to remain financially solvent.

The 141-page report was written by an Ohio consulting firm named Management Partners funded partly through the state's Early Intervention Program for municipalities in financial trouble.

It contained the startling prediction that unless Pottstown radically changed the way its borough and authority government is run, that borough property taxes would jump by 75 percent; water rates by 25 percent and sewer rates by 19 percent in the next five years.

The report was cited as the reason for the lay-off of 13 employees in late 2008 and the 10 percent
property tax hike which accompanied it.

The report highlighted a number of looming problems, not the least of which has been the steady drop in Pottstown’s total assessed property values.

The report contained 122 recommendations designed to save $370,000 a year.

Not all of the recommendations were undertaken, but many were and, as a result, there no tax hike for the current budget year.

However, one recommendation which council and the administration had yet to address was this outstanding obligation.

At the same meeting, council reviewed the action necessary to fund this obligation, members also reviewed the obligations with which they have kept pace -- the borough's two pension funds.

The minimum obligation needed this year to fund the police pension plan is $865,432 and the minimum needed this year to fund the pensions for non-uniformed employees is $186,497, according to Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr.

However, not all of that money comes from borough coffers as the state also kicks in part of that cost.




Council Poised to Reduce Borough Tree Requirements

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Photo by Evan Brandt

Street trees blossom in spring time on Beech Street in Pottstown.
Borough council is expected to vote Monday on a proposal to lessen the requirements for planting trees when a property is developed or re-developed.

Specifically, the vote would authorize Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. to advertise an amendment to the borough's sub-division and land development ordinance, known as a SLDO, and apply to the rules governing "open space trees" and "parking lot trees."

"This is the result of an ongoing theme at the planning commission," Garner told council during the Wednesday work session.

"We were calculating a large number of trees and then granting waivers and it was becoming problematic," he said.

Photo by Evan Brandt

The number of trees required in the current ordinance "was a little bit extreme," said James Majewski, a senior project engineer with Remington, Vernick and Beach, which advised the planning commission.

Reviewing the tree requirements and making changes "was definitely time well-spent," Majewski said.

"This change primarily reduces parking lot trees and open space trees. Developers are still required to plant trees, but this change makes it a little more reasonable and a little more fair to those trying to develop their land," said Garner.

The change would reduce the number of open space trees required from the current level of one new tree for every 2,500 square feet to one new tree for every 8,000 square feet, said Garner.

Additionally, where the current standard requires one tree for every two parking spaces, the proposed new standard would be two trees for every eight parking spaces, he said.

Steve Toroney
The amendment would also result in more control over the species of trees planted, referring to the borough's current list of approved species; as well as the newer rules about locating trees, both of which were drawn up and are administered by Public Works Director Doug Yerger.

"This will create a lot more leeway then there is now," said Borough Council President Stephen Toroney, who sits on the planning commission.

Toroney, said the long-simmering issue came to a head when the school district presented its plans for the renovation of the three elementary schools.

"It was ridiculous. They were going to have to plant like a thousand trees," Toroney said.

Councilman Dan Weand, who is also the chairman of the Pottstown Planning Commission, added "where there was supposed to be open space and play space, there would have been a maze," "or Sherwood Forest," quipped Toroney.

"Also, its important to note that Pottstown has a lot more trees now than it used to. We've got pretty good tree cover now," Weand said.

Councilman Jeff Chomnuk said under the new guidelines, a space the size of the football field at Pottstown High School would require only six trees.

"It's definitely more workable," he said.




Why Do Some Deaths Mean More than Others (in Syria)?

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Keeping track of who controls what in Syria 

is an ongoing enterprise.
You would think after 25-plus years in the newspaper business I could answer the question posed in
that headline myself.

(Heck, I've even basically recycled this headline from an April 28 post....)

After all, some deaths stay on the obituary page and some make it all the way to the front page.

But one would hope that the factors which go into deciding whose death rates the front page carry somewhat less weight that those that determine who gets attacked by American rockets and bombs.

Confused? I don't blame you, I am too -- about Syria; or, more specifically, our sudden interest in getting involved there militarily.

I do not normally comment here (much) about national matters.

This is because although I follow the news, I don't really consider myself enough of an expert to offer a perspective worth your time.

But sometimes, as regular readers may have noticed, I feel the need to sound off, or at least express my confusion out loud.

One aspect of the developing situation with U.S. involvement in Syria has caught my attention.

Do you really think HOW this boy died is more important to this
grieving 
father than the fact of his death? Do families of gunshot 
victims grieve less than the families of those killed with 
chemical weapons?
Why is it that the deaths of innocent civilians killed with chemical weapons require a different response than those killed with guns, or bombs, or missiles, or knives, or even neglect?

The forces of Hafez al-Assad have been killing civilians for more than two years now, albeit, until now, using the more traditional and familiar methods..

But, as my father points out repeatedly, people in the Middle East, like human beings everywhere, have been killing each other for centuries.

The issues over which most Middle East disputes revolve have little to do with the artificial political lines that were drawn there by the European powers after World War I; which is what we in the west so often focus om nonetheless.

So after roughly 100,000 civilian casualties; a conflict that threatens to broaden and envelop Israel and more posturing than a body-building contest, what's new that suddenly makes us so interested in committing force to the equation?

Really, as far as I can see, it all seems to have to do with President Barack Obama's ill-advised declaration last August that the use of chemical weapons in Syria would be a "clear red line."

In August, 2012, Obama declared the use of chemical

weapons in Syria to be a 'red line.'
(One must presume that, given Syria's desert location, that the red line being "in the sand" is implied...... )

Anyway, it seems that now that there's evidence that Assad used chemical weapons, Obama knows he will be called out by the right for not following up on his ultimatum.

Apparently one of the worst things that can happen in a Washington news cycle is to be called "weak."

Just look at the language used by the talking heads: "vigorous action" is required; "bullies only respect strength."

I mean we might as well come right out and say that the president does not want to seem "flaccid" in his determination to see his policies carried out.

Understand, I think the right would be right to call him out, but not for not following through on his 'line in the sand," but because it was a stupid thing to say in the first place.

And not because of any requirement that America appear strong. America being strong is what's important. How it "apprears" will always be open to interpretation and usually not the interpretation of the one doing the projecting..

(Why can't we ever get excited about America appearing "smart," or "diplomatic," or "deliberative," or even, dare I say it, "mature?")

It was a stupid thing to say because now Obama is boxed in and has limited his options -- not due to the volatile and fluid conditions on the ground in Syria, but because of our-inane-domestic-Big-Man-on-Campus politics.

And frankly, that's a stupid reason to get involved in a war in the Middle East, especially a civil war in the Middle East.

(It is significant to note that, at the same time that statement is driving his decisions, Obama is trying to get out from under it, claiming it wasn't him who set the "red line," but the world.....)

Why do these deaths matter more?
So, to circle back to the point, as a result of our domestic politics, to make it look good, we have to get whipped up about 1,400 innocent civilians people being killed differently than the 100,000 killed over the past 53 months.

A confessed devotee of the Jon Stewart/Stephen Colbert comedy hour, I sometimes wonder if I should apply for a writer's job because no sooner did I begin to ponder this very question of the manner of death being the trigger point for another steaming helping of Middle East folly, than both satirists leaped on it in their broadcasts.

Stewart pointed out that we have some pretty nasty weapons of our own; and that when Saddam was using chemical weapons on Iran during that war, we not only didn't object, but we supported him.

But although I am loyal to Stewart, I have to give the best line in this line of questioning to Colbert.

"Dictator Bashar al-Assad is killing his own people with chemical weapons. Before he was just killing them with bullets," Colbert said on Tuesday night's show. "If America cared about shooting people, we'd be invading Chicago."

We Bid Thee Well

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Among the more routine undertakings by borough council is the awarding of bids, by law, to the lowest qualified bidder.

At tonight's meeting, they are poised to award four, for a variety of projects around Pottstown.

Perhaps the most expensive is a $389,000 bid which will be awarded for "storm sewer arch improvement."

As has become painfully clear in the last few years, as Pottstown was developed over the decades, the many streams and runs which ran through the area were, in essence, paved over.

Or rather, arches were built over them, many of them brick and mortar and many, now beginning to crumble.

Mercury Photo by Kevin Hoffman
This arch repair on the 100 block of Walnut Street cost
more than $400,000 to replace.
In the past several years, the borough has grappled with collapses on the 100 block of Walnut Street in 2004, North Hanover and Grant streets, as well as collapse on private property at the site of the former Frederick Brothers mill in 2011 at East and North Hanover streets.

The Walnut Street arch cost more than $400,000 to repair, although the borough did get $250,000 of the cost back from the federal government.

This current project, paid with a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, will allow the borough to install "access" manhole covers in those on public property along the arch that covers the stream that enters the Manatawny Creek at Walnut Street.

Tracing it back upstream, it snakes through the borough, with one branch reaching sunlight opposite Lincoln Elementary School on North York Street, and another beneath the Frederick Brothers site and finally at Highland Cemetery and up into Upper Pottsgrove.

Mercury Photo by John Stricker
Public Works Director Doug Yerger inside
a storm arch near King Street.
Public Works Director Doug Yerger said access is needed in order to assess the condition of the arches. "We can't fix them if we don't know where they're falling down," he said.

Some money is supposed to be left over to "get and improve" some of the worst parts of this arch.

That money will probably be spent on Spruce Street where "we're having an arch that's beginning to collapse," Yerger said.

"The situation there is the same as the arch on Grant Street," which collapsed last winter, Yerger said.

"The water got underneath the foundation and undermined the foundation. We've got 30 feet of falling foundation and its going to get worse if we don't get it fixed," Yerger said.

 "These days, the rain comes in downpours anymore," observed Pottstown Borough Council President Stephen Toroney. "That has the water rushing through at high speed and its really bad for storm arches."

Photo by Evan Brandt
This arch, which collapsed on Grant Street near
The Hill School, 
has been repaired.
He added with a smile, "just like with your feet, falling arches are not a good thing."

The second most expensive bid to be awarded is $300,000 for street re-paving.

Yerger said the money should pay for about "a mile and three-quarters."

Related to that is a bid to replace manhole frames and lids, which are often left above or below grade grade when roads are re-paved.

As the photo here suggests, the last those bids will be for new street lights on High Street between Hanover and Manatawny streets.

Photo by Evan Brandt
The street lights along East High Street, between
Hanover and Manatawny streets, 
shown,
will be replaced as part of the bid expected to be
approved tonight.
Assistant Borough Manager Erica Weekley told council the borough received eight bids for the project and the winning bid, which came in at $174,000 is just under the $175,000 the borough received in a grant from Community Development Block Grant funds.

These funds come from the federal government and are administered through Montgomery County.

Weekley said the grant was received some time ago, but the project could not be put out to bid until some regulatory procedures were cleared up.

"We think it will make a nice improvement to downtown," she said of the lights.

Also on Parade

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Last year's Pottsgrove High School Show Choir

Blogger's Note: After The Mercury ran the Sept. 5 story about local marching bands participating in the Miss America parade on Sept. 14, we heard from Cynthia Foust, choral teacher at Pottsgrove High School, who let us know it won't just be bands making their way down the Atlantic City boardwalk.

Here's what she sent us:
The Pottsgrove High School Show Choir will also be performing at the 2013 Miss America Pageant Parade on Saturday, Sept. 14. 

Our singers will be members of a choir comprised of 500 vocalists who will be performing a beautiful arrangement of "God Bless America." 

Pottsgrove started rehearsing Aug. 19th in order to be prepared for the event.

All singers will be wearing an array of bright colored shirts as per the performance grid which is designed by the "Under the Sun" Production Company. 

The entire choir will rehearse for 1 hour prior to the parade at the Convention Center in Atlantic City. 

During the parade route, the choir will be singing the tune as they walk the route. A sound vehicle will provide the accompaniment. 

When they arrive in the telecast area, the choir will stand to perform the number and then continue on with the parade! We are one of the last units in the parade

As The Mercury reported, previously, also performing will be the Pottstown, Pottsgrove and Owen J. Roberts high school bands, as well as the Boyertown Alumni Band.

The parade will be televised live on channel PHL-17 from 6 to 8 p.m. on Sept. 14 and again on channel 6, ABC from 4 to 6 p.m. on Sept. 15.

Let's Dance!

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It took some doing to undo the undoing but it finally got done.

A long-planned middle school dance, which had originally been scheduled for Friday and was then cancelled because of a conflict with the Jewish High Holy day of Yom Kippur.

But appeals to the school board Tuesday night were successful and the dance was reinstated.

Several members of the executive committee of the school's PTO joined school board candidate Rick Rabinowitz in objecting to the cancellation.
But will the boys actually ask?.....

Rabinowitz, called it a "last minute cancellation" and said as such, "it does more harm than good" to cancel it.

He suggested the district adopt a simple rule: if a holiday or event "doesn't warrant school cancellation, don't cancel the event."

"At this late hour, pulling the rug out from under their feet is likely to create a backlash against Jewish students," he said.

"Let's let the kids dance," Rabinowitz said.

His comments were followed by Marissa Neeson and three other members of the PTO's executive board, who asked why the dance should be cancelled for Yom Kippur, which begins at sundown on Friday and ends on sundown on Saturday, but athletic and band events were still being allowed on Saturday.

"We're just looking for some consistency," said Neeson.

Then again, maybe they shouldn't.....
The dance, she said was attended by 370 students last year and raised "more than $2,000. This is one of our major fund-raisers to buy things like the benches we put outside this building," Neeson told the board.

Superintendent Shellie Feola said it had been her understanding that the date had simply been changed, but the PTO parents said finding a date that did not conflict with other district events had been very difficult.

She said it is "somewhat of a tradition we have in the district to have respect for that day."

However, as the meeting wound down, school board member Justin Valentine said he felt the dance should be allowed to go forward since so much planning had gone into it.

Board member Patti Grimm said "I agree completely."

And although the PTO members had left, they were called back into the meeting and confirmed they could indeed jump start their preparations back into motion.

The Fruits (and Vegetables) of their Labor

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Blogger's Note: Anyone who has a friend with a garden knows it isn't long after August has come that anonymous donations of tomatoes and zucchini, especially the zucchini, are found increasingly at your doorstep.

But the MOSAIC Community Garden at 423 Chestnut St. has a better idea. They're going to sell the vegetables they've grown to you, along with other fresh local produce, right here in the middle of Pottstown.

Below is their announcement about their farmstand, which is open Saturdays in September:

We are happy to announce the opening of our Produce and Information Stand! The children of our youth program and several volunteers had a hand in tending the earth and growing veggies.

Earlier this summer, they diligently worked to build the stand to bring the “fruits of their labor” to your table.

On Sept. 7, the kids and volunteers staffed the Produce Stand to sell fresh produce, herbs, local peaches and other healthy goodies.

It will be open, each Saturday morning from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon, through Sept. 28.

In addition, we will have information regarding organic gardening and other resources to find out more about our local CSAs and organic grocery stores.

Lastly, the public can learn more about what they can do to ensure every family has access to healthier food options in our area.

Look for the Produce and Information Stand in front of the gardens at 423 Chestnut St. in Pottstown. 

Priced right for you, all of the proceeds from the produce stand will enable MOSAIC to continue to develop workshops and other fun, educational activities for young and old alike; while educating individuals in food
justice and security.

All the while, the young farmers will be learning sales skills, marketing and public relations.

Now, for a special thanks to our sponsor: 

Global Advanced Metals of Boyertown, for their generous donation and support. Global Advanced Metals processes a metal called “tantalum,” found in Australia. Their core values of safety, health and environmental excellence guide the work that they do and dovetails nicely with our healthy outlook too!!

LOCAL HONEY??? Don’t miss out, it doesn't get more local than this: honey straight from the hives located in the gardens and tended by Lee Mauger will also be available for purchase.

We Know What They Did Last Summer

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Submitted Photo

Who doesn't like Dairy Queen on a hot summer day?

Blogger's Note: Another submission from the ever-submitting John Armato and his partner in public relations, Rupert Elementary Principal Matthew Moyer:

What did you do this summer? That is the question many students get asked on the first day of school. When students returned to Rupert Elementary last week, many of their teachers will know the answer to that question. 

That’s because students and staff from Rupert Elementary School have been engaged in some fun and educational activities this summer! For the second summer, the staff at Rupert Elementary set up a variety of unique opportunities for students and staff to stay connected all summer long. 

They started the summer with a few rounds of bowling at Limerick Bowling Alley. A visit to Pottsgrove Manor helped everyone learn about our home town history with a tour of John Pott’s historic home. 

They tapped into their creative side with a visit and tour of Art Fusion 19464. The staff at Art Fusion set up two great art projects for the group of over 40 to participate in. 

Submitted Photo

Rupert students also spent some time at the lanes this summer.
Staff and Rupert students also visited Dairy Queen, Rita’s Italian Ice, and McDonalds over the summer.

Rupert Principal Matt Moyer said, “It was great to see our students and staff spending time together throughout the summer. We were also able to get to know many of our new kindergarten children and their families.”

Members of the Rupert Staff who attended summer events:

Principal Matthew Moyer, Laurie Gresko, Cindy Bartolucci, Treena Ferguson, Shannon Wagner, Jenni Kohl, Sue Paravis, Jayne Burke, Rebecca Wyatt, Jamie Fazekas, Britney Oxenford, Allen Ferster, Diana Dotterer, Jayne Pollock, Stacey Bauman, Lisa Meyers, Sherry Shank, Christine Fiorillo, Mike Fiorillo, Deb Gratzinger, Natalie Pileggi, Sharon Butler, Tracey Hanson, and Amy Sellman.

Activities Included:

JULY

Limerick Bowling Alley, 653 West Ridge Pike Limerick PA for a FREE game of Bowling!

Pottsgrove Manor, 100 W King St, Pottstown, PA 19464 for a FREE tour!

Art Fusion 19464, 254 E. High St., Pottstown, PA 19464 for a FREE Family Art class!

AUGUST

Rita’s Italian Ice, 808 N Charlotte St, Pottstown - Purchase an Italian Ice and visit with Rupert Staff.

Dairy Queen, 1467 E High St, Pottstown - Purchase an ice cream and visit with Rupert Staff.

McDonald’s, 1428 East High St, Pottstown - Purchase some dinner and visit with Rupert Staff.

Submitted Photo

ArtFusion19464 offer a program to Rupert Elementary students over the summer.

This Saturday in Underwater Science

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Photo stolen from NPR
The Blob Fish.
Yuck.
Well we had a choice as we prepared this week's science entry and Mercury Police Reporter Caroline Sweeney made the decision.

Caroline Sweeney

(She hates this photo)
Offered science news about space or about water, she chose water and so don't blame us if you find this post to be all wet, or you're grossed out by the picture posted above.

It's there to grab your attention.

And so we begin with something truly ugly -- so ugly in fact that it has actually been voted most ugly by the Ugly Animal Preservation Society.

There really is such a thing.

Who knew?

Anyway, for reasons clear only to them, the society decided to hold an on-line contest to determine the world's ugliest animal and the blob fish, a native of very deep waters off Australia, won for obvious reasons.

Our thanks(?) to National Public Radio's web site for bringing it to our attention.

Seriously, yuck.
Graphic stolen from the Washington Post


While we're spending time on things you may find in deep water, we bring you now to the world's largest volcano which is, you guessed it, deep underwater.

Called "Tamu Massif," it too lives in the deep waters of the Pacific Ocean and was only recently discovered, according to this article in The Washington Post.

And, in case you were wondering why the word "massif" is in its name, it's because its friggin MASSIVE.

Up until now, Mauna Loa, one of the five volcanoes that comprises the big island of Hawaii, was the world's largest.

But Tamu Massif has a footprint the size of New Mexico!

Tamu, by the way, is an abbreviation for Texas A. & M. University, the home school of the scientists who discovered it. Figures, its discovered by Texans, who are always bragging about how everything in Texas is big.

"The area covered by the newly discovered volcano rivals the biggest volcano in the solar system, Olympus Mons on Mars," the Post reported. (See how I snuck a little space reference in there anyway?)

"Olympus Mons is the 800-pound gorilla of the solar system," said geophysicist William W. Sager of the University of Houston, the study’s lead author. "We didn’t know these massive volcanoes were here on Earth."

However, before we get all braggy about it, turns out Tamu is broad, but short.

Although Tamu Massif has a gigantic footprint, it is relatively short compared with Olympus Mons. The newly discovered volcano rises only a few miles above the seafloor, while the Martian mountain rises 16 miles at its peak.

Most importantly, scientists say there is little chance it will erupt.

Having visited ugly fish, let's visit some dead fish, thousands of them.

A resident of Wuhan, China, cleared dead fish from the Fu River

They were killed in a river in China because they had the misfortune of being downstream of a chemical plant there.

"Environmental protection officials said tests on water taken from the Fu River upstream from the metropolis of Wuhan revealed that extremely high levels of ammonia in the water were caused by pollution from a plant owned by the Hubei Shuanghuan Science and Technology Company," The New York Times reported in this Sept. 4 article.

The plant produces sodium carbonate, used in making glass, and ammonium chloride for fertilizer, according to local news media reports. It has been cited for environmental violations four times since 2008, said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, a Chinese nongovernmental organization that tracks air and water pollution.

The Fu River flows into the Yangtze, China’s longest river and the source of drinking water for millions. Spills into the Yangtze and its tributaries remain a continuing problem despite huge investments in reducing pollution, Mr. Ma said.

China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection said water pollution was a serious concern, with industrial spills, farm runoff and untreated sewage all factors in degrading water quality. As of last year, nearly a third of the sections of major rivers it monitored were so degraded that the water was unfit for human contact, the ministry said in its annual State of Environmental Quality report, released in June.

Now, just in case you're shaking your head thinking that China needs to get its act together  before it pollutes all its drinking water, we would warn you to look in the mirror first.

A drilling rig used to extract natural gas from the Marcellus Shale in Washington County, Pa. (The Associated Press)


Two years ago, The New York Times revealed that conventional wastewater treatment plants are poorly equipped to deal with the often toxic outflow from Marcellus shale drilling operations.

But in June, as reported by NPR's State Impact team, the state’s Independent Regulatory Review Commission, approved new water quality standards for pollutants like strontium. But chloride and sulfates were not included in the more than 100-page revision.

Prepare to be shocked, but apparently the industries that would have been affected by the regulation didn't want it. And so, it didn't happen.
Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection had originally proposed adding
chloride, sulfates, and a chemical known as molybdenum, to the state’s water quality standards.
But opposition came from miners of molybdenum, the coal industry, and the natural gas industry. Coal mining, along with other industries, generates sulfate discharges. Molybdenum is a heavy metal mined for use in steel and cast iron.
Despite efforts by environmental groups concerned about increased natural gas drilling activity, and resulting discharges of chloride, the DEP withdrew the chloride from the original proposal.
In 2011, the gas drilling industry agreed to stop sending its wastewater to the plants, but apparently (who knows how....) some of the pollutants are ending up in rivers and streams in Pennsylvania anyway.

Most conventional sewage treatment plants, like this one in
McKeesport, 
cannot handle wastewater from
natural gas 'fracking.'
And even though the gas industry in Pennsylvania says it operates in "zero discharge mode," it nonetheless opposed the regulations that should have had no effect on its operations. Hmmmmm.

As State Impact's Susan Phillips reported, "that wastewater has a high salt content. In it’s original proposal, DEP pointed to increased oil and gas production as a reason to establish standards for chloride, describing its potential impacts on aquatic life."

The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection wrote "freshwater fish and aquatic communities cannot survive in elevated concentrations of chlorides. Maintaining a proper salt-to-water balance in a fresh water environment challenges most aquatic life and, in particular, aquatic insects."

But maybe there's hope still in Pennsylvania.

The on-line version of the Harrisburg Patriot-News reported Thursday that: "Attorney General Kathleen Kane on Tuesday afternoon filed criminal charges against a Pennsylvania subsidiary of ExxonMobil for illegally discharging more than 50,000 gallons of toxic wastewater from a Marcellus Shale gas well site in Penn Township, Lycoming County.
"

One can't help but wonder if former attorney general Tom Corbett, who has received thousands in campaign contributions from this industry, would have made that case.... 


But before we get all conspiracy theory on you, let's not forget that sometimes we are a danger to aquatic life just because we're stupid.

Hawaii News Now - KGMB and KHNL
Case in point, NPR reported Thursday that 233,000 gallons of molasses that were spilled into Honolulu harbor on Monday, literally killing everything.

KGMB TV sent diver Roger White into the water to see what's happened to sea creatures there. He shot video and came back to say that:
"It was shocking because the entire bottom is covered with dead fish. Small fish, crabs, mole crabs, eels. Every type of fish that you don't usually see, but now they're dead. Now they're just laying there. Every single thing is dead. We're talking in the hundreds, thousands. I didn't see one single living thing underwater."

Why is the molasses causing so much damage? In an earlier report, Hawaii News Now:
A crab suffocated from a massive molasses spill in
Honolulu harbor.
"... did an experiment to see why molasses is so hazardous to fish. When we poured store bought Molasses into a vase of water we collected from Keehi Lagoon, the concentrated sugary substance went straight to the bottom.
"Unlike an oil spill, which can be cleaned by skimming the surface, the molasses quickly disperses to the deepest points. 'It's sucking up all the oxygen,' explained [state reef biologist Dave] Gulko. 'There's no oxygen at depth so the animals that need it can't get it and are suffocating.' "
You can see why its called a "Snakehead."


And, because no scientific post involving water on this blog is complete without news of our favorite "Frankenfish," we bring you now the latest news of the Snakehead, an invasive fish from China that, according to some stories, can do everything but advanced algebra.

In addition to being a voracious predator that can crowd out indigenous species, now, it turns out, it can also carry diseases that will kill its competitors but leave the Snakehead feeling dandy.

Last month, the Washington Post reported on an announcement from "the U.S. Geological Survey that Northern snakeheads in the Potomac River have apparently contracted a virus that is known to cause massive kills among largemouth bass."
It is possible that snakeheads could be reservoirs of the virus and pass it to bass throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
So far, the virus has been detected in bass, sunfish and other species, the USGS said, but only largemouth bass have developed a disease as a result. Most bass who contract it are otherwise fine, but some have trouble submerging and are forced to float on the surface.
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