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A 0% Tax Hike and A Math Fight in Pottsgrove

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Normally, a zero percent tax hike and an attempt to actually LOWER taxes would be the headline item from a nearly four-hour school board meeting that tested the patience and bladders of several school board members.

And it is. Look, it's the first thing in this headline.

But we here at Digital Notebook tower would be denying human nature if we tried to pretend that's all that happened last night.

There has been a slow-burning fire on the Pottsgrove School Board since last year about  the district's less-than-stellar math scores and last night, Daniel Vorhis, whose name I appear to be doomed to forever misspell on Twitter, gave an update on the district's progress.

It did not go well.

School Board President Rick Rabinowitz and board members Al Leach and Bill Parker all expressed a sense of exasperation with the "slow, methodical" progress, as Rabinowitz described it.

But it was Parker, and his characteristic bombastic approach to commentary, that provided the straw that finally broke the back of Superintendent Shellie Feola's composure.

The two spoke over each other in an exchange which lasted more than 10 minutes with Feola at one point saying "you don't value our opinion, so it doesn't matter."

Other board members, in particular Vice President Matt Alexander, chided Parker for his approach, saying his confrontational manner is counter-productive and Parker replying he would not be silenced.

Alexander told Parker that his approach would continue to ensure that "nothing gets done."

I won't make you hunt for the video in the Storify of the Tweets below, although it is there for the stalwarts among you. Here it is:



In the end, veteran board member Robert Lindgren settle jarred nerves by pointing out the administration had done exactly what the board had asked, but perhaps not as quickly as some would have liked.

There were several other things of import that occurred at the meeting, including the adoption of new grading standards which several of our devoted followers Tweeted about through the course of the evening, but which was adopted without much fanfare.

The board also accepted the resignation of the teacher and baseball coach currently facing charges for having sex with a student in between his bachelor party and wedding, and fired the substitute who was captured on video slapping a student at the middle school.

There was also some interesting comments about the board's use of social media, in particular Rabinowitz's PGSD Discussion page on Facebook, and the appropriateness of keeping it up.

Its a decision he said is his alone to make, and he will make is soon.

You can read about all that and more in the many, many, many Tweets below.


Pieces of Crossing Guard Puzzle Falling Together

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Pottstown school crossing guard Cyndi Marnell
at her post at North Hanover and Beech streets

Now that council has another month to consider the privatizing of the school crossing guards, we've gleaned some more information about the particulars from Borough Manager Mark Flanders.

Perhaps most important (at least to the crossing guards) is this email which Flanders sent Wednesday in response to a query:.
"We have been assured that any current crossing guard by who wants to continue as a crossing guard will be hired by ACMS and that at a minimum, they will receive the same pay that they are receiving now."
According to the job description on the borough website, the current crossing guard salary is $19.38 per hour with “up to 1.75 hours per school day.”

In case you haven't been following the story, ACMS stands for All City Management Services, a California company.

At the Wednesday work session June 8, Flanders informed council that arrangements had been made to privatize the school crossing guards with that company -- pending council approval at Monday night's meeting.

In the wake of Mercury reporting on that upcoming vote, Councilman Dennis Arms said the guards were not aware of the move -- despite assurances to the contrary by Flanders and Police Chief Rick Drumheller --  and council tabled the matter for a month.

Questions remained and Flanders has now answered most of them.

In addition to the guards being guaranteed jobs and the same pay, the question of how the savings will be realized has also been answered.

Understand that although the borough hires and manages the crossing guards, it is the Pottstown School District which pays their salaries.

The 2016 budget lists the cost for crossing guard salaries at $154,559 and that is the money that the school district has been paying.

However, Flanders informed us that in the first quarter of the year, the Pottstown Police Department undertook an audit and realized there are other costs related to the guards that the district was not paying.
"The internal audit revealed that historically we have been billing the (school district) for salary only (the budgeted amount) and not billing for the real costs – salary plus FICA, Medicare, Workers Comp Insurance, equipment, administrative costs, the cost when an officer or parking enforcement officer fills in, etc. The total actual cost for the borough to provide crossing guard services for the 2015/2016 school year is estimated at approximately $270,000."
And that, as I had asked, is how a contract with ACMS that is not to exceed $247,000 saves $23,000 a year.

Its also interesting that the money saved will actually be the school district's, since otherwise the borough was going to increase the amount of money it charged for managing the guards, Flanders confirmed.

He also said that although it is true in most instances that when a guard calls in sick and has to be replaced by a police officer, it costs the borough no extra money as the officer is already on duty and being paid.

However, "in some instances, because we don’t have the available staff, we have to use officers on OT status," Flanders wrote.
So there you have it folks, that's as much as we know about the crossing guard situation.

OJR Grad Wins $30K Scholarship in Essay Contest

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Paul Prince, chairman of the board of the Greater Pottstown Foundation, presents Owen J. Roberts senior Chandler Kalitsi, with the first installment of a $30,000 scholarship she won in the foundation's annual essay contest.














A recent Owen J. Roberts High School graduate has earned a $30,000 college scholarship from the Greater Pottstown Foundation as a result of her submission in the Shandy Hill Essay Contest.

Named after the founder and first editor of The Pottstown Mercury, He retired in 1967 after 36 years at the helm of The Mercury.

Hill was an ardent believer in supporting education opportunities for students within the Pottstown community.

The Greater Pottstown Foundation strives to continue that worthy objective through various education-related grants and student scholarship awards.

Each year senior students from Pottstown, Pottsgrove, The Hill School and Owen J. Roberts high schools are invited to write an original essay on some aspect of life in the greater Pottstown area.

The Foundation seeks the writer’s original and personal interpretation of how any aspect of life (including, but not limited to art, culture, race, bigotry, employment, poverty, etc.) is effected by living in this area as opposed to somewhere else.

Essay winner Chandler Kalitsi,
plans to study chemistry at Temple University.
In any year that a winning essay is chosen, the writer is granted a $30,000 college scholarship.

This year, the Foundation received a total of 34 essays submitted by students of the four eligible high schools.

The Foundation Board of Directors chose the essay written by Kalitsi, daughter of Annette Harper-Kalitsi.

Kalitsi wrote a heart-rending, if not eye-opening, essay about what it means to be an African-American in a predominantly white school, according to information provided by the Foundation.

The essay, while expressing very personal thoughts, was not critical or cynical as much as it was analytical,
focusing on the evolution of the writer’s personal feelings toward racism, and occasionally the lack thereof, over her 12 years of education.

It concludes with a justification for a more racially tolerant society.

The scholarship award was presented to Kalitsi by Paul Prince, the President of the
Greater Pottstown Foundation Board.

Chandler has been accepted at Temple University where she will be majoring in chemistry. Her current plan is to go on to medical school after receiving her undergraduate degree.

Educators of Influence in Pottstown Schools

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Today is Father's Day (although you won't read it until Monday )and while there is little argument that our parents have an immeasurable impact on who we become as adults, lets take a moment to recognize those who are probably second in that line of influential people -- Our teachers.

So, before we all head off into the summer haze of camps, beaches and pools, let's take a moment to appreciate our teachers and to offer a little help, here a submission from our friend Joohn Armato that slipped through the cracks until now.

The children who attend Rupert Elementary School are lucky to have a group of teachers who go above, beyond and out the door to support their students.

This is what they did in April.

The Rupert Elementary I’MPACT team went out to visit students from each grade level at their home to congratulate them and their families, and to acknowledge student successes during the Third Marking Period.

I’MPACT is an acronym for I’m Pottstown Action Community Team. Its mission is to “Celebrate Learning” with positive communication of activities happening at school through the building of relationships with community members.

The team makes door-to-door visits to surprise students and their families with certificates of achievement, and I’MPACT Winner shirts.

Students are congratulated for their hard work, citizenship, and positive behavior. The I’MPACT Team consists of teachers, support staff, parents, and administrators from Rupert Elementary School Students

Students visited were: Avon Jones, Eric Silva, Arthur Nihart, John Kabilko, Sarahi Gurdado-Ramos, Logan Pouchan, Owen Thornton

Those who did the visiting were:
Matt Moyer, Stacey Bauman, Laurie Gresko, Cindy Bartolucci, Lauren Crean, Corina Miller, Jayne Burke, Rine Strohecker, Britney Oxenford, Lisa Stephenson, Diana Dotterer, and Christine Fiorillo

Two Municipal Meetings for the Price of One

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When you follow the Digital Notebook blog, you get all kinds of municipal
coverage value for your payment of zero dollars.

And today is just that kind of day.

Not only do we bring you the doings of the Douglass (Mont.) Township Supervisors where very little of consequence happened, but we then doubled down and bring you much the same thing from Upper Pottsgrove Township's board of commissioners.

I arrived a bit late and the Douglass supervisors, minus Fred Ziegler who was home due to a reaction among his medications, were already up ro Chief Rick Smith's fire report.

But perhaps the most interesting item at the meeting was the complaints from some lively senior citizens about kids playing street hockey on Spruce Street.

It was much the same down Gilbertsville Road in Upper Pottsgrove.

Having arrived about an hour into the meeting, and about the most interesting thing the Digital Notebook team witnessed was some preliminary discussion about using solar power for the new highway garage

The commissioners also adopted a new peddler/solicitor ordinance that will now require veterans to obtain the license, but will not charge them the application fee once they have proven to the township staff's satisfaction that they are indeed veterans.

With that said, here are the Tweets:

Joint Efforts for Council and School Board

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Above, Members of Pottstown Borough Council and the Pottstown School Board tour the aquaponics lab of the Montgomery County Community College sustainability and Innovation Center in Pottstown prior to their joint meeting Tuesday.

At left, the fish seemed interested to have visitors.

West Campus VP David DiMattio explained that the fish droppings are pumped with the water in the experiments to provide nutrients to the plants where are being grown there without soil.


For the third time this year, the majority of Pottstown Borough Council and a minority of the
Pottstown School Board met face to face to discuss common problems and solutions.

Prior to doing so they got a tour of the Sustainability and Innovation Center of Montgomery County Community College located at 140 College Dr. in Pottstown which was handy since that's where their joint meeting was held.

As is often the case, the agenda was donated by prepared updates and reports, but there was some interesting information that came up at the end.

For example, we found out that First Baptist Church does not have enough money to fix the leaning tower that has forced the closure of Charlotte Street, and so is going to take part of the building down.

Jeff Sparagana with the borough council resolution
provided to him by Borough Manager Mark Flanders.
We also learned that in the past year, the borough's Licensing and Inspections office has inspected
1,699 rental units  some more than once.

And we further learned that Community Champions, hired last year to get a handle on vacant properties, has so far registered 213 of them in the borough and remains on the hunt for more.

All of these tidbits were answers to questions asked by Pottstown School Board member Thomas Hylton.

Borough Council also voted on a lovely resolution honoring retiring Pottstown Schools Superintendent Jeff Sparagana, now days away from retirement, thanking him for his dedication to borough schools.

The joint meeting was also host to the annual report from the Pottstown Area Industrial Development, as well as the Walk Bike Program, Pottstown InFocus film festival and all kinds of juicy tidbits.

Here are the Tweets to prove it:

A Healthy End to Pottstown Schools' Fiscal Year

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Thursday's school board meeting was blessedly short, about an hour.

Which is not to minimize the importance of the action they are about to take Monday, which is to adopt the second consecutive budget that does not raise taxes.

Given the financial difficulties placed upon our school system by the state's extremely broken funding system for education, that is a pretty remarkable achievement.

Linda Adams, the district's business manager who engineered this feat, likely will be rewarded with a new salary of $139,225 by a vote of the board Monday night.

That's a .8 percent salary hike from her current salary of $138,119 which, if you ask me, is a small price to pay for two consecutive zero tax-hike budgets, something unheard of in most of Pennsylvania.

Also unheard of for most of us not in public education are payments for unused sick time. But as Superintendent Jeff Sparagana prepares to leave the district, he will enjoy a $38,523.57 payment for unused sick time.

His makes up more than half of the $67,043 that the board will likely vote to approve Monday in payments for unused sick time.

Also earning a tidy reward for remaining healthy will be Taffi Wolf, the district's retiring technology director, who will receive $13,940 for unused sick time.

Retiring special education director Pamela Bateson will enjoy a payment of $6,950 for the sick days she did not use.

Its in their contract, so they are entitled to the money, but I sometimes wonder why I did not decide to feed at the public trough and get rewarded for staying healthy.

Anyway, the school board declined to discuss any of this, so its probably not important.

Here are the Tweets of the things the school board thought worthy of public discussion at a meeting hardly anyone attended.

Confronting Hate

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Photo by Evan Brandt

Vernon Ross and Ira Flax, seen here Friday night at an interfaith prayer vigil for the victims of the Orlando massacre, represent respective Christian and Jewish congregations who have come together to share a permanent home and learn to understand one another. Bethel Community Church of Pottstown and Congregation Hesed Shel Emet are just one example of how we all can to learn about one another, and learn to live with one another.
Somehow, saying their names out loud makes it more real.

That's what the dozen or so of us did Friday night at the prayer vigil held at Bethel Community Church of Pottstown, held in the wake of the killings in Orlando.

Work at a newspaper long enough and you cover your share of tragedy and then some.

Your job, at fires, accidents, deaths, is to get the facts first and save your feelings for later.

Getting the name of a victim, or survivor; spelling it right, that's the job at hand.

But say the name out loud? Think about who that person was?

That's for later.

When  I got the email from Pastor Vernon Ross about the hastily arranged vigil, I realized later had come.

It was time to come up for air; to try to come to terms with what's happening in the world.

Rabbi Ira Flax, who heads Congregation Hesed Shel Emet, which shares the building with Bethel, asked each of us to read through the names of the 49 victims killed in an Orlando nightclub.

The name I read first was Luis Daniel Conde, 39.

Conde was murdered alongside his high school sweetheart, Juan P. Rivera Velazquez, 37.

The two met in high school in Puerto Rico, and ran a salon together in Kissimee, with Conde doing make-up and Velazquez styling their customers' hair.

Like most couples, I'm sure they had their ups and downs. It can be tough to work with your spouse.

Like any other couple, they were out, at Pulse nightclub, to celebrate a friend's birthday.

They were killed because they were in love.

They were killed, along with the 47 others and 53 injured, because they believed that they should be able to define love as they pleased and not have their feelings for each other defined, or judged, by others.

Omar Mateen, 29, wanted the world to believe he massacred the people in the nightclub because he was inspired by ISIS, the terrorist group in the Middle East partially responsible for the flood of Syrian refugees flowing into Europe.

But subsequent reporting suggests that Mateen himself was gay and was at Pulse because he had been with a Puerto Rican man whom he later learned was HIV positive.

Whatever the facts may ultimately turn out to be, and we may never know, one thing is for sure: Omar Mateen did not kill all those people because of love.

Whether he hated Puerto Ricans, or homosexuals, or hated himself because he was gay, it seems inescapably evident that he hated.

And his actions generated even more hate.

In the wake of the shootings, there was the immediate Islamaphobic reaction; followed by the pastor who said the gay victims deserved to die; and the painfully misguided people from Westboro Baptist Church defiling the victims' funerals.

Mateen may have used an assault weapon to kill, but the real danger we're facing today, the real weapon is hate; hate and fear, which are inextricably connected and self-consuming.

When you fear change, fear for your family, fear for your livelihood, you become angry at your inability to ensure their future and you for someone to blame.

And these days, there is no shortage of people providing helpful suggestions for who you should blame.

It's a short walk from blame to hate.

When your country or your neighborhood no longer feels familiar to you, its natural to fear that you no longer know your place in it.

The morning of Friday's prayer vigil in Pottstown, we learned about the stunning decision by British voters to leave the European Union, a self-destructive decision driven by the desire to "put Britain first."

Syrian refugees, Mexicans, Muslims, homosexuals, they all represent "otherness" in places with changing demographics, places with people who once "knew" that this country, or Britain, was a "white Christian nation."

I won't debate here whether we ever were, but even that perception no longer holds true, and that changing of the landscape is spreading fear, without which hate burns itself out.

But its harder to think of "the other" as different when they become individuals right before your eyes.

Individuals with their own lives, their own loves, their own names; individuals who, at their most basic, are no different from you.

Luis Daniel Conde, may have been from Puerto Rico, gay and a person who liked loud music -- three things I most definitely am not.

But he was a human being no different from me in that he had the same right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness as any of us and he did not deserve to die.

Luis Daniel Conde was killed not because of who he was, but because of what he represented.

And until we can learn to stop blindly hating anything or anyone who is different or unfamiliar, it's never going to stop.

Bowling for Community Dollars

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown Rotary Club. 

Thanks to a successful June 15 fundraiser, Pottstown Rotary Club distributed checks in the amount of $1,000 each to:

• Olivet Boys and Girls Club
• Operation Backpack (they weren't present Wednesday, but will still receive the check)
• Pottstown Cluster
• Pottstown Area Seniors Center

Each of the recipients provides important services to people in need in the Pottstown area. Proceeds came from Pottstown Rotary's Bowling For a Cause this past April.

Some fast facts about Bowling For a Cause:

• This was just the Second Annual Bowling for a Cause and we raised nearly twice the amount as last year.
• We totally sold out Limerick Lanes
• There was bowling, basket raffle, silent auction, prizes for highest games, giveaways for the kids

The mission of Rotary is to provide service to others, promote integrity, and advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through its fellowship of business, professional, and community leaders. 

The Pottstown Rotary is committed to working both globally and locally.

Pottstown Bids Good-bye to Jeff Sparagana

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Pottstown School Board President Kim Stilwell, right, and board member Ron Williams, left, present retiring Superintendent Jeff Sparagana with a resolution thanking him for his service and a plaque to the same effect during Monday night's school board meeting.



Judging by the size of the agenda, one could be excused from thinking that Monday night's school board meeting would be a long one.

With presentations by the Foundation for Pottstown Education and the adoption of an historic second consecutive budget without a tax hike, one might have expected a long night.

But with brisk efficiency uncharacteristic to most school board meetings, things moved along quickly, helped perhaps by a single unanimous vote that took care of 20 items on the agenda in one fell swoop -- not that I'm complaining.

The budget was adopted unanimously and without comment for fanfare.

Here are a few of those Early College graduates.
The bulk of the meeting was devoted to the foundation's presentation, most particularly those students who have benefited from the early college program and are graduating high school with their first year of college under their belt.

But we would be remiss if we failed to mention the night's main event, saying goodbye to Schools Superintendent Jeff Sparagana, who retires in just three days after 23 years with the district. It was his last meeting.

As you can see in the photo above, the board adopted a resolution which, among other things, thanked him for bringing "his knowledge, passion and tireless to every endeavor undertaken for improving the education opportunities and overall well-being of the students attending Pottstown School District and their families."

 "Your commitment and dedication has made a difference and your legacy will live on through the many lives you have touched," read the plaque.

Board member Amy Francis complimented Sparagana by noting that one of his favorite sayings -- "the harder you work, the luckier you get" -- is now a mantra in her household.

As usual, coach that he is, Sparagana tried to reflect some of the gratitude and attribute that sense of accomplishment to the entire team.

(You can see the full content of his comments here:)



"Some of the comments this evening were really terrific and I really appreciate it, but I think that its about us; how we have functioned together for the last four years; how we have done some things collectively with borough government to bring people to the same table and sit together, listen and talk and solve problems," Sparagana said in his final remarks.

He noted that boredom was never an option, given that in his 23 years in the district, he changed positions 11 times, if you could the two "acting" posts he took one.

"I never expected to sit in this seat, I never planned on it. I didn't leave to go other places, because I loved the work I was involved in," he said. "Building the  PEAK program and some of the other things we were doing at the time, I just never really thought about anywhere else."

We here at The Digital Notebook wish Dr. Sparagana the best.

His motives have never been in doubt. He has always been, in our experience, fair-minded, took criticism in stride and never personally, and focused on the improvement of the school district and the community.

As he said when a reporter wished him well: "this is a good place."

Here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Help Dartel McRae Make a Film in Pottstown

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Dartel McRae is looking for investors to help him make his movie -- "Intermission."





They say you can't go home again, but don't tell that to Dartel McRae.

Because that's exactly what he's doing in an attempt to raise money for his first full-length feature film that will be shot mostly right here in his home town.

He's kicked-off a Kickstarter campaign that you can access through this link in an attempt to raise $87,000 to make "Intermission," a movie he wrote and hopes to direct and produce, as well as serve as the central character.

Good thing, since the central character, Chris, is based on him and the movie is based "loosely on my life."

"Intermission is a dramedy that takes a look at how a person deals with some of life's shortcomings and decides to choose happiness," is how the movie is described on the fundraising page.

Here is a sample of McRae acting in ABC's "Black Box."




McRae grew up in the First Ward, the oldest of five children and a single mom, Katherine.

He graduated from Pottstown High School in 2003.

While there, he spent time on stage in the school's productions of "Dracula" and "Oliver Twist, "but I never thought it would ever turn into anything."

After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh, McRae went to New York City "to go to law school, but things changed. I got inspired by some of my co-workers" and he has been working as an actor and stand-up comedian ever since.

Now he wants to make a movie about a character "is leading a monotonous life, and has a series of negative events occur. He realizes that he is missing something and that he needs a break with family and friends," said McRae.

McRae was part of the recent Pottstown "In-Focus" film festival, being interviewed on the third day at The Hill School in an "In the Actor's Studio" setting by John Armato, Pottstown's stand-in for James Lipton.

In the interview, he talked about his life in Pottstown, acting and his film and now he is hoping for help from his hometown to help him get it made.

You can follow progress on the film on Twitter @__intermissionindie, on Instagram @intermissionindieand on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Intermissionindie/

The Kickstarter campaign ends in 30 days, so don't dawdle.

Herb Miller Wins Green Allies' Founder's Award

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Upper Pottsgrove Counilman Herb Miller, center, with his family. At left is Todd Hillee, president of the board of directors of Green Allies and, at right, is Ken Hamilton, executive director of Green Allies




Blogger's Note: The following was provided by Green Allies

Upper Pottsgrove Commissioner Herbert C. Miller, Jr. was recently presented the Founder's Award by the GreenAllies organization for his outstanding commitment to preserving open space in the township and the role he played in leading the efforts to create the Althouse Arboretum.

It was Miller's tireless efforts that turned an idea of utilizing open space lands for educational and recreational purposes into reality. It was an idea that eventually evolved into the Althouse Arboretum.

In honor of Mr. Miller's accomplishments, the pavilion at the Althouse Arboretum was named the "Herbert C. Miller, Jr. Pavilion". He was also presented a special recognition plaque.

"It took several years of hard work and negotiations, led by Herb Miller, to turn my grandparents' property into this state-of-the-art outdoor education facility for everyone in the region to enjoy," said Todd Hilsee, President of the Board of Directors for GreenAllies

Mr. Miller now serves on the GreenAllies Board of Directors and remains a leader in the efforts to improve the Althouse Arboretum and its public programming.

Herb Miller speaks after receiving the Founder's Award from Hilsee.
In addition, Althouse Arboretum neighbor Gerry Yergey was presented the Outstanding Community Volunteer Award for her many hours of service to the arboretum and its programs.

Yergey has volunteered on numerouse occasions to assist with gardening chores and has provided assistance to several of the popular community programs provided by the GreenAllies organization.

GreenAllies is a national nonprofit organization that works to empower students to take leadership roles in promoting environmental sustainability. The organization manages the Althouse Arboretum in Upper Pottsgrove Township.

The Althouse Arboretum is a permanently preserved 17 acre wooded lot that has been converted into an outdoor education facility and community resource. It is a result of a unique partnership between Upper Pottsgrove Township and the GreenAllies organization.

Cigars and Scotch on the Rails Aids Carousel

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Carousel at Pottstown

The Carousel at Pottstown will hold a "Cigars and Scotch on the Rails" fundraiser on Saturday, July 16.

Ticket-holders will ride the rails from Boyertown to Pottstown and back on the historic Colebrookdale Railroad, the hidden and historic eight-mile rail line 5that winds through the "hidden valley."

Sponsored by Goose's Montecristo Cigars in Limerick and Cole's Tobacco in Pottstown, the Cigar and Scotch fundraiser includes a round-trip ticket on the railroad and a tour of the Carousel at Pottstown.

There are two ticket levels."Sinners" will receive a rail ticket and two cigars and two glasses of scotch, along with light refreshment for $70.

"Saints" oay $35 and will receive a rail ticket and can purchase wine.

Non-alcoholic beverages and light snacks are included.

The Carousel at Pottstown, located between King and High streets at the western gateway to Pottstown, is a facility that will soon open and feature a carousel mechanism built in 1905 by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company and with animals hand-carved by Ed Roth, who makes animals for Disney Carousels.

It will host events and parties as well as carousel rides.

Tickets are available at Goose's Montecristo Loungh of Limerick, at Cole's Tobacco on High Street in Pottstown or on line at www.pottstowncarousel.org/


Rotary Volunteers Help Drive Walking School Bus

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown Rotary Club

The Pottstown Rotary Club stepped up with several other local organizations to provide volunteers for the Walking School Bus program sponsored by the Pottstown School District during the 2015-2016 school year at Rupert Elementary School.

The Walking Bus became a reality in 2015 after the Pottstown School District took the position that encouraging more students to walk to school could reduce absenteeism and tardiness, increase fitness, reduce vehicle congestion at the school, and perhaps trade some of that endless young energy for a readiness to learn.

After promotion of the program to parents and kids, and design of the “safe” routes to Rupert Elementary which varied from 1 to 1.5 miles, the remaining critical need was for the bus ‘drivers”.

That’s where Brooke Martin of the Pottstown Rotary Club came in with about five of her colleagues, to be part of the total of 40 volunteers eventually signed on individually or from the other eight local participating organizations and employers.

Each week over the length of the school year, rain or shine, anywhere from 3 to 6 Rotary members would meet their early morning ‘passengers’ on their assigned route to school.

Most members walked one day a week, some more, all were available as substitutes, and all were at least as excited about snow-days as the kids. The shortest route with just a couple of kids only needed two volunteers each day; the longer route with 20 kids enrolled usually needed four volunteers.

Adding up three routes on five days for 25 weeks brought the total trip length to 425 miles that were covered over the duration of the Walking School Bus program.

Two of those Rotary members have bragging rights for being present for 50 of those miles, in a new definition of community service.

A Rotary goal in the coming school year is to expand its involvement with this worthwhile program.

The mission of Rotary is to provide service to others, promote integrity, and advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through its fellowship of business, professional, and community leaders.

The Pottstown Rotary is committed to working both globally and locally.

The State of America's First Freedoms

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Graphic by Newseum/USA Today


July 4, 1776 may be when America's freedoms were born, but it wasn't until Dec. 15, 1791 -- 15 years later -- that those rights were finally defined.

And so in honor of the day (and in absence of fireworks) we thought we would spend some time as we sometimes do, ruminating on patriotic subjects.

The Bill of Rights outlined those definitions at the insistence of those at the Constitutional Convention who worried about the federal government assuming too much power. They were opposed by those who worried that defining rights might limit them.

We're going to focus on only one of those Amendments to the Constitution today for two reasons.

First, its a holiday and we recognize your attention span is limited.

Second, this is the only Amendment which comes with its own handy status report that we could find. Also, it deals with subjects close to our hearts.

The status report comes in the form of an annual survey produced by The Newseum in Washington, D.C. and USA Today.

You can read the full report by clicking here.

The findings are not so much revelatory as they are worrisome.

For example, nearly 40 percent of the Americans surveyed could not name a single freedom outlined in just the First Amendment. (One suspects those figures would be somewhat higher for the Second Amendment.)

Fully 50 percent of those without a college degree could not name a single one.

And yet these are the freedoms among which Americans hold most dear -- freedom of speech, assembly, the practice of religion and, perhaps somewhat less dear, the press.

How does a person fight to preserve rights she does not know she has?

Another worrisome statistic is the dwindling number of people who believe the freedom to practice one's religion -- no matter how extreme -- applies to all.

In 2011, 67 percent of those polled believed freedom of religion in the U.S. was absolute. In 2013, it dropped to 65 percent and it now stands at 59 percent.

Religion, as it is everywhere, is a complicated topic for Americans.

Some say America was founded as a Christian nation and, if you date that founding to the Puritans, they're right -- so long as you practiced EXACTLY their kind of Christianity. You might want to ask Roger Williams how having a different form of faith was received in Plymouth.

At the same time, however, you could date the founding of the nation to the Virginia colonies, which might lead to the argument that America was founded as a commercial nation, since those folks were there as part of an investment.

Or, we could stick with the founding document, which uses different language for
religion than it does the other rights.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Notice that with freedom of speech, press, assembly and petitioning the government, the First Amendment says no law shall prohibit them.

But with religion, the primary fear was an official government religion. It already had a toehold in North America, with Virginia landholders being taxed to support the Anglican church.

Luckily, the founders were among that increasingly rare group of Americans capable of learning from history and its past mistakes.

They were familiar with history of hundreds of years of religious wars in Europe,
The practice of government-sponsored religion,
Spain, circa 1480
the Protestant reformation, the Spanish Inquistion, the Crusades, and they knew the dangers inherent in dictating belief.

Today, we seem to be drifting dangerously closer and closer to judging, jailing, prosecuting or killing people for their beliefs, instead of their actions.

We are also drifting in the direction of a country in which accusation equals guilt.

Witness the growing number of people who believe the government should have the right to force companies to unlock smartphones to allow for the examination of data collected by those accused of terrorist acts.

In the survey, a majority, 66 percent, said government should have the right to force companies to provide that information.

Let's remember that accusation is not proof and it is not conviction, and that there are rules for search warrants.

Prosecutors must usually provide a judge with some trail of evidence that provides a valid reason for the search, as well as a general idea of is being sought. And no one calls up the company that made the front door lock, or the lock on the file cabinet and says you must provide the keys.

However, in further proof that the majority of Americans are irony-challenged, almost the exact same percentage of those surveyed replied that they are "concerned about the privacy of personal information on the Internet."

In other words, Americans believe the right to privacy of information on their electronic devices does NOT apply to those accused, but not convicted, performing a terrorist act. Accusations are easy to make, convictions less so.

Rights are there to be applied to and protect all, particularly individuals and those not in the majority. THAT is supposed to be the American way.


The Donald captured as he is overcome by a spirit
of bi-partisan compromise.
And speaking of terror -- Donald Trump.

See? Your heart jumped there for a minute.

Yes, we've come to that sad portion of the survey where we deal with freedom of the press and the public's increasingly dim view of how that freedom is practiced.

Just over half the Americans surveyed -- 51 percent -- believe the media is giving Trump too much coverage.

This one is a hard one for those of us in the media. Our first reaction is "ONLY 51 percent? My God it's All-Trump all the time!"

But there is a part of our brain that says, you can't let the outrageous, false and consistently contradictory things he says go unremarked. We hope, pray, it will lead to Americans rising up in opposition to the xenophobic, homophobic, Islamophobic things he says regularly.

Instead, a disturbing number of Americans are embracing those statements and rather than being Trump's revealers, we have become his enablers.

Such inherent self-conflict is probably one of the factors behind the finding that very few Americans who responded to the survey believe the press reports in a bias-free manner.

Less than one-quarter of those surveyed believes the media "attempts" to report the news without bias.

We've apparently abandoned the idea that bias-free reporting is actually possible, and now we're delving into motivations, with most Americans believing we don't even try to be bias free.

We have often told anyone who asked, that of course we are not without bias. We're human beings, a species generally recognized to hold beliefs, views and character traits.

For example, longtime Mercury Reporter Evan Brandt is a smart-ass, plain and simple; whereas Fox News morning anchor Steve Doocy is simply an ass with a silly name.

What matters, in our view, is whether the reporting is fair. There is a difference.

Reporting may lead to a conclusion, often the result of doing due diligence to understand all the sides of an issue.

Some believe reporters should give equal time to both sides of an issue. That smart-ass Evan Brandt has even found himself counting sentences when covering political campaigns to ensure equal time.

But sometimes the close examination of an issue reveals that one side is just wrong, or stupid, or dangerous.

Then a reporter must ask herself whether or not her first obligation is to the truth as she has come to see it as a result of more research than most of her readers (listeners/viewers) will undertake; or to a bias-free standard we must truthfully acknowledge is impossible to achieve.

In our view, the answer is to err on the side of truth, with the understanding that yes, truth is often subjective, which is why the attempt must be made to be as fair as possible.

When the muckraking reporters of McClure's magazine -- Ida Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens and Ray Stannard Baker -- revealed the abuses of Standard Oil, political corruption and union violence, they took a side.

They revealed the truth. But their careful documentation of that truth gave them credibility such that Americans were convinced what they wrote was true. And America changed for the better as a result.

But in yet another example of America's irony-challenged character, although most survey results indicate the media is biased, nearly three-quarters of them -- 73 percent -- believe the media is "very" or "somewhat" accurate in its coverage of the 2016 presidential campaign.

It is also ironic that as more and more Americans drift away from professional journalism as a source of information, more and more of them believe that the media should act as "government watchdogs" -- fully 71 percent, up 2 percent from the last survey.

This particular function of journalism is close to that smart-ass Evan Brandt's heart. In fact, he considers it the single most important function of journalism.

Your Local Government Watchdog at work
In fact, he has more than once been heard to say "the First Amendment was not adopted to give us the inalienable right to cover car crashes and fires."

That people love to know about those things is undeniable. But as he sees it, that
coverage is what pays the bills so the expensive, time-consuming, necessary and singularly less-sexy work of making sure elected (and appointed) government officials behave honestly, honorably and do not squander tax dollars gets done.

But as newspapers -- the root source of so much of the news in the world -- struggle to survive, it begs the question: "Why do you want us to be government watchdogs if you'd rather watch cat videos on Facebook?"

It must be America's sense of irony.

Cleaning the Banks of the Schuylkill River

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Photos Courtesy of the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary
Bradley Maule, center, in green shirt, with some of the volunteers who helped him clean the banks of the Schuylkill River during last month's Schuylkill river sojourn.





Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary

The Schuylkill Action Network has partnered with Bradley Maule of Philadelphia to pinpoint the Schuylkill River’s most littered banks.

This comes about three weeks after Maule’s 112-mile journey down the river, from Schuylkill Haven to Philadelphia.

Maule joined more than 200 paddlers for the Schuylkill River Sojourn on June 4-10.

During this time he served as the Schuylkill Action Network’s sojourn steward. This required him to document the river’s trash.

Bradley Maule along the banks of the Schuylkill River.
To do this he used the hashtag #SojournSteward on Facebook and Instagram. He also posted articles on PhillySkyline.com.

“As I expected, the most visible form of litter is always plastic,” said Maule. “Piles of plastic bottles accumulating from urban storm drains, sheets of plastic wrapped in tree branches and roots on banks — discarded plastic always presents a harsh contrast in the natural world.”

The SAN has worked to reduce litter washing into the river since 2011. That is when it expanded the Schuylkill Scrub, an annual campaign to clean up the Schuylkill Valley. This, in turn, keeps the Delaware Estuary clean.

“We’re looking to expand the Schuylkill Scrub, to prevent litter from occurring” said Virginia Vassalotti of the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary. She works to coordinate the SAN on behalf of its member-organizations. According to her, “Brad’s photo map will help us determine where litter is coming from and what types of litter are most prominent. This will help us develop strategies to prevent litter.”

Here's some video on the subject from Comcast Newsmamkers:





Few have studied this litter at its source. That is why the SAN turned to Maule. He spoke out on the issue in 2015 with his “One Man’s Trash” exhibit at the Fairmount Water Works. This consisted of all the trash he encountered during a year of weekly hikes in Wissahickon Valley Park.

“I felt a strong connection as we came to the confluence of the Wissahickon Creek at the Schuylkill River on the final day of the sojourn, and I was happy to find it pretty clean,” said Maule. “I’d actually give the overall course of the river a B+ — pretty clean, but there’s still work to do, especially in places with larger populations like Reading, Philadelphia, and even Pottsville.”

Visit SchuylkillWaters.org for info on the SAN and SchuylkillScrub.org to report litter near you.

Sanatoga Green Project Making Progress

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This aerial photo shows the proposed Sanatoga Green mixed use residential, office and hotel complex super-imposed on the property it may soon occupy.


The proposed 508-residential unit; 6,000 square-foot of office space and 100-room hotel project proposed for 51 acres near the Limerick outlets continued to win approvals Tuesday night.

First there was the public hearing that proposed to add one more parcel to the "gateway zoning" district required for the proposed Sanatoga Green project to move forward.

Only the developers spoke and, not surprisingly, talked about the benefits of the change. It was subsequently approved unanimously by the township commissioners without comment.

Then came the news that the Commonwealth Finance Authority has approved $2.1 million in financing to upgrade the west-bound Sanatoga Interchange off Route 422.

The application was driven by the outlets located off Evergreen Road in Limerick, but was made jointly by Limerick and Lower Pottsgrove. There is a 30 percent match required for the $3 million upgrade and Lower Pottsgrove is responsible for 35 percent of that 30 percent match, said Township Manager Ed Wagner.

However, Wagner said both township's also applied for a grant from PennDOT, which may provide the whole match.

The financing is good news for the development of Sanatoga Green because without the capacity increases the upgrade will ensure, that project would not move forward.

Wagner explained that the upgrade to the west-side of the interchange will cost $5.5 million or more, but is less crucial because less local traffic comes from that direction.

It may be a year or more before either the interchange project, or the Sanatoga Green project, breaks ground.

In the meantime, another public hearing for the Sanatoga Green project -- this one for a "conditional use" to allow for construction on steep slopes -- has been set for 6:30 on Thursday, July 21.

And here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Salary Disputes, Fire Chief Rules and Bond Savings

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Last night's council meeting covered a lot of territory in two hours.

It began with Council President Dan Weand refuting comments and articles by school board member Tom Hylton last month about what Hylton said is a 30 percent increase in payroll costs to taxpayers in the last four years.

Here's the full video of Weand's comments:



That was followed by a vote on bond re-financing of water and sewer bonds that could save as much as $800,000, which would be used to keep rates down.

Vice President Sheryl Miller said towns far outside Pottstown and the surrounding Pottsgroves are using the borough kennel to store found animals and that from now on, they will have to pay $500 annually for the privilege.

There was extensive discussion of proposed changes to the fire ordinance, mostly in outlining the policies and elements that define the fire chief's position in anticipation of the pending retirement of current chief Richard Lengel.

Councilman Dennis Arms insisted that the new chief must be required to live in the borough, but few other council members hopped on that bandwagon.

Also under discussion was proposed changes to the Human Relations Commission.

Before that happened, though, Mayor Sharon Thomas used her mayor's report to- address some of those issues.

Here is video of her report:



Council reviewed changes being proposed to the zoning ordinance for the rules governing convenience stores, and again Arms spoke up and said the borough has too many.

Kristin Sirbeck, owner of Beverly's Pastries, also spoke on that issue during the public comment portion. She is the second speaker in the video posted below:


Find below the Tweets and videos from the meeting.

Look for a few, more detailed stories about selected topics from the meeting in coming editions of The Mercury.


See You in a Few Days

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The Digital Notebook is taking a summer hiatus.

We will return Tuesday with an account of Monday night's Pottstown Borough Council Meeting.

When Citizens 'Attack'

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I know, I know.

I'm supposed to be off fishing somewhere.

But one of the problems with going fishing, and not catching any fish, is it gives you a lot of time to think.

So, despite my best efforts, I started thinking about Wednesday night's council meeting.

I was thinking about Borough Council President Dan Weand's response to the issues raised last month by school board member Thomas Hylton.

Hylton, using W-2s he obtained from the borough through a Right to Know request, said spending on employees had jumped more than 30 percent -- or $2 million -- in just four years.

Weand responded that Hylton's figures were "misleading" and, reading from a prepared statement, explained how that conclusion had been reached.

(You can see video of Weand reading his entire statement below:)



But it wasn't the specifics of his response so much that caught my attention. After all, council has been responding to Tom Hylton for years.

But it was that dynamic and one particular word upon which I dwelled as the fish ignored my bait. (This is a metaphor obviously as the only fish I ever see are in an aquarium or on my plate.)

The word in Weand's response that I kept coming back to was "attack."

A citizen raised a comparatively well-informed concern about spending at a public meeting (and yes, in the newspaper) and the response is to call it "an attack'?

I thought about it and wondered what would people think if you took the names (and wel-known personalities) out of the equation.

This can be hard, I know, because as former council Ron Downie once said, Pottstown executes "policy by personality." In other words WHO is speaking or acting is often more important than WHAT they say or do.

So here is the thought-experiment I thought up on my metaphorical fishing boat written, of course, in the form of a narrative:
A tax-paying citizen of the Borough of Pottstown recently raised concerns at a public meeting about spending on personnel.

The citizen had taken the steps of using the Right to Know law to obtain w-2 forms to get the fact as best they could be determined, and had taken into account the fact that the borough had gained and lost employees in the past four years.

The citizen even went to the trouble of putting the figures in a spreadsheet to determine, as accurately as he knew how, what the financial impact of the last four years of borough employment had been.

When the citizen saw the results, he brought those concerns to the publicly elected officials of the Borough of Pottstown and expressed them to said officials.

In what is unquestionably an unusual step, the citizen also went to the trouble and expense of outlining his concerns in a paid advertisement in the local newspaper, to ensure his concerns were shared with a wider number of his fellow citizens.

The elected councilman, chosen earlier in the year from among his peers to head the council, tasked the borough's finance department with examining that expenses and (because these instructions were not given in public, we don't know exactly what the finance department was instructed to do).

We do know the result, that at the next public meeting, the elected councilman provided a response which raised several reasonable responses, including that overtime expenses had been high due to unavoidable circumstances like being down 14 police officers and a winter that beat down hard on overtime budgets at the highway department.

(The citizen responded that taxpayers pay over-time too, and when those 14 missing police officers were replaced, that was unlikely to lower the police budget very much, but I digress).

Up until this point in the narrative, things have gone about as well as one would hope in a representative democracy. A citizen, who took the trouble to educate himself as best he could about a cost to all taxpayers, brought that concern to his elected officials in the hope of spurring a desired course of action.

The elected official responded that the local government had taken a look at the matter and did not quite see it the way the citizen did.

And then, with one word, "attack," the whole thing goes off the rails.

Instead of thanking the citizen for caring enough to take an interest in his borough, and go to the trouble to research a potential problem and form an informed opinion instead of just showing up to complain "my taxes are too high" as so many other speakers -- who are often thanked for their input -- often do, the elected council categorizes the exchange of views as "a direct attack."
 Why?

We know why.

Because the citizen raising those concerns is Tom Hylton.

And because Tom Hylton, a citizen of the borough of Pottstown, so often raises matters of public concern -- concerns elected and appointed officials often would rather not confront --  they respond defensively.

To be fair, the borough weathers a pretty staggering amount of criticism, whether in The Mercury, word of mouth, or the seemingly endless number of borough critics living in cyber space. Being a little defensive is understandable.

Nevertheless, the job council members are elected to do is to represent the citizens of Pottstown in overseeing their local government.

And there seems no more striking example of the kind of oversight with which they are charged than to hear concerns from the citizens about the costs of that government and its impact on the taxes they pay.

That's the job elected officials asked voters to give them, so they had better learn to like it.

But, "if you’re attacking the borough, or the finance department, you’re attacking me,” is how Dan Weand, the elected official, chose to respond, paradoxically, right after he said "I love getting comments."

Does that strike you as the kind of response that will encourage other citizens to get informed on subjects, and bring their informed concerns to their elected officials for a public airing, as those officials so often say they so desperately want?

Or rather, does it demonstrate exactly the kind of response that might convince a concerned citizen they shouldn't even bother because "they're never going to listen to what I have to say anyway."

While it is admirable to defend the borough's employees and endeavor to correct what you see as an inaccurate depiction of their pay, is it among the best practices for a local government to describe the raising of such inquiries or concerns by a citizen as "a direct attack?"

For goodness sake, if you can't show up at a public meeting and raise concerns about public spending without it being characterized as an attack, let's just do away with the pretense of living in a representative democracy.

One of the lesser quoted clauses of the First Amendment, I was recently reminded, prohibits the government from making any law that would abridge the right of the people "to petition the government for a redress of grievances."

While the elected borough council has passed no such law, as of yet anyway, the response would suggest council is not overly fond of citizens showing up to exercise their First Amendment rights -- particularly if they are Tom Hylton.

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