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Considering Downtown Pottstown

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Photo by Evan Brandt
From left, PDIDA Board members Ross Belovish, Cindy Brower, 
and Main Street Manager Sheila Dugan at Thursday's meeting
After the weather postponed the first attempt, the Pottstown Downtown Improvement District Authority held its annual meeting with merchants Thursday night.

Merchants were briefed on upcoming events, asked to remit their "assessments" in a timely manner, warned that they need to clear the spaces in front of their stores of obstructions if they want the plows to clear their parking spaces.

Further, Police Chief Rick Drumheller addressed the audience of about 25 on the police efforts to keep downtown safe.

Also, Parks and Recreation Director Michael Lenhart briefed merchants about upcoming events for the bicentennial celebration of the borough's incorporation and invited them to get involved.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting.

Hill School Architecture Subject of Lecture

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Interested in the architecture at The Hill School?

Well, this year’s David R. Dougherty Senior Teaching Fellow in American History is Michael J. Lewis, the Faison-Pierson-Stoddard Professor of Art History at Williams College. 

And he will be lecturing about The Hill's architecture on Tuesday, Jan. 27 at 7 p.m. in the Center for the Arts off Beech Street.

The lecture, which is free and open to the public, is about the architecture of The Hill School and its American historical context.

Here is some information about Dr. Lewis:
Lewis

B.A. Haverford College (1980)
Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania (1989)
Publications — Books
· American Art and Architecture (Thames & Hudson, 2006)
· Gothic Revival (Thames and Hudson, 2002/ Japanese translation, 2004)
· Frank Furness: Architecture and the Violent Mind (W. W. Norton, 2001)
· Monument to Philanthropy: The Design and Building of Girard College, 1832-1848, with Bruce Laverty and Michelle Taillon Taylor (Philadelphia: Girard College, 1998)
· Drawn from the Source: The Travel Drawings of Louis I. Kahn, catalogue of an exhibition at the Williams College Museum of Art, with Eugene J. Johnson (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1996)
· La Geometrie de la Fortification: Traites et Manuels, 1500 – 1800/ The Geometry of Defense, Catalogue of an exhibition at the Canadian Centre for Architecture (Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture, 1992)
· Frank Furness, The Complete Works, with George E. Thomas and Jeffrey A. Cohen (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1991/ revised edition 1996)
· The Politics of the German Gothic Revival (New York: Architectural History Foundation and MIT Press, 1993)

Also, Lewis has:
· Written numerous essays and review in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Commentary, New Criterion, Architectural Record, Chronicle of Higher Education, etc.
· Authored National Historic Landmark Nomination of the John Coltrane House for the National Park Service, 1998
· Is a historical consultant for restoration of Old Economy Village, Pa. for Pennsylvania Museum Commission, 1988-89
· Served on architectural juries, including memorial to Kurdish victims of Halabja poison
gas attack, Teheran, Iran (1992) and choosing Awards of Merit and Conservation Awards, Natal Institute of Architects, Province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa (1995)
· Organized and conducted study tours for Society of Architectural Historians of Hudson River Valley (2006) and architecture of Harmony Society, Pennsylvania (2007)

Vote for Pottsgrove Library, Help Them Win Money

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Blogger's Note: The following was found on the Pottsgrove School District web site and re-produced here to spread the word!

Pottsgrove High School is in the running to be named one of the world’s most innovative schools and it needs your support to win.

There’s a share of $200,000 on the line, and the best way to help Pottsgrove get a share is to vote..

A few weeks ago, Danielle B. Small, library media specialist, entered the Follett Challenge, a program created by Follett to find and reward schools for their work applying technology, content and creativity in ways that engage students, foster literacy and promote critical thinking. 

As part of the competition, she created a short video about what makes Pottsgrove's program unique.

You can support them by viewing the video and voting for the submission at FollettChallenge.com website under the “View Entries” tab or at the following link: http://follettchallenge.com/video.cfm?id=543

Twenty percent of the total score is based on how well the district spreads the word about its video and earns votes! 

You can cast one vote per day until to January 30, 2015, so be sure to visit daily.

Your vote could make the difference in helping our school be crowned the Follett Challenge champion!

Learn More About Fair School Funding Thursday

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The meeting will be held at Rupert Elementary School, starting at 7 p.m.


I know, I know; the phrase "joint school board/borough council meeting" does not have you rushing to your calendar to check your schedule.

But maybe you should  -- at least if you care about fair public school funding, an issue which is currently giving Pottstown the very short end of a very sharp stick.

Right now in Pennsylvania, the amount of resources your public schools can bring to bear on your child's education has more to do with your zip code than the innovative financing of the administration.

In fact the innovation is more likely to be found in places like Pottstown and Daniel Boone school districts where enfeebled tax bases make the raising of local public revenues both burdensome and unequal when compared with wealthier locales.

In a state where about 34 percent of public school funding comes from the state -- the national average is closer to 44 percent -- that means local taxes make the difference.

So while financial contortions are happening in places that are stringing together programs with Scotch tape and wishful thinking, places like the Merions (Upper and Lower), resplendent in the benefits of more affluent households, an opulent tax base, and a funding formula that favors the already favored, build a second pool.

Well if this kind of situation burns your bunions the way it burns mine, you might actually want to pencil in the Jan. 29 joint meeting.

Because one of the featured presenters on the agenda is Lawrence Feinberg. 

"And just who is Lawrence Feinberg?" you ask.
All photographic evidence suggests
Lawrence Feinberg has a sense of humor.

I'm glad you did, because I'm about to tell you. 

In addition to being a Haverford school board member and the operator of an extremely helpful and informative list serve of articles about education in Pennsylvania, he is one of Pennsylvania's 11 circuit riders.

"And what....?" Hold on, I'll tell you.

A circuit rider is someone who is trying to build support, or "political will," among educators to support a fair funding formula for public education.

Currently the matter is being reviewed by a task force set up by former Gov. Tom Corbett and this group has some thoughts on the results.

The guidelines for what they would like to see in a new formula are simple and straightforward:
  • Accuracy is important: The formula should be based on real costs, and real data;
  • Students and schools need stability: The new system must be transparent, sustainable, equitable, and long-range — and supported with sufficient, stable, and broad-based resources
  • Responsibility is shared: The new system must operate based on shared fiscal responsibility among the local community, the state, individuals, and commercial taxpayers;
  • Accountability is required: The new system must include strong accountability standards to ensure that schools invest efficiently and effectively to boost student achievement and help ensure post-secondary success
And Feinberg is no slouch.

In 2011 he was the Recipient of Pennsylvania School Boards Association’s first annual Timothy M. Allwein Advocacy Award. 

In 2012, Feinberg was the Recipient of Media Area NAACP’s Foot Soldier for Justice Award; and was part of a group of 40 education leaders from Pennsylvania invited to meet with President Obama’s senior education policy advisors as well as top staff from the U.S. Department of Education.

And, among other things, Feinberg is Founder and Co-Chair, Keystone State Education Coalition, a statewide, bipartisan grassroots advocacy organization of several hundred locally elected, volunteer school board members and administrators from Pennsylvania school districts who evaluate, discuss and inform their school boards, district constituents and legislators on legislative issues of common interest.

Let's face it, the list goes on and on. In other words, this guy knows his stuff and, if you get your butt over to Rupert Elementary School Thursday, he's going to share some of that knowledge with you and the school board and borough council

The meeting starts at 7 p.m., and if you want a tour of the newly refurbished Rupert Elementary, get there at 6:30.

Be warned, after the joint meeting, the regular school board meeting that was postponed Monday for a snow storm that never showed up, will take place.

But don't worry, you can leave whenever you want.

A (Really) Full Agenda

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OK, so I was late. Sue me. I was still the only news organization there.
So as the first Tweet indicates, I was late for the Pottsgrove School Board meeting Tuesday, but it wasn't entirely my fault.

The web site said it started at 7:30, but it actually started at 6:30 p.m., which is how they roll under the new system in which the committee meetings are rolled into the regular meetings

Anyway, the important things discussed were the field trip policy, which was tangled up with word that the 6th Grade trip to New York City may be in jeopardy; the pending change in grade configuration; new classes proposed for the high school; an update on the high school project, which is a little ahead of schedule; a budget review which showed the potential for a 3.56 percent tax hike, costing a homeowner with a $120,000 assessment an additional $152 a year; and more.

Yeah, you read that right.

There's other stuff mixed in there too, including Tweets from some who were following my Tweets from the meeting.

Check them all out here.

Things to Think About Before You Hit 'Send'

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Josh Ochs
Josh Ochs opened a few eyes Wednesday.

During the day, the social media expert showed Pottsgrove middle school and then high school students how their activity on social media platforms could come back bite them in the behind when applying for colleges and jobs.

Using real-life examples, he showed the students -- and then their parents at an evening session -- how the temporary satisfaction of posting something into the seeming ether of Twitter, Vine, Instagram, Facebook, Kik, WhatsApp, Whisper, Secret, Ask.fm, After School can turn into a permanent problem.

Then he showed how colleges, employers and others you might hope to impress can be unimpressed with a simple Google search.

And finally, he talked about how to take control of that social media profile, and use it to boost your opportunities instead of becoming an obstacle to them.

The Tweets from the evening session are below.


An Issue of Fairness

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Lawrence Feinberg
The topic of discussion Thursday night was fairness and why its so hard to come by in Pennsylvania when it comes to funding public schools.

Two speakers -- Tina Viletto, director of legislative services for the Montgomery County Internmediate Unit and circuit rider Lawrence Feinberg -- outlined the issues for a joint meeting of borough council and the school board at Rupert Elementary School.

Three efforts are underway to address the fact that Pennsylvania is one of the few states that does not distribute public education funding in any kind of formalized way that recognizes differences in district wealth, population and other important demographics.

One is the task force commissioned last year by former Gov. Tom Corbett and headed by Montgomery County legislator Mike Vereb; one is a lawsuit seeking to compel the state to comply with its Constitutional obligation to provide for an efficient school system and the third is the effort with which Viletto and Feinberg are involved, a coalition trying to advocate for, and influence the final form of, a fair funding formula.

They were speaking to a largely receptive audience and the meeting ended with some sharp and impassioned comments by Superintendent Jeff Sparagana; School Board President Judyth Zahora and School Board Treasurer Mary-Beth Bacallao.

You can read them below.

Tech Savvy Principal

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William Ziegler
Pottsgrove High School Principal Bill Ziegler has garnered another award.

As regular readers of this blog are aware, last month Zieger was named President-elect of the Pennsylvania Association of Elementary and Secondary School Principals

He better get a shelf.

Now we are informed that Ziegler is one of three school leaders from around the country who won a Digital Principal Award from the National Association of Secondary School Principals.

The awards were for integrating digital media in their efforts to
improve instruction, student achievement and their own leadership, according to a release from the Reston, Va.-based organization.

Here's what they had to say about him.
At Pottsgrove, Ziegler "led a highly collaborative process to build a 1-1 program. Ziegler created a Teacher Digital Team and a Student Digital Team, and he worked closely with parents and the district to ensure all stakeholders were involved and invested in the school’s digital transformation.

His leadership extends to the state level where, as president of the Pennsylvania Association of Elementary and Secondary School Principals, he launched the weekly #PAESSPchat on Twitter and introduced a Tech Studio, conducted by NASSP Digital Principals, to the state conference.
He regularly models the power of new media to everyone in the Pottsgrove community, and recently turned the school’s Twitter handle over to a student so the community could see the school for a student’s perspective.

“As a principal, I am responsible for leading in a digital age,” Ziegler says, “and assuring that our students are equipped, prepared, and ready to be digital learners, leaders, and citizens.”
The NASSP Digital Principal Award program was created in 2012 to recognize excellence in technology leadership.

The 2015 candidates were nominated by their peers or teachers, then invited to submit a portfolio of items that highlight their digital leadership. The portfolios were reviewed by a panel of expert judges and three principals were identified as the 2015 winners.

The three 2015 NASSP Digital Principals will receive an expenses-paid trip to Ignite ’15 in San Diego, CA, February 19-21 to formally receive their award and to present on a panel about technology leadership.
The other two principals were John Bernia, of Oakview Middle School in Oakland Township, Michigan and James Richardson, principal of Buck Lodge Middle School in Prince George's County, Maryland.

The National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP) connects and engages school leaders through advocacy, research, education, and student programs.

NASSP advocates on behalf of all school leaders to ensure the success of each student and strengthens school leadership practices through the design and delivery of high-quality professional learning experiences.
Reflecting its long-standing commitment to student leadership development, NASSP administers the National Honor Society http://www.nhs.us/, National Junior Honor Society http://www.njhs.us/, National Elementary Honor Society http://www.nehs.org/, and National Association of Student Councils. http://www.nasc.us/


Why Do We Need Wards?

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This map, made for The Mercury when the wards were last re-districted, hangs on the wall by my desk for easy reference. Do we really need to be any more divided than we already are?

We have a saying in the newsroom, that often-enough Pottstown gets trapped in a conventional kind of thinking we describe as "that's the way we've always done it."

We understand this, because we often find ourselves thinking the same way at The Mercury.

But something shook me out of my conventional thinking last month and I began to ponder the question above...."Why do we need wards?"

What prompted this rumination was the recent announcement of two Democratic candidates for the Fourth Ward seat being abandoned by Borough Council President Stephen Toroney.

Two well-qualified candidates -- one a Pottstown native and Pottstown High School teacher, the other a former candidate who serves on several board ran for mayor and regularly attends council meetings -- announced their intention to run.

(I received an e-mail Sunday from a candidate who has announced his intention to run for the Republican nomination in the Fourth Ward. Look for that story in Tuesday's Mercury).

Ross Belovich
Dennis Arms
So as I wrote the articles announcing the announcements by Ross Belovich and Dennis Arms, I thought to myself: "Boy its a shame we couldn't have both these candidates in the race in November. After all, half the time candidates run unopposed in some wards."

And that's when that final word caught in my mind.

"Wards" are what is preventing Pottstown from enjoying a campaign with both these candidates.

So I began to wonder what purpose they serve.

The obvious answer is to ensure even representation.

But how different are we really? We all pay the same tax rates, we all (presumably) want to see the borough revitalized and getting its fair share of public monies; to see our roads paved, our streets safe and our community desirable.

Is Pottstown truly so wildly diverse that a council person from Ward 7 can't understand the problems of someone who lives in Ward 1?

Now look at those two wards and recognize most people would consider Ward 1 to have a higher African-American population and so they might argue wards ensure a voice for that demographic on council.

And yes, previous occupants of that seat included Alison Hunter and Mark Gibson, one a Democrat, one a Republican; both African-Americans both independent thinkers.

But Ward 1 is currently represented by a Caucasian fellow named Ryan Procsal, who ran unopposed.

And Ward 7 (the "Rosedale" ward) is represented by Joe Kirkland, an Africa-American who not only ousted a Caucasian incumbent; he then, four years later, beat off a a challenge from another Caucasian ... twice.

So perhaps this is the right place (and time) to consider whether those racial markers matter any more. Wouldn't it be great if they didn't?

February is Black History Month and much of that history is devoted to Black Americans fighting to be considered nothing more than Americans.

Are there still differences? Of course.

Do we need to keep working at these things? Of course.

But maybe one way to do that is to do away with the idea that whites and blacks are so different in Pottstown that we need to encode representation for each in how we elect our representatives.

Pottstown is not the deep South, where laws are needed to ensure voting access for African-Americans.

Yes, Pennsylvania tried to enact a Voter ID law which, intended or not, disproportionately disenfranchises poor and black voters, but a judge thankfully tossed it, largely for those reasons.

And consider that our mayor, Sharon Thomas, is African-American and she defeated a Caucasian incumbent who had upset Thomas's incumbency four years earlier.

And the mayor is a post that is elected borough-wide.

Why isn't everyone else?

The school board is elected borough-wide and lord knows the taxes levied by that body tower over those levied by council.

Each election cycle, we see activists and politicos bemoan the difficulties in finding people with enough time, talent and will to run for public office. Why are we limiting the pool of candidates?

Two excellent candidates might be next-door neighbors. Currently, we could only have the benefit of one.

What if we increased that pool of candidates by a factor of seven? What would we lose?

When people think of Pottstown, this is all we should
want them to think of.
How often have we heard the lament that we have to "find a way to bring the town together?"

Indeed, the first obstacle might be said to be that we are officially and permanently cut into seven different pieces.

What better way to engage the entire community in a discussion of unity than to have a community-wide discussion about making us unified?

Then consider the matter of re-districting.

We're now five years late on the 10-year cycle of re-districting that is supposed to follow every Census.

Do we really have the time and resources in Pottstown to fritter them away on that exercise in futility while we face a host of other more important issues?

I mean come on people, we're 5.5 square miles. We're not Nebraska. What's the point?

It is probably too late to change the election framework for the current election cycle, but perhaps that's better.

After all, although current candidates brought this issue to mind, you can't change the rules of an election in the middle of an election.

But we should consider changing it for the next one.

In the coming year, I feel certain The Mercury is going to address this question, to find out how we eliminate wards and to ask you if you think they should be eliminated.

Tell me what you think, either in a comment here to be shared with other readers, or in an e-mail: ebrandt@pottsmerc.com

As it stands, the only good reason that seems apparent for keeping the ward system is "that's the way we've always done it."

After all, we're one school district. Why can't we be one town?



Of Bridges and Highway Garages

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If there was a word to describe what was discussed at the Douglass (Mont.) Supervisors meeting Monday night, that word would be "infrastructure."

To be sure, it was not a long meeting, 30 minutes by my count, but during that time they managed to discuss the replacement of the County Line Road bridge over Swamp Creep -- for which they've been awarded a $595,500 grant (minus their $118,000 contribution); taking over the Henry Road bridge from the county; and beginning the process of replacing the "disgusting" highway garage on Municipal Drive.

The board also discussed PennDOT's plans to re-pave Route 100 from Farmington Avenue to the Berks County line.

The only other subject of discussion that merits note here is the second meeting of the newly formed Emergency Services Board.

It intends to seek more funding for the services of the Gilbertsville Ambulance Company from New Hanover Township, as well as pursue an ordinance that will require insurance companies to reimburse the fire companies for the cost of responding to motor vehicle accidents.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting.

Getting to Know the Neighbors

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Photo by Evan Brandt
The former St. Peter's Church, has been purchased by a 
Conshohocken church named Higher Ground International.
The pastor and members of Higher Ground Church International, which has purchased the former St. Peter's Church and school on South Street, met with neighbors Tuesday night to assuage fears that the Conshohocken-based church plans to open a homeless shelter or boarding house.

Well actually, they do want to open a boarding house, two in fact; one in the former convent and one in the former rectory.

But rather than house homeless or random people off the street, the plan is to have one-year leases and specialize in housing veterans, Pastor Steve Martin told the dozen or so neighbors who accepted the church's invitation circulated Sunday in the neighborhood.

A Frequently-Asked-Questions sheet answered many of the neighborhoods questions before they were asked, but the group kept Martin busy answering questions for about 90 minutes nevertheless.

Most of the answers to those questions can be found in the Tweets below.

No Urge to Merge

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Many members of the Phillies Fire Co. turned out for
Wednesday night's borough council meeting.
Pottstown Borough Council made its way through a fairly hefty agenda Wednesday night with relative speed.

The first big item on the agenda were a presentation from Higher Ground Church International regarding their application to open a boarding house for veterans in the rectory and convent of the former St. Peter's Church.

But his presentation was similar to the neighborhood meeting held last night in the rectory and, as faithful readers of this blog, you already know most of what is relevant because you read about it in yesterday's post.

If not, you may have read about it in today's Mercury.

The other big item may not have been on your radar screen is the pending consolidation of the fire companies and the Phillies refusal to take part.

As a result, as of March 31, the Phillies, with about 50 percent of all the borough's volunteer fire fighters, will not be permitted to fight fires in Pottstown.

Look for your fire insurance costs to increase.

We covered the story live, so you may have seen it in today's Mercury.

But if not, I have embedded a video here of some of the comments made by local attorney Doug Breidenbach who spoke on behalf of the Phillies, who showed up silently in force in the audience Wednesday night.



In brief, he told council that the reasons provided by the borough for consolidation are not adequate and that although it may be necessary in the future, it isn't now.

Not only are there currently enough volunteers, but keeping the current system as long as possible is staving off the potential necessity of a paid fair company and every year the current system remains saves taxpayers money.

Neither Borough Manager Mark Flanders not anyone on council responded to his remarks.

Anyway, here are the Tweets.

Please 'Grease' Their Palms

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It's been a few years since Pottstown High School staged a musical but, they're staging one this year -- the classic 1950s drama "Grease," made famous on the big screen by John Travolta and Olivia Newton John.

The show is not until Feb. 27th and 28th at 7 p.m., and March 1st at 2 p.m.

But there's a way you can help out right now.

As a high school student I both acted and spent time in the lighting crew for the shows at Pleasantville High School and I can tell you from experience that not only does it require a lot of work, and a lot of dedication; it also requires a lot of money.

So why not make a donation in exchange for an ad in the show program?

"As you know, this will be a great opportunity for our students and will help them broaden their horizons," high school math teacher Robert Decker wrote in a letter to local businesses.

"In an effort to make this year a success we are turning to our community in support of this great
opportunity. We are asking for your donation in exchange for an ad in our program this year. This ad will also be put  on our Facebook page as well as Twitter to show your generosity and support, he wrote. 

"You are able to purchase a quarter-page ad for $20, half-page page ad for $30, and full page ad for $50."
You can send a check made payable to “PHS Musical” and the ad that you would like printed in the
program as well as seen Facebook and Twitter. 

These items can be mailed to :
Pottstown Musical
ATTN: Robert Decker
Pottstown High School
750 Washington St.
Pottstown, PA 19464

I know its late notice, (My bad, but I really can't manage more than one blog post a day folks) but they would like the materials by Feb. 9th.

"We feel that every contribution provides a positive outcome for all involved as many of the students and their families have supported the community and surrounding area businesses through patronage over the years and will continue to do so as residents of the community. Together, we can offer a great show for our students as well as the community," Decker wrote in his letter. 

If you have questions or need additional information please email: phsmusical@pottstownk12.org.

History and Memory

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Mercury File Photo
Newstell Marable speaks to Pottstown Borough Council
For the last two weeks, I have been involved, one way or the other, with exploring the life and legacy of Newstell Marable, the long-time President of the Pottstown Chapter of the NAACP, who died Jan. 21 at the age of 84.

And in doing so, I have found myself musing on the relationship between history and memory.

History, as they say, is written by the victors and although that analogy mostly applies to military history, the grain of truth remains.

For those who live through it, history may not be how they remember, or it may be different than most people think of it because of a personal memory or experience.

Here's an example:

I was speaking to Newstell's widow Millicent recently, and we were talking about Newstell growing up in the south 80 years ago, the Civil Rights era and how what was happening nationally was also happening locally.

Among the many examples of she offered of Newstell standing up against discrimination and prejudice, she mentioned in passing his efforts to get a workers social club High Street, associated with the former Doehler-Jarvis plant, to admit African-Americans.

I reflected on the fact that it was ironic how a union, frequently considered the traditional foil of conservative views, would oppose inclusion of black workers.

But she corrected me, saying "well they weren't all like that. The UAW was pretty good. They provided three buses that we took down to Washington for the march."

"Which march was that?" I asked absent-mindedly.

"The March on Washington," she replied without any change of expression.

"The one where Dr. King spoke?" I asked, eyes widening.

"Yes, we were right at the corner of the reflecting pool."

"What was it like?" I asked, suddenly more focused.
Some of the photos on display at Newstell's service Saturday

"I just remember how quiet it was, how respectful everyone was being," Millicent replied. "One fellow got hit in the head with a sign, and he was bleeding. I know it hurt, but he didn't get upset."

That march happened on a hot August day, a year before I was born.

For me, it will never be anything but history; inspiring history to be sure.

King was a wonderful writer, one of those uncommon people who can marry intellect, education and passion into a single, undeniable narrative.

And he was an even better speaker. He knew how to use rhythm, repetition and intonation to turn words into music to reach into you beyond your reason, to something deeper.

I made sure when they were young that my son and whichever of his friends I could corral, watched video of King delivering his most famous speech. I wanted them to know why they were home from school that day. I wanted them to understand how important this was.

But although it can bring tears to my eyes, and reaches forward in time with its message, it is still history for me; a thing apart, something that happened before I was born and was experienced only by others.

For Newstell Marable and his wife Millicent though, it is memory. It has the ineffable quality unique to them and their personal experience.

This gives greater texture to the anecdote the Rev. Vernon Ross mentioned during Saturday's memorial service at Bethel AME Church; how after every service, Newstell would come up to Ross and say "still living the dream reverend."

For Newstell and others of that era, I was realizing this was not an pat phrase to utter, but a recognition of and re-dedication to something they had experienced in their lives. For them, that phrase is a reminder of how hot it was that day in Washington, those neighbors who rode the bus with them, how they felt when they first heard the speakers that day.

That will never be written in a history book, and is lost with the death of each holder of those memories.

But it is as important.

Because without those personal experiences of the people who pushed Civil Rights forward in this country, that history would have been written by someone else.
The flag on display Saturday recognized Newstell's service 
in the U.S. Army.

And as I thought about the stories she told me -- having a fire hose turned on them when they marched outside Sunnybrook Pool to protest its exclusion of blacks; being chased out the back door of a Boyertown church when they spoke up against the Ku Klux Klan; being barred entrance to a social club until a white person came along to take her inside -- I realized that just as we are now losing most of the generation for whom World War II was an experience to be remembered instead of a history to be learned, Newstell's death marks a milestone in the march of the history of Civil Rights as well.

It has made me realize that we are now losing those for whom the fight for Civil Rights was not a reason for a holiday, but a reason to get up in the morning.

And while the history will remain, the memories will not

Still, Saturday was an opportunity to pass some of those memories along.

At his memorial Newstell's sister, Margaret Seltman, wisely observed "I can't tell you the things about Newstell that you know, but I can tell you what I know."

"She talked about how Newstell was like the wind. "You don't see it, but when you see the trees all bend, you know its been there. That's what Newie was like."

She said when they were growing up in Alabama, three siblings would ride to church on the same bike: "Me on the seat, Juanita on the handlebars and Newie standing up, pumping the pedals."

"Now THAT is an image that suits Newstell," I thought to myself, "pushing progress forward and taking others with him."

And Bishop Everett Debnam, from Invictus Ministries, likened Newstell to snow saying, like snow, Newstell's love and desire to help others "just falls where it will."

That seemed right too.

So in a lot of ways, Newstell Marable was an elemental force, like the wind or the snow, something you can neither avoid nor deny if you are in its path.

And Ross was right too when he said "we need more like him."

After all, there's still more history to be made.








Spend Valentine's Day with The 60s Boys at SunnyBrook Ballroom

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The 60s Boys will perform at Sunnybrook on Valentine's Day. 




Blogger's Note: The following was provided by SunnyBrook Ballroom

Treat your Valentine to a special day of romance as the SunnyBrook Ballroom presents Eastern Pennsylvania's premier '60's band. 

The ‘60’s Boys entertain audiences of all ages with authentic vocal renditions. 

Appearing regularly throughout the state of PA. and also N.J., N.Y. with superlative vocals, musicianship, dynamic enthusiasm and a genuine love of the music they perform, the '60'S Boys authentically re-create the hits made famous by the likes of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, the Blues Brothers, the Grease Soundtrack, the Beach Boys, the Temptations, the Righteous Brothers, Wilson Pickett, James Brown, the Beatles, and the classic hits from so many others.

The '60's Boys create an energetic bond with their audiences, ensuring an evening of dancing in the aisles, toe tapping and clapping all night long.

Advance online orders are $25 reserved seating through Feb. 13; $30 day of the show, Members receive a $5 discount.

With one of the largest ballrooms in the country, you can always plan to dance the night away to your favorite music. 

About the Historic SunnyBrook Ballroom


Reopened in 2008 as an entertainment venue through the work of scores of volunteers from the community, the facility’s casual fine dining restaurant and Chummy’s Lounge was reopened in 2011.  
The venue is owned and operated by the SunnyBrook Foundation. During the heyday of big band music, the historic ballroom was a regular stop on the tours of all of the era’s big bands. Benny Goodman, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Frank Sinatra, and Louis Armstrong are just a few of the names of nationally known performers who filled the room with the music of the era.

The venue has hosted political rallies, community meetings, weddings, wedding receptions, class and family reunions, high school proms, and other events.

It is located at: 50 Sunnybrook Road, Pottstown, PA.

Contact the site by e-mail at sb@thesunnybrookballroom.net or by phone at 484-624-5187.

Or, visit their web site: http://www.sunnybrookballroom.com


More Merger Mania

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Mercury Photo shamelessly filched from John Strickler
Unhappy Phillies firefighters pack Monday night's borough council meeting.



I could tell you that lots of things happened at last night's borough council meeting, and it would be true.

For example, council made quick work of deciding against withdrawing its opposition to the proposal to open a boarding house for vets in the rectory and convent of the former St. Peter's Catholic Church on South Street.

It should be noted, however, that even if the Higher Ground Church International does not get its variances, it can still house six people in each building. The variance is simply asking for permission to exceed that limit because there is more space, and also to allow some of the rooms there to be 20 square feet smaller than required in the ordinance.

But let's face it, the big news was the ever-more-dire brinksmanship between the borough and the Philadelphia Steam Fire Company No. 1, known to you and I as the Phillies.

Here is the video of what Council President Stephen Toroney read at last night's meeting:


Borough council did not blink, and took the next step forward, authorizing Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. to prepare changes to the ordinance and fire services agreement that would allow for consolidation -- with or without the Phillies.

Without the Phillies, however, the borough will lose more than 50 percent of their firefighters as that is the company with the most volunteers.

Deadline day is March 31. That's when either the Phillies join the consolidated department, or the borough removes authorization for them to respond to fires in Pottstown.

Toroney says the other three companies have assured the borough that fire safety will not be compromised with only half its department responding, which leads one to wonder:
1) Why they needed so many volunteers in the first place, if they can see no loss in service with half as many?:
2) And how do the remaining companies intend to boost volunteerism after allowing the only company increasing its volunteer base to walk away?

But hey, I'm just a journalist. What do I know? I just ask questions.

Click here to read the story in today's paper from last night's meeting.

Here are the Tweets:

No Tax Hike in Pottsgrove -- Yet

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Photo by Evan Brandt
The Pottsgrove School Board gets ready to get going Tuesday night.
The Pottsgrove School Board did something unusual Tuesday night.

They adopted a preliminary budget with no tax increase, but with a $2.5 million deficit.

And they did it unanimously.

Which either makes them irresponsible, or geniuses.

What better way to point out the uselessness of the state's Act 1 laws which require school districts to go through the motions of adopting a budget everyone knows they are not going to adopt, then to just adopt it "as is."

How many times does a school board get beat up in Sound-Off for adopting a preliminary budget with a ridiculously high tax hike, even when its only pro-forma?

This time, the headline for Pottsgrove will say "no tax hike" or something like it, even though anyone who is paying attention knows it will likely be somewhere between zero and 2.4 percent, which is the limit set by the Act 1 index.

They'll stay within that limit because they also voted against applying for the "exceptions" that would allow them to raise taxes above 2.4 percent in what promises to be a very tough budget year; what with a new governor, a Legislature in control of the opposite party and, perhaps most significant, contract negotiations with the district's teachers.

So it promises to be a very interesting year.

Here are the Tweets from last night's meeting, along with some followers who responded live and whose Tweets I have include as well -- which is always fun.

Praying for Pottstown, Every Friday

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided to us recently by the Rev. Reggie Brooks, senior pastor at Victory Christian Life Center and we thought we would share it with you.
For the past 11 years, a small group of pastors in the Pottstown area have been meeting every Friday morning from 9 to 10 a.m. to pray for this community. 

This was started by Pastor Donnie Cloen of New Passion Church; Pastor Mike Anthony of Heart of God Family Worship Center and Pastor Reggie Brooks of Victory Christian Life Center. 

In the past few years the attendance has shifted to include Pastor Charles Cedeno of New Life Assembly of God and Pastor Bruce Levengood of Hopewell Community Church.

More recently, a letter was sent out to other area churches inviting the pastors to come out for the first prayer of the new year on Jan. 2. 
Pastor Reggie Brooks, right and
Juanita Brooks from Victory Christian Life Center

And 25 people responded and began to pray aggressively for Pottstown. 

This prayer meeting happens every Friday from 9 to 10 a.m. 

On the first three Fridays of the month, the prayer is held at Victory Christian Life Center, located an the southeast corner of Franklin and Washington streets. 

The prayer will be at different churches on the fourth Friday of each month.

"We believe that the time has come for everyone to come together in prayer, Pastors and lay-people alike. It does not matter what your denomination is, we are not looking to divide the community but to unite in a common cause to bring an end to the violence and destruction of this town," according to Reggie Brooks, the senior pastor of Victory Christian Life Center.

In February, the fourth Friday prayer will be held at New Birth Life Church, 335 W. High St. in Pottstown. 

In March, the fourth Friday prayer will be held at New Life Assembly of God, 902 N. Evans St. in Pottstown.

"We look forward to a fantastic year and a powerful outpouring of God’s spirit on this town that will heal our land and bring forth the many blessings the God has promised us," Brooks wrote.

The Trail Leads to What Ales You

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Some proceeds from the sale of SRT Ale will be used
to help maintain the Schuylkill River Trail.
Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Schuylkill River Hertitage Area and re-printed here with tremendous enthusiasm.

The Schuylkill River Heritage Area has announced its collaboration with Sly Fox Brewing Company, on the release of a new canned beer that benefits and celebrates the Schuylkill River Trail.

SRT Ale, due to hit local distributors in cans on Earth Day, is brewed specifically for craft beer fans who also love the outdoors of southeastern PA. 

Sly Fox's SRT Ale is a golden, delicious, hop-forward American Pale Ale, and at 4.7% alcohol by volume, it's designed to be the perfect post-activity beer.

The latest Sly Fox beer is also a tribute to a beloved recreational resource. 

A portion of the proceeds from the sales of SRT Ale will be donated to improve and maintain the 130-mile Schuylkill River Trail (SRT) that meanders near the brewery in Pottstown, as well as Sly Fox's original Brewhouse and Eatery in Phoenixville. 

The beer's launch will take place over several days as it journeys down the southeastern Pennsylvania trail from Pottsville to Philadelphia.

"Brewing a tribute beer to the crown jewel of regional recreation was a natural for us," said Sly Fox Brewmaster, Brian O'Reilly. "The Schuylkill Watershed is vital to the work we do and Sly Fox is committed to supporting it."

HIDDEN RIVER, PUBLIC TRAIL


The Schuylkill River Trail and accompanying Water Trail are well-used recreational resources that follow the length of the beautiful Schuylkill River, whose name means "hidden" in Dutch. 

When complete, the Schuylkill River Trail will wind along the river
from Pottsville to Philadelphia.
The Schuylkill was named 2014 Pennsylvania River of the Year by the Pennsylvania Organization for Watersheds and Rivers. Recreational usage on and along the river is growing exponentially as the surrounding population does, and consequently, more resources will be required to complete, protect and maintain the trail.

Starting in Pottsville, Schuylkill County and winding through the Schuylkill Highlands to Philadelphia, the river was historically flanked by railroad lines that have since been converted to paved and gravel trails as part of the Greater Philadelphia's Regional Trail Network. 

The Schuylkill River National and State Heritage Area, managed by the non-profit Schuylkill River Greenway Association, works to promote and improve the entire Schuylkill River Trail and operates and maintains about 30 trail miles in Berks and Schuylkill Counties.

Not only is Sly Fox Brewing Company's SRT Ale contributing to trail upkeep, but the beer is a tribute to every step, paddle and pedal on the trail.

"The Schuylkill River Heritage Area is pleased to enter into this partnership with the Sly Fox Brewing Company," said Kurt Zwikl, executive director of the Schuylkill River Heritage Area. 

"The release of SRT Ale highlights the recreational value the trail brings to the communities along the river, he said. "Our thanks go out to the brewery for this recognition."

The Schuylkill River National and State Heritage Area also hosts the Schuylkill River Sojourn, an annual 112-mile guided canoe/kayak trip on the Schuylkill River that begins in rural Schuylkill Haven, PA, and ends seven days later in Philadelphia's Boathouse Row. 

The Sojourn is a way to advocate and educate about the river's importance, history and connection to the people who live and work along it. 

Inspired by the Sojourn, the ceremonial release of Sly Fox Brewing Company's SRT Ale will make the journey, north to south, delivering news of the beer along the way.

SRT SPREE


The SRT Spree will follow a Sly Fox launch team over the course of four nights and five days as they trek from Pottsville to Philadelphia with a larger-than-life SRT Ale can, welcoming beer and trail lovers to join in along the way. 

The team will travel by kayaks, road bicycles, trail bikes, horseback, recumbent trikes and on foot to advance the giant can to the final destination. 

Each day the Spree will stop along the trail for an organized trail cleanup and recognition of a local beer purveyor that will introduce SRT Ale to the public. 

The Schuylkill River Trail in Pottstown.
Area businesses and community organizations will be invited to join this movement as it draws awareness to the trail – and the ale.

"We hope this unique event creates a lot of buzz for SRT Ale," adds Corey Reid, Sly Fox Beer Ambassador and member of the SRT Spree launch team, "but, more importantly, it will draw valuable attention to the trail and the river."

On Earth Day, Wednesday, April 22, the SRT Spree will conclude at the Schuylkill Banks, Philadelphia's newest riverfront park, for a final cleanup and launch celebration.

"SRT Ale is a special release for Sly Fox," said Todd Palmer, also a member of the launch team and creative director at Virtual Farm Creative, Sly Fox Brewing Company's advertising agency. 

"The brewery is right off the trail, and we all use it and value it as a resource. We all love the outdoors and we all love beer. Every great adventure should end with a great beer!"

Beer lovers anticipating the release of SRT Ale are encouraged to join the journey or track the team's progress online at www.slyfoxbeer.com/SRTSPREE.

Mr. Costello Went to Washington, And Brings Washington to You

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A map of Pennsylvania's 6th Congressional District
So let's face it, going down to Washington, D.C. to talk to your Congressman can be a hassle.

Lucky for you, you won't have to brave the Beltway because newly-minted Congressman Ryan Costello is bringing Washington, D.C. to you -- sort of.

Staff from his office of Congressman Ryan A. Costello will be available to meet with constituents during a Pottstown Mobile Office Day at Borough Hall, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 19.

Constituents are encouraged to call 610.376.7630 to set up an appointment. 
Costello’s staff will be available to meet with constituents who need help with federal agencies, such as Social Security and Veterans Affairs.

“Mobile office hours are a great way to meet face-to-face with the residents of the district and deliver excellent constituent services they deserve,” Costello said. “I’m extremely grateful that Pottstown officials are willing to partner with me in serving the community.”
Costello stressed that constituents in the Montgomery County portion of his district do not need to wait until Feb. 19 to receive help with a federal issue. 

Casework staff is available by calling either the Wyomissing Office at 610.376.7630 or the West Chester Office at 610.696.2982.
Ryan Costello

The Wyomissing office is located at 840 North Park Road in the Park Plaza strip mall.

The West Chester office is in room 105 of the Historic Chester County Courthouse at Market and High streets.

“Our casework staff is very responsive and is available to set up appointments for face-to-face meetings throughout the district at times convenient for the constituent,” Costello said. “We will strive to provide ‘on-demand’ constituent service and will come out to your neighborhood if you cannot get to one of our offices.”

Costello was elected in November 2014 after serving as a Chester County Commissioner. 

The Montgomery County portion of his district includes: Collegeville; East Greenville; Pennsburg; Pottstown; Red Hill; Royersford; Schwenksville; Trappe; and Douglass; Limerick; Lower Pottsgrove; Lower Providence; New Hanover; Upper Pottsgrove; Upper Providence; West Pottsgrove townships; and parts of Perkiomen, Upper Hannover and West Norriton townships.



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