Quantcast
Channel: Digital Notebook
Viewing all 2733 articles
Browse latest View live

Painter Prompts Patriotic Art Contest

$
0
0
Mark Painter
State Rep. Mark Painter has announced an art contest for all elementary school students in the 146th Legislative District.

"This art contest is designed to encourage students to recognize the rich history in Pennsylvania," said Painter, D-Montgomery.

Rules and themes for the 2013 Elementary Art Contest:

· Category I: First Grade/"The Liberty Bell"

· Category II: Second and Third Grade /"Betsy Ross and the American Flag"

· Category III: Fourth and Fifth Grade/"Benjamin Franklin and Lightning"

· Size: 11 x 17 white poster board

First graders can draw the Liberty Bell.
· Each entry must include the following information: student’s name, age, address (city, state, zip code and
county), telephone number, school, teacher and grade.

· Deadline: May 20

Entries will be judged on the basis of use of theme, creativity and originality, and artistic design.

Winning students will be recognized with official certificates of achievement and also will have their artwork displayed at Painter’s office.

To arrange artwork pickups, contact Painter's office at 610-326-9563 or email malexander@pahouse.net.

Reading for the Gold (And Silver and Bronze)

$
0
0
Chip, the Diamond Credit Union mascot, with two Reading Olympians. Diamond Credit Union sponsors the Pottstown School Districts Reading Olympics teams.


Over 150 elementary students in the Pottstown School District recently competed in the 13th annual school district Reading Olympics competition earlier this month.

The Reading Olympics requires teams of students to read 45 books in preparation for the event. 

Each round of competition sees two opposing teams attempt to answer 20
questions given in rapid-fire fashion from moderators. After a question is asked about a book, teams huddle to determine the correct answer. One point is awarded for each correct answer and Olympic ribbons are awarded for overall performance. 

District teams qualify to compete in the annual Montgomery County Intermediate Unit competition which annually attracts over 500 teams and 7,000 participants.

The Pottstown School District program is organized by Reading Specialist Karen Neitz. The goals of the Reading Olympics are to increase students' reading for enjoyment and promote reading skills that increase achievement and academic success. 

“I am always so excited to see our youngsters actively engage in reading. This event is an opportunity for students to experience teamwork and the satisfaction that comes from hard work,” said Neitz.

For the eighth consecutive year the Pottstown School District’s Reading Olympics program has received financial support from the local Diamond Credit Union. 

John Foust, President of Diamond Credit Union said, “We are proud to partner with the Pottstown School District in their efforts to promote the skill of reading so that students may learn to read so that they can read to learn. It is extremely rewarding to see the glow in students’ eyes when they correctly answer one of the questions. As an organization, Diamond Credit Union is committed to being a contributing member of our community.”

Here are the results:

Earning Gold Ribbons Were:

Lincoln Lightening Readers - Kylie Boughter, Kaile Butterfield, Melissa Coleman, Seth Jones, William Maddox  Cristine Martinez, Dylan Murphy, Megan Robie, Alixander Stewart, Somaiya Tate, Donovan Towson, MiKayla Viers, Winni Weng, Emme Wolfel.

Rupert Reading Racers - Zachary Beekley, Tyler Bruton, Kamrin Gatlin, Kameryn Herpich, David Hicks, Isaiah Lamar, Courtney Maulseed, Alexandria Olvera, Amana Douglas-Quill, Destri Roye, Emily Russo, Arianna Rumley, U'Kari Taylor, Kito Thompson, Julius Vargas, Hannah Wilson.

Earning Silver Ribbons Were:

Franklin's Rockin' Readers - Dezmyre Aiken, Tajime Brown, Christina Butler, Brooklyn Colegrove, Devin Dolla, Hannah Feist, Erin Glass, Avery Heverly, Kaylin Lascik, Julian Paskel, Esteban Pineda, Bryce Redd, Tanner Scott, Phillip Shiffler.

Franklin's Ballistic Bookworms - Shelby Clayton, Elijah Davis ,Jacob Eames, Andrew Green, Paige Jones, Tahkeim Lowe, Cayla McNair, Riley Mead, Jonae Oister, Payton Reid, Isabel Sharp, Marisa Walker, Emily Weber, Harmony Wood.

Edgewood Elites - Beyonce' Brown, Rasherra Jackson, Kishan Patel, Nathan Lang, Alexis Taylor, Isabelle Dupon, Joseph McLoughlin, Amari Folly.

Earning Bronze Ribbons Were:

Edgewood Reading Stars - Nathalie Baten, Jacob Stiefel, Hannah Lewiski, Marcos Maldonado, Anthony Lowe, Raquel Villegas, Diego Magana-Jaime, Cheyenne Dickinson.

Barth Read Big or Go Home - Topanga Brooks, Heaven Charriez, NiYell Clifford, Sylvahna Craft, Nancy Deschamps-Ocampo, Kaelyn Draucker, Zoe Earle, Haley Haas, Alexa Howard, Justice Mayes, Pearce Raegler, Robbie Raegler, Mason Saltzer, Cheyenne Shirley, Jaleinda Thompson, Taina Virola.

Barth Reading Warriors - Haile Clayton, Aiden Crowder, Kristin DiPietro, Jena Epright, Anyae Germany, Nathan Harper, Sherese Marshall, Jamair McCalpine-Thomas, Wesley McCalpine, Jada Oliver, Briana Quarles, Gabriela Reyes, Faith Roach.

The Art of Feeding the Hungry

$
0
0
Mercury Photo by Kevin Hoffman
Volunteers fill backpacks to be delivered to hungry Pottstown students. 

BLOGGER'S NOTE: The following is provided by Julie over at ArtFusion 19464 (Formerly the Gallery on High):

ArtFusion 19464 is proud to partner once again with Operation Backpack to host a food drive for the month of April. 

Operation Backpack provides local hungry students with much needed food for the weekend. 
Mercury Photo by Kevin Hoffman
Operation Backpack organizer Lisa Heverly in a photo taken last year
for a Mercury article on the program.

There are many homeless and chronically hungry students in our area, and together we can help them succeed by addressing their hunger.

True to Life Ministries (TTLM) runs Operation Backpack and works with individuals and organizations like GSP to gather donated food and supplies. 

Volunteers use these items to fill backpacks distributed to qualifying students at the end of each week. 

The backpacks protect the students' confidentiality, and they are discretely returned on Mondays so the process can start over. 

For more information on TTLM, please visit their website, or call them at 484-300-0280.

Mercury Photo by Kevin Hoffman
Volunteers get backpacks ready for filling.
Donations can be dropped off at 254 E. High St. during normal business hours (Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.). 

We will have a collection box at the front of the store until the end of April. Please check the list for approved items.

Thank you for your help in providing this vital assistance to those in our community.


Dinner AND a Show for $8? Wow!

$
0
0
One of my duties as a father/ blogger is the shameless promotion of activities with which my son is involved and this is one of those times.

The Pottstown Schools Music Association is holding its first Jazz and; Spaghetti Dinner on Saturday, April 20, from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Goodwill Fire Station on High St.

Proceeds from this event will benefit ALL district music students.

Posted here is a copy of the ticket order form that was also sent home with most students.

If you don't have a student in Pottstown schools but would love to come, you can print out this page or, better yet, click on this link and you can print out a clean copy of the form to turn in to a music teacher in any Pottstown school.

Tickets are $8 for adult, $5 for ages 6-10, and 5 and under are free.

Please return your order form by Friday, April 5, which will help the volunteers prepare in advance.

The dinner includes: spaghetti, meatballs, bread and butter, coffee, tea, iced tea, lemonade and dessert.

I have not yet heard the high school jazz band perform this year, so I'm  looking forward to it. Plus, as some of you who may have seen me lumbering down the street can attest, I love pasta.

And, if you want a taste of what kind of entertainment you will enjoy, here is a video of the Pottstown Middle School Jazz Band performing "Smackwater Jack" at Arcola Middle School during a recent competition there.

They received a rating of "excellent" as I recall, as well as being named the best trombone section.




And, if that wasn't enough to whet your appetite, for both more jazz and a delicious spaghetti dinner (did we mention they've got meatballs?!?) here is another taste of the entertainment.

This is "I've Got Rhythm," again from the middle schoolers.




So come on down. Enjoy some dinner, see a show and help promote music education in Pottstown. It's a win/win/win!

Spring Cleaning ... A River

$
0
0
Show the Schuylkill a little love this month and sign up to help clean her banks.

Blogger's Note:The following was provided to us by Shaun Bailey, marketing and communications Coordinator for the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary. 

Last year, participants in the Schuylkill Scrub organized over 2,000 volunteers at more than 90 sites across the Schuylkill Valley — a six-fold increase over 2011. This spring, leaders at the Schuylkill Action Network hope to increase participation even more.

Anyone hosting a riverside cleanup between April 1 and May 31 is invited to register their event at SchuylkillScrub.org. Those who do will be eligible to win a free rain barrel or $100 toward the purchase of plants that are native to the region. 

Reporter Frank Otto and I, left, watch in amazement as
irrepressible former Mercury reporter Brandie Kessler
tries to dig a buried tire out of the ground. Talk about
an immovable object meeting an irresistable force...
They can also receive free gloves, trash bags, and safety vests. And they can benefit from free disposal at participating landfills during Pick It Up PA Days on April 20 to May 6.

Individuals can also log on to SchuylkillScrub.org to find volunteer opportunities. These will take place in Berks, Chester, Montgomery, Philadelphia and Schuylkill counties, among others. 

(Last year, the editorial staff at The Mercury teamed up and helped to clean up Mother Earth on Mother's Day; more specifically, Ganshahawny Park -- that's Lenape for Tumbling Waters -- Park along Old Reading Pike in Douglass (Berks) Township.

You can read all about that adventure in Mercury Editor Nancy March's blog post on the subject.)

(Now that I've plugged her blog, I feel no guilt in pilfering some of her photos from last year!)
This is some of the stuff we pulled out of the park.


“What sets the Schuylkill Scrub apart is how it fits into anyone’s schedule,” said Tom Davidock, coordinator of the Schuylkill Action Network. “Instead of a single, one-day event, we have dozens spread across two months and more than five counties.”

Participating in the Schuylkill Scrub will help to provide clean drinking water for almost 2 million people, beautify local communities, and sustain healthy fish and wildlife. It will also help environmental leaders track the progress of anti-litter campaigns at the local, regional, and national levels. This is because all cleanups will automatically be registered with both Keep Pennsylvania Beautiful and Keep America Beautiful.

Boss lady Nancy March at work.
“Volunteers cleaned up over 600 miles of Pennsylvania’s shoreline and waterways last year — roughly a three-fold increase over 2011,” said Michelle Dunn, program coordinator for the Great American Cleanup of PA. “This would not be possible without campaigns like the Schuylkill Scrub and the volunteers they rally to our cause.”

The Schuylkill Scrub was founded in 2010 by the Green Valleys Association and the Hay Creek Watershed Association, both of greater Pottstown, Pennsylvania.

The Schuylkill River travels 130 miles through southeastern Pennsylvania. 

The land draining to this river spans approximately 2,000 square miles surrounding the riverside cities of Philadelphia, Norristown, Pottstown, Reading, Pottsville and more.

Information and online registration is available at SchuylkillScrub.org, or by calling Tom Davidock of the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary at (800) 445-4935, extension 109.

It's All Happening at the Library

$
0
0
Libraries are intended to be community gather places, a one-stop-shop for resources and, as always, a place
to get really great books, movies and music -- all for free.

And if you take a look at what's happening at libraries this month, you would be hard-pressed to disagree.

* So, as this flyer shows, the Pottstown Regional Public Library is celebrating "Family Reading Month" in April, challenging family to read together for 20 minutes a day for 20 days.

But you have to register by next Saturday.

* The Pottstown Regional Public Library is also hosting an important new workshop on Tuesday April 16 at 10 a.m.

That's when Genesis Housing Corp. and National Penn Bank will host a free workshop on "Banking Basics."


Topics will include: Banking for Real Life; Free and Low Cost Accounts; How to Start or Start Over; How to Avoid Identity Fraud.

It will also offer the opportunity to ask the experts your questions and chances to win door prizes.


For more information and to register, call 610-275-4357 or visit www.genesishousing.org


* Further, Danielle Small, library media specialist over at the Pottsgrove High School Library has announced  plans to celebrate National Library Week there, from April 14 to April 20.

The include Amnesty Day (April 15); Design Your Own Bookmark Day (April 16); and Student Drawing to win Barnes and Noble Gift Card Day (April 19).

Appropriately, National Library Week occurs during School Library Month, according to the American Library Association, which sponsors both celebrations.

School Library Month began in 1985 and the theme of the first national observance of School Library Month was "Where Learning Never Ends: The School Library Media Center."






Business is Bustin' Out All Over Pottstown

$
0
0
Photo by Evan Brandt
This shows the location of the proposed new urgent care center at the intersection of Route 100, King Street and Shoemaker Road. They would like to begin construction as soon as possible.

The roller coaster ride of business news and revitalization efforts in the borough took an upswing Wednesday night when borough council heard about two proposals for two new businesses which want to put up new buildings in the borough.

One, known as Patient First, is part of a chain of 43 urgent care medical centers that has been in business for 43 years and promises to bring 50 jobs into the borough.

"We're looking to hire locally," said  Carl Wright, founder and president of The Wright Group, which will construct the building.at the site of the former Chinese Food restaurant across the parking lot from Ollies Outlet and Just Cabinets.

The Wright Group, which is also building the Hanover Square townhouses at the former Mrs. Smith's factory site, will lease the building to the urgent care company for 20 years or more.

"So we're talking about a long-term commitment," Wright said.

Patient First was founded 32 years by Richard Sowers, an emergency room physician who realized that many of those patients who came to the emergency room for treatment did not have life-threatening conditions and could be held instead by an "urgent care" practice, Wright said.

"It was a revolutionary idea at the time, but now they are everywhere," he said.

The business -- which operates nine similar centers in Greater Richmond, Va.; eight in Greater Hampton Roads, Tidewater, Va., and the DelMarVa Peninsula; 14 in Greater Baltimore; six in greater Washington, DC; three in eastern Pennsylvania; and four in central Pennsylvania -- will be open every day of the year, from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.

This (fuzzy) photo shows an existing Patient First building.
Councilman Dan Weand, who is also the chairman of the borough planning commission, praised the proposal.

"We had the pleasure of working with a well-prepared and congenial developer," he said.

"It's going to be a beautiful building," said Council President Steve Toroney, who also serves on the planning commission.

Eleven waivers were required to move the project forward. 

Council is set to vote on a preliminary/final site plan approval at Monday night's meeting.

A second new business is also poised to be approved Monday night.

Haggerty Steel, located outside Phoenixville, is looking to expand and to do it here.

"We're looking to grow, that's why we're coming to Pottstown," said Tom Haggerty, who was at Wednesday night's council meeting representing his company.

Haggerty Steel is a "fabrication and welding company," Haggerty said, adding "we would like to break ground in June."

Noting his company had just received its bank finances, Haggerty said "the next eight weeks are very critical, I would like to move in by October or November."

He said the company has eight permanent employees, and he would like to add more, but said that the company at times employs many more, depending on the size of the bids he wins for contracts.

"We're expanding so we can bid on bigger projects," he said.

Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. told council the company is looking to build a 9,000 square-foot building on an undeveloped 1.25-acre plot in the Circle of Progress, adjacent to the Pottstown Municipal Airport.

He said the planning commission recommended site plan approval for this project as well.

"We think you will be a great addition to Pottstown," Weand said.

Asked by Mayor Bonnie Heath about his experience working with Pottstown, Haggerty said "it's been very easy so far and the staff has been great. I found it very easy to do business in Pottstown."

Later in the meeting, Toroney praised the job being done by Steve Bamford, Pottstown's economic development point man and the executive director of Pottstown Area Industrial Development Inc.

"I want to thank him for the great job he's doing," Toroney said. "We've just seen two great things occuring here in Pottstown and Steve has been a big part of making that happen."



Reading on the Wing

$
0
0
Edgewood Elementary first Grader Grace Lewiski peers over the top of her book.


Blogger's Note:Do we ever get tired of news of the Pottstown School District, provided through the auspices of cheerleader extraordinaire John Armato? We say no.

Second grade students at Edgewood Elementary School gained new appreciation for the joy and value of reading thanks to a visit by the Philadelphia Eagles Book Mobile.

First-graders Leilani Alberto, left, and Hannah Jane Daniels
share 
a book during a visit from the Eagles Bookmobile.
Second graders in Jayne Burke’s and Tina Ludy’s classes sat down with Storybook Man and Coach Ally and spent some time enjoying the pleasures of reading.

Storybook Man used his best expressive reading and captivated the students’ attention as he read about the hippopotamus that ate the teacher. 

Needless to say, there were a lot of laughs and smiling going on. 

He then told the true story of the “Three Little Pigs” (from the wolf’s side of the story).

At the end of the program, each student received a free book. 

First grader Cyan DiMarcello
The second graders showed their appreciation by giving an Eagles’ cheer goodbye to Storybook Man and Coach Ally.

“Our students were so excited to have a visit from our special guests and appreciated the time that they took to read stories to them. It’s through activities like this that youngsters gain an appreciation and sense of joy from reading that will hopefully stay with them the rest of their lives,” Ludy, said.

Council News and Notes

$
0
0
Photo by Evan Brandt
The site of the future borough garage at 10 Rice St.

Blogger's Note:Lots of things happen at borough council meetings, not all of them are big and we don't always have room for all of them in The Mercury -- hence the function of this blog.

Here are a couple of items of interest from Wednesday night's work session.

New Borough Garage

The borough is getting closer to having a new municipal garage, a long-overdue effort.

The location is at 10 Rice St., just inside the borough border on the west end of town and it is an empty lot.

Borough Manager Mark Flanders said the lot is 2.1 acres and will pay $186,000 for the lot.

On Friday, the borough issues "request for qualification" documents which will be used to develop a short-list of architects for the building.

"Request for proposal" documents will then be issued to the short list and a council committee will chose the architect.

The project is being funded through a capital projects loan the borough took, which also paid off the bond that paid for borough hall and allows the borough to pay a lower interest rate on servicing the debt.

The project is long over-due. Some of us may recall that in 2006, part of the facade of the current garage facing Beech Street, across from the Ricketts Community Center, fell down.

New Fire Truck

In addition to serving borough building debt at a lower rate, the borough's plan to buy a new fire truck will also have taxpayers paying a lower rate.

Flanders told council Wednesday that the plan to buy a new KME "quint" ladder truck may also save some money.

Finance Director Janice Lee said the financing method chosen will have an interest rate of 2.29 percent over the next 10 years. 

Pottstown purchased this "Quint" ladder truck for
Empire Hook & Ladder Co. about five years ago.
It will also allow the existing loan for the last fire truck the borough purchased five years ago, on which taxpayers are paying 4.17 percent, to pay paid off out of the existing loan. 

The new truck is estimated to cost $669,100 and by paying 90 percent of the cost up front, the borough will receive a $23,000 discount, Lee said.

As a result, the borough's debt payments will be $2,000 less than currently and will allow for these capital projects and purchases to move forward, Flanders said.

"This is a recognized need of the borough," said Councilman Dan Weand.

Fire Chief Richard Lengel said the maintenance by fire companies allows trucks to be used for about 30 years.

He said the truck being replaced is similar to the truck run by Empire Hook and Ladder, which is currently housed at Goodwill Fire Company on High Street, since the two companies merged.

The plan is for the new truck to replace the ladder truck now at the Phillies fire house on Chestnut Street.

Road Sign Roulette

Many people may not know this, but High Street was the original Route 422.

As often happens when by-passes are built, traffic moves faster, but also moves around the businesses that once lined the main drag, hoping to capture the interest, and consumer dollar, of passing motorists.

Sometimes, some of that potential business can be recaptured with a sign on the
road that designates the old route as the "business route."

And that is exactly what state Rep. Mark Painter, D-146th Dist., hopes to do.

Borough Manager Mark Flanders told council Wednesday night that Painter has proposed "labeling the stretch of High Street as 'Business Route 422' from the Sanatoga interchange to Stowe. It can be done at minimal cost and it would be paid by PennDOT," Flanders said.

"I think this is a great idea," said Councilman Joe Kirkland. "People will often take the detour just to see what's there."

Flanders also noted that no where on southbound Route 100 does it indicate which exit to take to reach downtown Pottstown.

"We're working on it," he told council.

What You See on TV

Photo by Evan Brandt
Gus Tellis at work, recording Wednesday night's borough 
council workshop session.
Those of you addicted to watching borough council meetings on PCTV will be relieved to know that council is preparing to extend for three years its contract with the new operators of the service -- Tellisvision.

Run by former PCTV employee Gus Tellis, Council President Stephen Toroney said "there is an air of excitement under Mr. Tellis that has not bee a part of PCTV in a long time."

The stability of a three-year extension would help make the company more solvent.

Finance Committee Chairman Dan Weand said the committee is "impressed with the operation so far" and has recommended the contract extension.

Pre-School Expansion

Grace Lutheran Church
Council may likely vote Monday to approve a conditional use permit which would allow the expansion of the pre-school housed at Grace Lutheran Church on North Charlotte Street.

In existence for 44 years, director Stephanie Houck said the idea is to expand from a half-day program that runs from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; to a full-day that runs from 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

"Nothing will change, there will just be more time in the building," she said.

The expansion, which is dependent on the center getting licensed to operate as a full-day service, will allow about 50 children to be educated there.

She predicted the traffic in and out of the center would actually be less, because parents would drop-off and pick-up their children at different times.

The school does plan to add a new playground to the grounds.

A New Look

Photo by Evan Brandt
And now for perhaps the most ground-breaking item on our round-up.

Borough Manager Mark Flanders, who recently returned from a southern vacation we are told, looks a little more relaxed these days.

Perhaps that's because he seems to have expanded his trademark mustache and left part of his "vacation beard" in place.

As a fellow supporter of facial hair, the Digital Notebook staff wishes him an itch-free experience.

(We can't help but notice the preponderance of gray in that new beard, but then, who are we to talk....)

It Flows Downhill

$
0
0
Sewage from Pottstown, West Pottsgrove, Upper Pottsgrove and Lower Pottsgrove is all treated at the Pottstown Wastewater Treatment Plant.
If its true that it flows downhill, then it’s apparently also true that officials in the surrounding townships which send their sewage to Pottstown for treatment feel like they are are the bottom of that hill when it comes to capital expenses.

The Pottstown Wastewater Treatment Plant on Industrial Highway is owned and operated by the Pottstown Borough Authority.

Sewer systems in West Pottsgrove, Upper Pottsgrove and Lower Pottsgrove connect to it and sewage generated in those communities are treated at the Pottstown plant for a price.

Under the terms of agreements between the townships and the borough authority, the townships also pay for
A birdseye view of the Pottstown Wastewater Treatment Plant
a proportional portion of the capital costs associated with operating and improving the plant in addition to paying for the treatment of their sewage, which is calculated by volume.

By way of example, Lower Pottsgrove’s bill for 2013, approved on Feb. 11, was $411,613.

In Upper Pottsgrove and West Pottsgrove, those agreements are made directly with the township government.

In Lower Pottsgrove, a separate township sewer authority oversees the piping and pumping systems in that township, as well as governing the relationship with the borough authority.

According to a report in Monday’s Sanatoga Post, all three townships would like to change that relationship.

The practice the three townships most want to change is the borough authority’s unilateral decision-making, Lower Pottsgrove Manager Rod Hawthorne told the board of commissioners during an April 1 meeting, the post reported.

“We want a say. We’d like to have seats at the table,” Hawthorne said, according to the Post.

The borough authority is not unaware of these concerns and discussed them during a March 12 board meeting.

Borough Manager Mark Flanders
“Both West Pottsgrove and Lower Pottsgrove disagree with the capital plan,” Borough Manager Mark Flanders, who is also the manager of the authority, told the authority board last month after reporting that his staff had submitted it to all three municipalities for review.

“When we asked for their input, their response was ‘we don’t agree,’ he said. “They want to sit down and talk. It’s my understanding they want to actively participate in sewer plans.”

“I suppose their input is ‘we don’t want to pay any more money,’” said authority board member David Renn.

Tom Carroll
“I can sympathize with their situation,” said Authority Board Chairman Tom Carroll.

Bob Plenderleith, who oversees the day-to-day management of the borough authority’s accounts, told the
board that the staff has been sharing the capital plans for the plant, which may include a second $6.2 million dryer used to dry the sludge which is a by-product of sewage treatment. Drying it makes its disposal significantly cheaper.

“We shared the preliminary numbers ahead of time so they could prepare their own budgets,” said Flanders, referring to a common complaint of several years ago, when the township officials complained they were not getting accurate or timely numbers out of borough hall.

Although the timeliness has improved significantly, apparently some officials in the township still question the accuracy.

Plenderleith noted that West Pottsgrove recently imposed a fee on its sewer customers to begin to set aside funds for capital expenses.

But he also observed that he believes the townships ‘want to have a say in what we do and don’t do.”

A joint meeting among the three townships and the borough authority has been set up for Tuesday, April 16, according to the Post.

“There is some benefit to having a face-to-face meeting,” Renn said when a meeting date was still being discussed. “Perhaps we can make them understand that these are not whims, these are necessities,” he said of the capital plans.

Hawthorne said the townships want “to talk about how they might more equitably share in discussions of and planning for capital funded projects. They’d also like to propose joint grant-writing and other collaborative efforts to ensure the four municipalities don’t compete against themselves where authority projects are concerned,” according to the Post report.

Officials from all three townships have already met separately from the borough authority to share their common concerns and decide which issues to bring to the table at the April 16 meeting.

According to the minutes of that joint meeting, held Feb. 11 and highlighted in the Post report, the townships would like to discuss the sewer service agreements; having “a seat at the table for discussion of future and present financial commitments required by the borough;” and “a third-party overview of the borough’s wastewater treatment plant and financial billing issues.”

The possibility that the townships might want to re-negotiate their service agreements with the borough authority was raised at the March 19 meeting, a possibility which elicited a one-word answer from Renn — “no.”

The minutes of the meeting between the three municipalities also indicated that Lower Pottsgrove has paid Bursich Associates, its engineer, $5,000 to conduct a comparative study of “other treatment plants about the same size as Pottstown’s.”

Pottstown’s operation will be compared with the Lower Perkiomen Valley Regional Sewer Authority, and the Downingtown Area Regional Authority, according to the minutes of the Feb. 11 meeting.




Follow Evan Brandt on Twitter @PottstownNews

Rockets and Robots and Math, Oh My!

$
0
0
Have you ever wanted to build a sumo wrestling robot? Now you can, thanks to a program at the Olivet Boys and Girls Club that starts up Thursday.

Have you ever launched a rocket?

Built a sumo wrestling robot?

Did you ever wonder why bridges don't fall down?

Well if you are a high school student in Montgomery County, there is a free program focusing on Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics -- or STEM -- available through the Olivet Boys and Girls Club at the Ricketts Community Center that can help you explore all those questions and more.

Professionals from two companies -- Montco WIB and Turner Concepts -- will meet with 15 to 20 students over eight weeks and be mentors helping to explore those subjects.

Open for students ages 14 to 18, the program begins on April 11 and runs through June 22.

Each group will meet for two hours every other Thursday  from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and every fourth Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Ricketts Center, 640 Beech St.

The Saturday events will take place at Central Montco Technical High School in Plymouth Meeting.

Subjects covered include aerospace engineering; civil engineering, physics; mechanical engineering and robotics engineering.

Projects include:

  • An egg drop that will showcase fundamental properties of physics; 
  • A rocket project in which students will build model rockets in small teams and compete for best launch and innovation; 
  • A rubber band car project that will enable students to see the mechanical action required to move an object, to understand the difference between potential and kinetic energy and to analyze how a vehicle is affected by motion and stresses; 
A K'Nex Bridge

  • Building bridges using K'nex which will show how varied types of brides support weight and the differences between static and dynamic loads and;
  • Robotics competition in which students will build a robot to compete in the Robot Sumo Competition where two autonomous robots face off on a circular platform in a high-tech version of the ancient Japanese sport of sumo wrestling.
Director Jan Burgess said Tuesday that seats are still available and students can sign up at the center.

For more information, call 610-945-1020.










Iron Work and the American Revolution

$
0
0
Noah Lewis will portray Ned Hector, a free black man who was a teamster and artillery man in the war during the April 20 program at Pottsgrove Manor.


Blogger's Note: The following was submitted by Lynn Symborski, the museum educator over at Pottsgrove Manor.

Visit Pottsgrove Manor on Saturday, April 20, 2013 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to learn about the importance of iron in the Revolutionary War.

Many members of the Potts family were involved in the American Revolution. 

Samuel Potts, who grew up at Pottsgrove Manor, and his brother-in-law, Thomas Rutter III, cast cannon for the American cause at Warwick Furnace.

In this program, re-enactors portraying artillery men and blacksmiths of the Continental Army will show how important the local ironworking industry was to the war effort. 

Noah Lewis will portray Ned Hector, a free black man who was a teamster and artillery man in Colonel Proctor’s Artillery. Captain Seth Oaks’ Independent Company of Artificers will give demonstrations of 18th century blacksmithing.

This program is being held in conjunction with Pottsgrove Manor’s new exhibit “Forging a Lifestyle: Ironworking with the Potts Family.” 

Guided tours of the exhibit will be offered on the hour during the program.

The exhibit can also be viewed during a guided tour of Pottsgrove Manor during regular museum hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. 

Tours are given on the hour. The last tour of the day begins at 3 p.m. 

Groups of ten or more should preregister by calling 610-326-4014.
Pottsgrove Manor is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks and Heritage Services Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department.

For more information and a full calendar of events, please visit http://www.montcopa.org/index.aspx?nid=930 or like Pottsgrove Manor on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/PottsgroveManor.

Work and Play in Your Local Garden

$
0
0
Get started growing your own vegetables at the community garden's
work and play day this Saturday or April 20.
The MOSAIC Community Land Trust will host its first "work and play day" of the season on Saturday, April 13 from 9 to 12 at the garden, located at 423 Chestnut St.

The day is geared toward those who would like to have a plot to grow their own fresh vegetables.

The event will include a brief information session about what community gardens are about, as well as take applications for raised bed garden plots for the 2013 season.

There will be a wide range of free seeds and seedlings for garden plot owns to dig in and plant that day.

Washington
Plot owners pay a small annual fee to lease their plot and actively cultivate it throughout the entire growing season.

Individuals, families, community organizations, youth groups and local restaurants are all welcome to apply for a plot.

A second work and play day is also scheduled for Saturday, April 20 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. if you can't make the first.

Applications for a plot can also be found at the group's web site: www.mosaiccommunitylandtrust.org/ and can be mailed to MOSAIC Community Land Trust, 10 S. Hanover St., Pottstown, PA 19464.

For more information, call Laura Washington, garden manager, at 484-300-2410 or e-mail her at wash5000@msn.com

Of Robots, Wasps, Jellyfish and Dragonflies ... Oh, and Asteroids Too

$
0
0
We're excited here at the Digital Notebook Complex dear readers, and we hope you are too.

That's because it's time for another exciting installment of....

THIS SATURDAY IN SCIENCE!!!!!!

When you're too busy to keep up with the world of science, we do it for you. Just another of the many, many services provided by the energetic staff at The Digital Notebook. 

Since head Digital Notebooker Evan Brand intends to finish the latest in the "Game of Thrones" books this weekend, titled, appropriately, "Dances With Dragons," let's begin with news of the high-flying dragonfly.

Move over Miramar, according to this very interesting article in the April 1 edition of The New York Times, the best pilots in the world, drone and otherwise, is the dainty but deadly dragon fly.
Cool graphic stolen shamelessly from The New York Times.

The blue line shows the dragonfly's flight path, the red line the prey.
The Times explains:
Dragonflies are magnificent aerialists, able to hover, dive, fly backward and upside
down, pivot 360 degrees with three tiny wing beats, and reach speeds of 30 miles per hour, lightning for an arthropod. In many insects, the wings are simple extensions of the thoracic box and are moved largely as a unit, by flexing the entire thorax. In the dragonfly, the four transparent, ultraflexible wings are attached to the thorax by separate muscles and can each be maneuvered independently, lending the insect an extraordinary range of flight options.
According to the article, which you should check out because it has some awesome video of dragonflies hunting and avoiding being a fat frog's meal but which we are too technically inept to embed here, dragonflies are 95 percent effective when they hunt.

It seems they do so by paying attention, and with the help of a set of nerves they have have evolved that connect eyes, brain and wings, specifically designed to improve their flight abilities.

The Times explains again:
In a string of recent papers, scientists have pinpointed key features of the dragonfly’s brain, eyes and wings that allow it to hunt so unerringly. One research team has determined that the
A dragonfly's eyes and brain work together. 
nervous system of a dragonfly displays an almost human capacity for selective attention, able to focus on a single prey as it flies amid a cloud of similarly fluttering insects, just as a guest at a party can attend to a friend’s words while ignoring the background chatter.
Other researchers have identified a kind of master circuit of 16 neurons that connect the dragonfly’s brain to its flight motor center in the thorax. With the aid of that neuronal package, a dragonfly can track a moving target, calculate a trajectory to intercept that target and subtly adjust its path as needed.
Of course not everything in the insect world is so super cool.

Take, for example, the discovery of a giant wasp nest in an abandoned home on the Canary Islands.

Very, very uncool dude.
It kind of looks like The Blob doesn't it?

The nest was found in the town of San Sebastián de la Gomera, which from this point forward, I will translate as meaning "town with giant freakin' wasp's nest."

This thing was so huge, 22 feet, that it is said to have housed literally millions of wasps. Scientists think it may be an invasive species from Africa, Morocco to be specific.

(Why is it that all the insects that come over from Africa beat the crap out of all the native inspects. Remember Africanized bees?)

Now on to our planet's oceans which are, quite frankly, a frackin' mess; mostly thanks to us.

But what man messes up, teenagers can clean up (at least that's the motto in my house.)

19-year-old Boyan Slat (OK, barely a teenager) has come up with a way to collect and recycle much of the plastic that is now floating around the ocean, thanks to our everything-is-disposable culture.

"The device consists of an anchored network of floating booms and processing platforms that could be dispatched to garbage patches around the world. Instead of moving through the ocean, the array would span the radius of a garbage patch, acting as a giant funnel. The angle of the booms would force plastic in the direction of the platforms, where it would be separated from plankton, filtered and stored for recycling."

It could remove 7,250,000 tons of plastic waste from the world’s oceans. When can we start?

Probably not until someone figures out how to make money doing this.

Sorry sea life.

If you would like to watch an 11-minute video of this super-teen talking about this idea and demonstrating it, we have embedded it below for your viewing pleasure:




In keeping with our ocean theme, we now move on to the U.S. Navy.

While apparently the Air Force could learn a thing or two about effective drones by studying dragonflies, it seems the Navy wants to learn more about underwater robots by studying jellyfish.

Giant jellyfish.

(We pause here to ask you loyal reader, where else do you get cool stories like these that combine giant
The Cyanea capillata on which the robot is based.
jellyfish and robots? Just at The Digital Notebook, that's where!)

Anyway, according to this report by National Public Radio, the U.S. Navy is funding "development of a giant jellyfish robot."

Cyro, which measures 5 feet 7 inches in diameter and weighs 170 pounds, is based on Cyanea capillata, the giant lion's mane jellyfish indigenous to the cold waters of Arctic, the northern Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

It is being developed at a lab at Virginia Tech, funded by a grant from the U.S. Naval Undersea Warfare Center and the Office of Naval Research.

Here's a video of it being tested at Virginia Tech:


Virginia Tech: Autonomous Robotic Jellyfish from virginiatech on Vimeo.

Discovery News says it will be used for "ocean monitoring, exploration, and even clean-up in the case of an oil spill."

Yeah.

I'm sure that's ALL the Navy wants to use it for...

And if THAT wasn't enough science-fiction-turned-science for you, finding the above on Discovery News led to the discovery of this other super-cool thing below -- giant robot turtles.
The latest in robot turtle technology.

Mechanical engineers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology have been hard at work on a robotic sea turtle project called "Naro-Tartaruga" since 2008. Led by masters student Cedric P. Siegenthaler, the project has support from Disney Research Zurich and the Center of Structure Technologies.

It was set for an open water test last fall. No word yet on how the tests went.

"The most recent robot prototype features a large waterproof torso that can pack in a bunch of sensors and batteries needed to keep it working. The robot is several feet long, primarily made of aluminum, and can move a meter per second, which translates into 6.6 feet. Each fin contains three actuators for 3-D movement and the robot has a diving depth of more than 300 feet," Discovery News reports.

And what's a science post without news of space?

Not terribly complete, that's what kind.

So we bring you our grand finale, NASA's plans to capture an asteroid and tow it into orbit around the moon, a satellite's satellite if you will, and put it in a holding pattern for later mining.

President Obama's just-released federal budget proposal for 2014 requests $17.7 billion for the space agency, up from the $16.6 billion that Congress eventually approved for last year's budget.
The asteroid project would send astronauts to a 500-ton nearby asteroid by 2021. They would later move the roughly 30-foot-wide space rock into orbit around the moon for later prospecting. The mission would use the space agency's now-under-development Space Launch System rocket and Orion crew capsule, modified to allow space walks by astronauts, to make the capture happen. The proposed budget next year would add $78 million to develop asteroid lassoing technology to NASA's budget.
If you don't mind repetitive space music that is almost as boring as the soundtrack from the first Star Trek movie, check out this NASA video showing (but not telling) how the mission would work.



That's it for this edition of This Saturday in Science folks.

Come back again.




The Bad Guy

$
0
0
Spy Vs. Spy
As a young reader of MAD magazine, I must admit I am pleased to see that it
still has some appeal for the current generation.

One of the standards of MAD, then and now, was Spy Vs. Spy.


In fact, it hit such a core note with my son and his best bud, that they used it as their Halloween costume one year.

As a proud papa, I would post photos but they're teenagers now and therefore, anything I do to single them out among the broader population marks me for death.

And then, who would bring you "This Saturday in Science?"

So you'll have to be satisfied with the familiar images, as show above.


Anyway, according to traditional archetypes, the spy in white should be the good guy and the guy in black, well, vice-versa of course.

But, as anyone familiar with this genre knows, neither is good and neither is bad.

And in many ways, it reminds me of how Pottstown operates on several levels.

Allow me to explain.
Were there ever more clearly
defined roles than
Snidley Whiplash and
Dudley Do-Right?

As a journalist, I look on my job in most ways as being an educator.

I educate Mercury readers about things people have done, things the government has done or may be about to do, and who died.

To make that information more digestible, more attractive (we are a business/public service operation after all), we have found that its best to present this information in the form of a story.

And, as we all know, every good story needs a villain.

Truthfully, how interesting is Jean Valjean without Inspector Javert?

Sherlock Holmes without Professor Moriarty?

Luke Skywalker without Darth Vader?

And so when we tell a good story, if you don't have a good bad guy, chances are people may just yawn and turn to the sports page.

But as good as black and white may be for storytelling -- and make no mistake, it is an old, old tradition going back further than The Mercury, further even than print itself -- it is a sham.

The world is grey. Hell, even Darth Vader's story line turns out to be kind of complicated.

People do bad things. Sometimes, the same people do good things.

Sometimes, people do mostly bad things making them, on balance, mostly bad people.

But most people, are both.

The problem, for us here in Pottstown, is the tied old bugaboo we've pointed to so many times -- policy by personality.

As a result, when you disagree with a position someone takes -- or occupies -- if you disagree with them the are, immediately, bad.

One look at the salacious anonymous blog Save Pottstown can tell you this.

There is always a bad guy, whether its Tom Hylton or, these days, Mark Flanders.

So anything you (or they) don't like, well it's always someone's fault.

If only it were that simple.

Does this mean we're not supposed to judge people? Of course, not. We all do it all the time and it serves a purpose.

But policies, or circumstances, or conditions, are usually not the fault of a single person and all to often, they take cooperative action to implement or, as the case may be, overcome.

For example, I knew when I wrote the April 1 story about Royal Medical Supply being forced out of downtown Pottstown because of changes in health care regulations, that it would be controversial.

I knew that if we put 'Obamacare' in the headline, it would draw a line in the sand for a lot of people.

Nevertheless, I also knew, that if we ran a headline that read "Medicare/Medicaid rule changes force business from downtown," that no one would read it.

Still, the sides people took based, as far as I could tell, on that headline, were striking.

I received e-mail from a man who thanked me for "telling the truth about Obama" and suggesting I should next write up how he is trying to take all our (well,
YOUR) guns.

"Did he even read the story?" I wondered.

Another man, who lived in California no less, said on The Mercury's Facebook page, that it was obvious I was just a Republican stooge and hated Obama.

"Boy does this guy not know who I am" I thought.

Even a former colleague, sent me an e-mail and asked me if I was mad because obviously the newsroom resident conservative had obviously tried to put a spin on my story with the headline.

He was wrong. I wrote that headline myself because, that was, I felt, the story.

And, the truth of the matter is -- it's complicated.

As Roy Repko, who helped found the Royal Medical, helped me understand, it was not so much the goal of the regulations affecting his business -- drive down the cost of medical equipment -- which was causing the problem, but the method.

I don''t know Mr. Repko's politics and I didn't ask. Primarily, it seemed to me, he wanted to get the word out about a petition, hoping to get enough people to sign it not to reverse the policy, but the procedure.

Me? I just wanted to show how everything we do has unintended effects and here was one right in our town.

Was this President Obama sitting in the Oval Office dictating methodologies that would force Roy Repko into making a decision he didn't want to make?
It's complicated

Hardly.

This is a complicated situation which well-meaning people are all trying to
navigate which has consequences some might not have foreseen.

Is medical care too expensive? Yes.

Are lots of people unable to access it? Yes.

Does something need to be done? Yes.

Was 'Obamacare' the right way to handle it? Time will tell.

In the meantime, its impacts will ripple through our economy and people we know in unforeseen ways. This was one of them.

Another example occurred this week when we ran yesterday's story about state Rep. Mark Painter's district chief of staff, Michael Lavanga, owning a property in the 400 block of Walnut Street that had been declared "blighted."

I only found out about it because it ran as a legal notice, apparently the result of the borough's inability to update its property records. Mr. Lavanga felt he was being singled out and we should not run the story.

Needless to say, we disagreed.
The house at 409 Walnut St. owned by
Michael Lavanga.

But when he sent me his statement, it was immediately evident to me that the circumstances under which he was struggling are not uncommon.

He bought a property before the real estate bubble burst, thought he could make a few bucks, and soon found out that -- well -- it was more complicated than that.

The property had been trashed by tenants and vandals and he didn't have the money to fix it up and, quite frankly, given the decreased value of the property and the likelihood it would happen again, as a business decision, restoring it was a questionable investment.

I understood that.

I would like to fix up my property, but I can't afford it.

I imagine many landlords face this situation, and I have heard them say so.

But immediately, there was a rush to paint Lavanga as a villain. "He's the problem," some might have said.

Do I know if he's a bad or good person? Not based on one story about one circumstance.

And really, is that the point?

The point, it seems to me, is that we have a problem with low-income housing.  property maintenance. quality of life and tax base in this town.

It is a problem, or rather set of problems, with many mothers.

Selecting one person, or one group of people -- be they landlords, tenants, borough managers, school board members, immigrants, poor people, Scandanavians, people who love dogs, civil engineers, whatever -- as the cause of it all, suggests, simplistically, that neutralizing them or demonizing them will solve the problem.

This is childish.

I think it's fair to say our straits are dire enough that all should matter is the idea.

Will it work? Will it make things better? Is there evidence it will work?  Has it worked elsewhere?

The world is a complicated place. The problems we face are complex. The solutions, sometimes a mystery.

The challenges we face here in Pottstown are not unique to Pottstown.

Towns like our all over Pennsylvania are struggling. Look at Reading. Do we really want to be chasing our own tail while our problems multiply until we find ourselves in that predicament?

The only thing unique about Pottstown is going to be how we face those challenges.

Dividing ourselves into problem and victim or hero and villain will only
perpetuate the conditions we are all trying to overcome.

That will only make us unique in being stupid by fighting amongst ourselves in a hopeless, endless and pointless search for a villain

Wouldn't it be nice if we rose above our pettiness, as a town and as a nation, and tried to address the problems we face instead of the people we want to blame them on?



 








R-E-S-P-E-C-T at Barth

$
0
0
From left, Raymond Boone, Taina Virola, Lillian Stirk,
and Ni'yell Clifford with Dumpo
Blogger's Note: Did you think we had forgotten about submissions from John Armato, our most reliable contributor? Fear not.

Students at Barth Elementary School learned that the phrase “Respect Yourself” is more than the title to a ‘70’s hit record.

(Admit it, now you've got Aretha Franklin, the undisputed 'Queen of Soul' echoing in your head)

The school hosted an interactive assembly sponsored by J.P. Mascaro and Sons titled “The Respect Program.” 

The assembly focused on the meaning of respect, how to show respect, why respect is important, and who should be respected. 

As the students discussed during the assembly, they identified the importance for respecting yourself, friends, peers, parents, teachers, property, authority, and the environment. 
Dumpo rubs Christian
Coale's head for good luck.

At the conclusion of the assembly, each student received an activity book that they could take home and use to help them further understand the meaning of respect.

One of the highlights of the assembly was the appearance of the Mascaro mascot “Dumpo the Elephant.”

Barth teacher Kelli Wolfel said, “the J.P. Mascaro Respect assembly came at a great time in the school year to remind students ways to earn, give, and show respect for those around them. The students were engaged and entertained while learning about this very important topic."

Managing Your Green

$
0
0
Fragmented forest space, like this, has too many edges to be
effective forest.
So as it turns out, all open spaces are not created equally -- at least not when it comes to the wildlife and natural services they are intended to perform.

In short, round is better.

That was just part of the lesson Peter Williamson, vice president of preservation services for the Natural Lands Trust, had for the Pottstown Metropolitan Regional Planning Committee recently.

Williamson was there to talk about the various aspects of open space management with which municipal officials may not be familiar.

Now in its 60th year, Williamson said Natural Lands Trust has 41 preserves and one quarter of them are in Montgomery County.

Better to have one large forest, like this.
One thing those years have taught the preserve managers, Williamson said, is that
fragmented open space does not provide the range or benefits or larger sized preserves, and further, that "edges" reduce that effectiveness even more.

For example forest edges allow more light and more invasive species to protrude deeper into the forest, reducing its effectiveness at water retention and as habitat for native species, he said.

Invasive species are perhaps the second largest problem facing preserved open space, both in meadows, marshes and forest.

Dumping fast-moving storm water into streams, causes
erosion like this.
Another challenge is deer which are multiplying in southeast Pennsylvania with no natural predators and eat everything below six feet high.

And lastly, there's storm water.

For many years, storm water was something engineers wanted to get rid of as quickly as possible. Then, when it was realized the sudden influx of high-velocity water to streams was damaging, it became necessary to hold or retain the water, to allow it to be absorbed into the ground and released through the ground as stream base flow as a more constant rate.

A healthy stream bank looks like this.
Any municipality that owns or manages open space, therefore, faces these challenges, Williamson explained.

When considering meadows, he provided several recommendations.

Only mow twice a year, around St. Patrick's Day and the Fourth of July. This allows the grasses to provide cover to animals that need them.

"Mow the edges, along roads, and it gives the property a managed feeling without impacting the wildlife," he suggested.

Also, plant a mix of warm and cool season grasses, so the meadow is more weather resilient and green for most of the year.
Mowing a meadow along the roadside, gives it
a managed look while preserving habitat.

To learn more, particularly about storm water management, mark your calendar for May 30.

That's when the organization's annual "Green Futures" event will be held, this year right here in Pottstown at the Montgomery County Community College's Pottstown Campus.

Click here for details and sign-up information.

The Career Doesn't Fall Far from the STEM

$
0
0
Representatives from PECO present Montgomery County Community College with a $15,000 grant for student scholarships to Johns Hopkins University’s Engineering Innovations Summer Program. From left: Dr. David Brookstein, dean, STEM, MCCC; Dr. Karen Borgsmiller, director of Engineering Innovation, Center for Educational Outreach, JHU; Frank Wellman, senior account manager, PECO; Dr. Karen A. Stout, president, MCCC; Craig L. Adams, Exelon, president and CEO, PECO; Frank J. Jiruska, director, Energy and Marketing Services, PECO; Suzanne Ryan, regional external affairs manager, PECO; and Dr. Vidya Nandikolla, Engineering Innovation instructor, JHU.

Blogger's Note:The following from Alana Mauger, our friend over at Montgomery County Community College

Montgomery County Community College and the Johns Hopkins University Whiting School of Engineering (JHU-WSE) have entered into an agreement to bring the JHU-WSE Engineering Innovation (EI) Summer Program to MCCC. EI is an intensive summer course designed to introduce high school students to the field of engineering.

Developed by JHU faculty, the program is designed to help high school students develop the skills to think and problem solve like engineers through lab activities in computer engineering, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, material science, civil engineering, robotics and mechanical engineering. 

Students who successfully complete the program with a grade of A or B will receive three transferable college credits from JHU.

“Engineering Innovation builds on the College’s commitment to re-energize our STEM programs by building entrepreneurial pathways that introduce students to careers in STEM and help them navigate their way to a baccalaureate degree,” said Dr. Karen A. Stout, president, MCCC.

MCCC received a $15,000 grant from PECO that will provide scholarships to offset the cost of tuition, which is $2,200, for eligible students.

“We are proud to partner with MCCC to help increase interest in the engineering field and are pleased that our support helps underserved youth participate in this program,” said Craig L. Adams, president and CEO, PECO. 
 “MCCC consistently adapts their programs to help fit the needs of the changing community. We are thrilled that they are working with JHU to develop our future workforce in such a critical field,” Adams said.

“We deeply appreciate PECO’s continued support of the College’s programs that support the educational attainment of youth and young adults in Montgomery County,” Stout said. “The impact of STEM programs, like Engineering Innovation, will make a significant difference in our community workforce for years to come.”

Engineering Innovation at MCCC’s Central Campus in Blue Bell will run from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday through Friday from July 1-26. 

The program will culminate on July 26 with activity that tests the strength of bridges students will build as part of their final project. Space is limited to 24 students.

To participate in the program, students should have completed algebra II, have knowledge of trigonometry, and taken one of the lab science courses (chemistry, physics, and/or biology). 

Students wishing to apply need to complete an online application and 250-word essay, and must submit most recent standardized test scores, a letter of recommendation and official high school transcripts. 

Full details are available online at http://engineering-innovation.jhu.edu.

Edgewood Walkabout

$
0
0
Edgewood's Walking Club on the move.


Blogger's Note:Information Guru John Armato shows us how Edgewood puts the "Walk" in "Walkable School District."

Edgewood Elementary School students in grades 3, 4, and 5 are taking part in a voluntary before school walking club led by physical education teacher Jane Thompson. 

More than 30 students meet in the school’s playground every Thursday morning before school to begin a 20-minute walk around the neighborhood. 

The students must have written parent permission to take part in the healthy walking tour. 

While Mrs. Thompson is at the point of the group, classroom assistant Kerry Kline walks along with the students with parent volunteer Sandy Mather being at the rear of the group.

The students are excited and enthusiastic to take part on our walking tour.

After every walk you can see that they begin their school day with a fresh sense of energy and the ability to focus on their school work. 

“I am proud of our students for taking part in this voluntary program and enjoy our conversations as we walk around the neighborhood," Kline said.

This Town is Going to the Dogs...

$
0
0
Fido, don't do it!
...That was the message resident Stanley Thomas had for borough council during the April 8 meeting.

Thomas, who said he recently moved to the area near the King and Washington streets intersection, was at council to complain about dog crap.

"There are dog droppings all over the place," he said.

"You see all these people walking with Rotweillers and those dogs who get blamed for things and you have to look down when you walk," said Thomas.

"Nobody is picking up after their dogs, it's disgusting."

"That is a real problem," agreed Borough Council President Stephen Toroney.

Steve Toroney has
promised to address the
problem of indescreet dogs.
"There are areas of the town that are not well kept and you have to walk in the
street to avoid it," he said.

Councilwoman Carol Kulp suggested that perhaps signs be put up to remind residents that there is an ordinance against allowing their dogs to crap in the street and on the sidewalk.

"Right now people have to be caught in the act to be cited," Toroney said.

"This is a problem and we will address it," he said.

In the meantime, watch where you walk...
Viewing all 2733 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images