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A Barth First Grader's Giving Spirit at 7 Years Old

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Barth Elementary First Grader Ethan Caballero with Trojan Man and elven helpers Anthony Wiggins, left, and Austin Andrews review the toys Ethan collected to deliver to sick children in the hospital who could not be home for Christmas.








Blogger's Note:The following was provided by John Armato, avatar of the Pottstown School District.

Barth Elementary School first grader Ethan Caballero may only be seven years old but he has shown that he can work side by side with men like, Trojan Man to help bring joy and cheer to children who have to spend their Holiday in the hospital.

Together they held a toy drive that collected more than 300 toys that will go to Pottstown Memorial Medical Center for children who were not be at home when Santa made his deliveries. 

Ethan has already learned that the true spirit of Christmas is more about giving than receiving and his wish to bring joy to others is one of the many reasons we can say "Proud to be from Pottstown." 

Trojan Man who is the a champion of the community along with his Elves Anthony Wiggins and Austin Andrews were happy to give a helping hand.

Four Apply to Replace Ziegler on Douglass Board

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Tuesday night's Board of Supervisor's meeting only took 16 minutes (a new record?) but some pretty important things happened from an official standpoint.

First of all, given that last month the board accepted the resignation of now-former supervisor Fred Ziegler as part of the former police chief's plea bargain concluding his trial on theft charges, there were only two of them to vote.

So any disagreement meant a tie vote.

But the two remaining supervisors, Anthony Kuklinski and Alan Keiser, agreed on everything, including the re-appointment of Kuklinski as chairman and Keiser as vice chairman.

They also agreed on the re-appointment of Peter Hiryak as township manager and Robert Brant as township solicitor, along with a number of other appointments.

But perhaps the most important item was the replacement of Ziegler.

By law, they have until Jan. 19 to make the selection, or the vacancy board takes the matter in hand.

However the board seems to have things under control.

So far four people have applied to replace Ziegler and they will be publicly interviewed, as is required by law, at a special meeting, scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 14 at 10 a.m. at the township building.

The four who applied are Constable Josh Stouch; former supervisor John Stacik, whom Keiser ousted in 2015; Roger Updegrove, who has served on the township's recreation and Act 209 committees, and George Kirkwood.

Kuklinski said the board will consider any additional applicants interested up until the special meeting on Jan. 14.

The final vote on a replacement will take place at the Tuesday, Jan. 17 meeting.

The supervisors were asked if Stouch can hold two elected offices at the same time. Hiryak said that matter is currently "being researched."

I guess we'll have to wait to see how that shakes out.

In the meantime, here is a meager Twitter offering a very short meeting.


Police Promotion, Lifesaving Awards Kick Off 2017

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Pottstown Police Officer Zachary Robinson, second from left, and Cpl. Steve Morrisey, are flanked by Pottstown Police Captain Robert Thomas and Chief Rick Drumheller, as well as Police Chaplain Everett Debnam, right, after receiving commendations for reviving a North Hanover Street man on Nov. 12.


Although there was a lot on the agenda of Wednesday night's borough council meeting, it was nice to start the year off with two positive police stories.

The first we will relate here is the tale that began on Nov. 12 when officer Zachary  Robinson arrived at 331 N. Hanover St. to find George Weller collapsed half in and half out of the door of apartment 29.

Weller was blue, not breathing and had no pulse.

Robinson immediately began providing oxygen and chest compression, but because of where the victim was located, had to stand over him, straddling him in the doorway.

When Corporal Steve Morrisey arrived, and saw Robinson was tiring, he stepped in and relieved him until medical help arrived. They were later informed Weller had regained a pulse, due in part to their efforts.

Police Chief Rick Drumheller said both officers' uniforms will now bear a badge indicating they have saved a life, although Morrisey's will have a star in the center because it is the second time he has performed that service.

Police Officer Todd Istenes, on the other hand, was on hand Wednesday to receive a different change to his uniform -- some stripes on his sleeve -- specifically, to be promoted to corporal.

Newly minted Pottstown Police Corporal Todd Istenes, in blue shirt,
is 
flanked by Capt. Robert Thomas, Chief Rick Drumheller
and Chaplain 
Everett Debnam after being promoted Wednesday.
"When you're the chief of police, you're afforded the luxury of watching your officers grow up," Drumheller said as Istenes stood next to him.

"I've watched Todd's career from the very beginning. I've watched his dreams and desires, his goals and his meticulous work," said Drumheller.

As the newest member of the command staff, "I have to tell you, your world will change," Drumheller told Istenes. "There will those who respect you, those who put themselves out, and there will be those who test you. Do well, just maintain what you've been doing your whole career, and you'll do a fine job." 

Of course than just these two things happened last night.

There was a presentation on land banking, a blight-fighting tool that borough council seems newly interested in taking up. Look for a story on that in The Mercury in the coming days.

Also, PDIDA Executive Director Sheila Dugan has asked not only for the size of the PDIDA board of directors to be reduced from nine to seven, but also reviewed the first year of the downtown farm market, and plans for the coming year.

That too will be the subject of a coming Mercury article.

And there are 14 appointments to be made at Monday's meeting, but the most interesting one looks like it will be for the open seat on the Pottstown Borough Authority.

Last month, the authority board wrestled with the procedure, and appropriateness, of seeking the re-appointment of Jeff Chomnuk. He schooled them a bit on their previous endorsements.

And now it seems that Council Vice President Sheryl Miller, who ousted Chomnuk from the Third Ward seat on council, is now seeking to be appointed to his seat on the authority.

That's going to be interesting.

In the meantime, here are the Tweets and videos from last night's meeting:

The People Get Their Say on Quarry Expansion

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Photo by Evan Brandt
William 'Ross' Snook, newly appointed to New Hanover Township's Environmental Advisory Board, with some of the exhibits he was not allowed to present during Thursday's Zoning Hearing on the proposed expansion of the Gibraltar Rock Quarry.


If you're an aficionado of zoning hearing meetings, you know that is a realm of legalese, rules about when you can ask questions, and of whom, and when you can make a simple statement, and about what.

The year-plus long set of hearings regarding the proposed expansion of the Gibraltar Rock quarry to a site adjacent to the former Good's Oil Co. site, the source of groundwater contamination, has been no exception.

But Thursday night was that rare occasion when the people who have been suffering through these hearings for more than a year, got to offer (somewhat) unfettered comment on what they think of the whole idea of digging a hole and pumping hundreds of thousands of gallons of groundwater a day right next to a contamination site.

It would not be an understatement to say no one seemed to think its a good idea.

Most of those who spoke, asked the zoning hearing board to consider the health of residents, and argued it would be better (and safer) to wait until the site is cleaned, and declared clean, before allowing any blasting and pumping.

But don't let me give the impression that you could just get up there and say anything that came to mind.

For when Celeste Bish from the Ban the Quarry group tried to read the names of those people who have died in homes with contaminated wells since the contamination was first discovered, many of them of cancer, it was ruled either not relevant to the hearing or inadmissible because she didn't have personal knowledge of their death.

Of course, I would think an obituary in the newspaper is pretty certain evidence of death, but then I'm not a lawyer so I could be mistaken.

Nevertheless, when the chance finally came, 11 people who wanted to speak and were lucky enough to be there at the right time, had their say, which you can read about in the Tweets below.

But despite what you might think, we're not done. There is at least one more hearing, tentatively set for Feb. 2 with a possible postponement to March 2, at which Gibraltar attorney Stephen Harris will offer rebuttal witnesses from his expert.

And then the township's attorney, and Ban the Quarry's attorney, and so on and so on and .......

Anyway, here are the Tweets.

New Members Welcomed to PHS Honor Society

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The newest members of the Pottstown High School chapter of the National Honor Society       
Blogger's Note: The following was provided by the Pottstown School District.

Recently, in a special candle-lighting service, Pottstown High School National Honor Society inducted 23 new members into the society. 

Sponsor Robert Decker said, “This was another successful induction of some of the most talented and dedicated students Pottstown has to offer. I look forward to working with them in the coming years to positively impact our students, district, and community.”

During the ceremony, the four pillars of National Honor Society were described
From left, Ashley Adams, Yuliza Cruz, Robert Decker,

Heather Swanson and MaSofia Sosa.
by students: Heather Swanson – Scholarship; Yuliza Cruz – Service; Ma Sofia Sosa – Leadership; and Ashley Adams – Character.

In order to be considered for membership, students must have a cumulative grade point average of 93 percent or above and fill out a personal data sheet that describes how they demonstrate their participation in the four pillars of National Honor Society. 

A faculty panel then reviews each student’s information and makes recommendations for those who should be invited to become members. Membership requires a continued demonstration of living up to the four pillars of honor society.

High School Principal Danielle McCoy addressed the students and parents, “The honor bestowed on National Honor Society recipients is not easily earned. It isn’t enough to have excellent grades. Excellent grades only earn them the right to apply for membership. The students inducted also demonstrated stellar accomplishments in the areas of leadership, character, and service. It is not an accolade to be easily dismissed. It is a positive reflection on the students, their families, our school, and our community. These students represent the academic and well-rounded elite of the Pottstown School District.”
Brother and sister members Mary and Josh Gery.

School Board President Amy Francis provided closing remarks by saying, “These students give us another reason to say – Proud to be from Pottstown. I encourage them to continue making the positive decisions which have led to their success and I am sure that they will continue to achieve success in their adult lives."

New members are:

Asgar Bin Ali, Subrina Ali, London Aquino, Mitchell Aquino, Jakhaya Beckham, Jacob Bosko, Elsie Cannell, Gabriel Francis, Mary Gery, Jennifer Hainsey, Emily Jerdon, Rachel Lees, Alivia Lopez, Martin Metzger, Aubrey Miller, Manuel Paez, Courteney Parry, Julianna Roseo, Hannah Shankle, Taylor Sundstrom, Emmanuel Toussaint, Abigail Welder, Br’Anna Williams

Ringing Rocks Kids Wear Pajamas for a Cause

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Ringing Rocks Elementary School.

Before they headed home to wait for Santa in their cozy PJs, students (and now a
few teachers) at Ringing Rocks Elementary School came to school in their PJs for a good cause.

As a holiday service project, Ringing Rocks hosted a Pajama Day in support of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. 

Students and staff raised over $800 in donations to further the research and care that leads to life-saving treatment for children at CHOP.


Lisa Rabbitt, associate director of school and youth programs at CHOP, told the school "you that by supporting Pajama Day you are helping the kids at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia! Each day at CHOP physicians are providing lifesaving care and cures for children with rare and complex diseases, scientist are making discoveries that lead to new cures and treatments and none of it would be possible without the support from people like you."

"So from everyone here at CHOP, THANK YOU for saying YAY to Pajama Day," Rabbit wrote.




Land Bank, Farm Market Approved by Council

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Monday's council meeting was sure speedy.

Not that I'm complaining.

But they took care of business right quick.

That business included making 14 appointments to various boards, including having to choose from among two applicants for an open seat on the powerful Pottstown Borough Authority -- but at least one of those contestants was NOT the one you read about in Saturday's Mercury.

In making those appointments, council shrugged off a suggestion by Vice President Sheryl Miller that council wait another 30 days to give more residents time to apply.

Council President Dan Weand said that is a great idea -- for next year.

Council also voted unanimously to have solicitor Chuck Garner begin working on an ordinance to create a land bank in Pottstown.

He said it will take some time as most of the 14 other land banks in Pennsylvania are either county-wide, multiple municipalities or at least cities larger than Pottstown.

Council also approved changes sought by PDIDA to move the Pottstown FARM, downtown market to the south side of High Street and to changes its hours and the months it will be staged.

Here are the Tweets that say it all:

Student Artist, Tax Loss, Relay for Life Questions

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Lower Pottsgrove Elementary Fifth Grader Avery Huber received this certificate as a result of her artwork being selected for a state-wide anti-drug poster published by the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office. she was recognized Tuesday by the Pottsgrove School Board.


As is so often the case, the item most likely to generate headlines from last night's Pottsgrove School Board meeting was no where on the agenda.

It was essentially a re-hash of a discussion the school board had last year when asked by the Relay for Life of Pottstown for permission to once again use the stadium at Pottsgrove High School.

That permission was granted, and that has not changed, but questions were raised about using a public facility to raise money for an organization, the American Cancer Society, which some feel is less about research and more about paying salaries to its executives.

This is no small question given that the Pottstown Relay is among the five largest in the world and regularly raises hundreds of thousands of dollars for the charity.

Perhaps the only new rhetorical point raised was offered by Patricia Grimm, a long-time and enthusiastic supporter of the Relay for Life. She argued that if the board is going to start questioning the effectiveness and finances of organizations which rent its facilities, it will have to do so evenly.

That means asking the wrestling tournament how much money it raises and how its spent. "If we do it for one, we have to do it for all of them," she said.

A loop-hole however, was identified by solicitor Marc Davis who pointed out that the district policy is not to rent its football stadium, so the Relay's use of it puts it in a different category.

The whole emotional subject was raised by Business Manager Dave Nester, also a supporter, who said that the Relay organizers "are nervous" and, looking ahead to future years, wanted to know if they should start looking elsewhere to hold the Relay.

Ultimately, the board decided to invite a representative from the American Cancer Society to address the board at a future meeting, although a date was not set.

In other news that affects your pocket book, the board approved settlements on three assessment appeals for three year's worth of taxes that will require refunds of more than $200,000.

Two of the properties making appeals include the former Thriftway in Sanatoga, now home to Landis Market, as well as the strip center perpendicular to that building which runs along High Street.

The third property is on Laura Lane in Upper Pottsgrove.

The board also heard, and endorsed, a presentation on reaching out earlier to families of incoming kindergarten students to help reduce the achievement gap often experienced by those raised in low-income households.

That's the wrap for now, here are the Tweets:


Crowd Balks at Swamp Creek Trail/Greenway Plan

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Photos by Evan Brandt
One of many speakers at last night's public meeting on the possibility of creating a Swamp Creek Greenway and trail from Schwenksville to New Hanover Square Road suggests Sunrise Mill should be restored before any thought is given to building a trail.


The meeting room of the Lower Frederick Township building was a tough place to be Thursday night if you were facing the crowd.

A presentation on the kick-off of a feasibility study looking at the creation of a Greenway and Trail in the Swamp Creek Valley, stretching across 5,000 acres from Schwenksville to New Hanover, drew a capacity crowd to the Lower Frederick Township building Thursday night.

Michael Stokes, assistant director of the Montgomery County
Planning Commission outlines the plans so far.
Not too many of them were there to support the idea of a trail, if the comments were any indication.

Michael Stokes, assistant director of the Montgomery County Planning Commission, doggedly tried to field questions and comments as residents spoke over him, and each other, in their effort to express their skepticism about and outright opposition to the project.

Many said the stream, which empties into Perkiomen Creek less than a half-mile from the township building, the surrounding woods and the wildlife that lives there would be best preserved by leaving it alone.

"There's a conflict between conservation and preservation when you say you want to bust a trail through it all," said Jim Rupert, a 15-year resident of the stream bank and one of the few speakers who took the time to give his name.

He said he has seen quite a bit of wildlife along the creek and those animals are "very sensitive to human activity. It's 100 percent untrue to say putting a trail through there would not be affected."

A resident of Delphi Road says it would be dangerous to put a 
trail along the curved street where there are many accidents.
Others said Montgomery County has enough trails, while many others questioned what their property rights are and whether the county would be taking any of it.

"I won't lie to you, government has the right to take your property for a public purpose, but that is not our intent," Stokes said.

The intent of the meeting was to get input from the community and to outline some very early concepts for what the county is considering. He added that the county already owns about 60 percent of the property that would comprise the greenway and host the trail.

Since 1971, Montgomery County has owned the Sunrise Mill property and it is a key element in the greenway and trail plan.

A photo of Sunrise Mill was used as the first slide in the presentation.
Not currently open to the public, it was built in 1767 and is structurally sound, but it has not been restored inside, said Stokes.

Several speakers suggested public money would be better spent restoring the mill and opening it to the public, rather than conceiving of a trail that is designed to bring people to a historic building they cannot tour.

"You're doing it backwards," said one speaker.

There were a few who spoke favorably about the idea.

One Limerick resident said she uses the Perkiomen Trail regularly and that 77 percent of Montgomery County residents polled view trails favorably, although it seemed evident not too many of those poll-takers were in the room Thursday.

Geoff Creary, from the landscape architecture firm
Simone Collins, 
listens to input from a resident about
the map showing the 
proposed Swamp Creek Greenway
prior to the start of Thursday night's meeting.
Dulcie Flaharty, a member of the Montgomery Planning Commission Board, employee of Natural Lands Trust and longtime open space advocate in the county, said fears about eminent domain are common when a trail is first-proposed.

"Look at where we've done trails already," she said, noting that all but a few of the 200 private property purchases necessary to create the Perkiomen Trail were negotiated sales, and only one lawsuit.

But that did little to convince the crowds and at one point, a voice int he crowd said "it's theft of private property."

Finally, one resident asked Stokes pointedly, if the majority of residents speak out against it, "what are the chances really, that it won't happen?"

"That's why we're here," Stokes replied.

Subsequent public meetings are planned for March and June.

Here are the Tweets as they happened during the meeting.

A Reminder

Acrylic Art Now on Display at The Hill School

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"Daybreak by Annalie Hudson









Blogger's Note:The following was provided by The Hill School.

An exhibit called “Ten Years” by acrylic painter Annalie Hudson, opened yesterday in The Hill School's Boyer Gallery of the Center For The Arts. 

Hudson’s exhibit will run through Feb. 17.  

The Gallery, located at 780 Beech Street, Pottstown, Pa., is generally open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday by appointment.

Hudson is a member of the Pasadena Society of Artists and the Upstairs Studio Artists, Phoenixville, Pa. 

She has exhibited her work in Pennsylvania and California galleries including nearby Goggleworks Schmidt Gallery in Reading and Ursinus College’s Berman Museum of Art in Collegeville. 

Her work also has been featured in Philadelphia Stories Magazine, the Artists Equity Show (Philadelphia), and the Eileen Fisher Store Exhibit (Pasadena).

Hudson writes: “At 50, I began to play around with acrylic paints to see if an artist lived inside of me. The vastness of the rugged American Southwest landscape was my first inspiration. Its expansiveness fueled my imagination. Creativity is a natural resource, but not always easily accessible. Sometimes journaling and walking gets my artistic juices flowing again. Painting lets me communicate what my words cannot say.”

Hudson also notes that her daughter, Gillian Yao Wenhold, Hill School class of 2014, is another great source of inspiration for her. Hudson writes, “I met her in China when she was just nine months old. From her, I have learned the importance of focus, commitment, and dedication.”

Pottsgrove High Yearbook Wins First Place Prize

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The staff of the Pottsgrovian.




Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottsgrove School District

The 15-16 Pottsgrovian Yearbook "Construct1n6 our Future" has just been awarded first place for Senior High Schools with the Enrollment of 1001 - 1700 students by the American Scholastic Press Association.

The ASPA is located in College Point, NY and reviews school yearbooks and other publications throughout the country. 

Pottsgrove's yearbook was "graded" on page design, story layout, graphics, headlining, cover design, advertising placement, photography and a variety of other things.

Editor and senior, Sydney Eaton joined the yearbook staff when she transferred in as a sophomore from Baltimore, MD. Sydney says, “Yearbook can be tough at times hitting deadlines and such, but it has been a great experience. Seeing the final product at the end of the year is very satisfying.” 

Graduating this June, Sydney is considering studying journalism at Northwestern this fall. 

In her 13th year as Pottsgrovian Yearbook Advisor, Danielle Small exclaimed, “I am proud of our students and will continue to have the Pottsgrovian Yearbook Staff design the best yearbook in style, format, contents, and presentability of our community.”

"Tthis honor is confirmation of the great work that our students and staff are doing to help students connect learning to life," said Pottsgrove High School Principal William Ziegler. "We stand and applaud Mrs. Small and her student design team for their award winning work.”

'Trojanauts' Take on All Robots at Competition

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The Trojanauts work with their robot at the Oxford competition.



Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown School District.

Pottstown High School students Javon Dill, Justin Johnson, Manuel Paez, Chris Stone and Imir Toney are members of the PHS Trojanotics Robotics Club. 

Over the weekend of Jan. 7, the Trojanauts, as they're called, traveled to Oxford High School to do
battle with 31 other schools from Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware in the first robotics competition of the year. 

The club was guided by their advisors, math teachers Robert Decker and Eilee Basham. 

The team battled thru five rounds of the"Velocity Vortex" challenge which required the students to design, build, program, and operate their robot to achieve a variety of actions. 

The students had opportunity to learn valuable lessons that will aid them in their next event on Feb. 11 at Emmaus High School. 

Activities like Robotics is a way to make learning fun and meaningful for students, and another reason to say Proud to be from Pottstown.

New (Former) Supervisor, New Trash Hauler, and Congratulations Chief Templin on 25 Years Service

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Douglass Police Chief Barry Templin, right, is congratulated
on 25 years of service to the township by Supervisors
Chairman Anthony Kuklinski
As you have no doubt already read in your print edition of The Mercury, former Douglass supervisor John Stasik Jr. was appointed to fill the vacancy left by Fred Ziegler's resignation last month.

I'll trust you to find that news in the newspaper (although a video of the vote can be found admid the Tweets below).

But that was not the only thing that happened last night.

Police Corporal Brian Steffie was promoted to the rank of sergeant and Chief Barry Templin was recognized for 25 years of service to the department.

A local boy who graduated from Boyertown Area Senior High School, Templin was congratulated by the entire department and his extended family, as well as the Board of Supervisors.

He said the people he works with "make my job really easy, although I suppose I shouldn't tell you that."

He added that the officers in the department are "the ones who go out and bust their buns every day" and make him look good.

Although they all looked pretty good in this rare photo of the all of Douglass's uniformed personnel:

Douglass (Mont.) township's uniformed personnel.


The other significant development last night was the awarding of a three-year trash collection contract to Keystone Disposal.

The low bidder among five -- which included Advanced Disposal, which had the most recent contract, A.J. Blozenski, J.P. Mascaro and Son and Waste Management -- the cost to the township per year is $278,333.33 for the service.

The three-year total is $835,000, $72,535 less than the next lowest bid of "907,535 from Advanced.

Advanced won the contract for disposal of the township's trash at its Western Berks Landfill with a low bid of $58.65 per ton.

Township Manager Peter Hiryak said the bids were about $30,000 lower than the last rounds of bids, which the township rejected in November.

He said the November bids were higher because "we made it too complicated." Simplifying the bids brought the price down, he said.

Douglass (Mont.) will continue to use the pay-per-bag system, in which users buy their trash bags from the township as their only disposal cost, ensuring they only pay for what they use.

The township will continue to operate its recycling and composting facility. The only change as a result of the new trash hauler, said recycling coordinator Andrew Duncan, is that recycling will be collected once a week, instead of once every two weeks as occurs now.

"I expect that will increase our recycling and reduce our trash tonnage," Duncan told the supervisors in recommending the Keystone bid, which they adopted unanimously.

We'll have a little more on that in an upcoming article in The Mercury.

In the meantime, here are the Tweets and video from last night:

MCCC Earns Silver Rating for Helping Veterans

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Montgomery County Community College.

Montgomery County Community College has been named a Silver Medal Military Friendly® School recipient in the category of community colleges for 2017.

New this year, Military Friendly® Awards showcase the most powerful and effective programs of more than 200 companies and 1,200 post-secondary schools that were designated as “Military Friendly®” in November. 

Of those designated, 154 employers and 541 schools have been recognized for excellence in different categories, highlighting not only “Are you Military Friendly®?” but “How Military Friendly® are you?”

Dr. Kevin Pollock, President of MCCC, said the recognition was a tribute to the efforts of the Veterans Resource Center and the hard work and dedication of the College’s faculty and staff to serve veterans.

“Montgomery County Community College strives to provide outstanding services and amenities to our veterans and their families,” Dr. Pollock said. “They have made tremendous sacrifices to serve our nation and deserve high-quality educational opportunities and programs to help them make a smooth transition to civilian life.”

The Veterans Resource Center at MCCC, with offices on the Central Campus in Blue Bell and on the West Campus in Pottstown, currently serves more than 450 veterans, service members, and spouse/dependents with their transition to college. 

A sample of the services include Veterans Administration (VA) work study opportunities, priority registration for veterans, a Student Veteran Organization, Veteran Service Team (VST) meetings, a veteran lounge and computer area, assistance with VA educational benefits, VA educational certifying officials, and general VA information.

The Center also invites campus and community resources to provide services and other outreach events to assist veteran students with their transition to collegiate life such as employment opportunities, non-traditional therapies like yoga and equine therapy for veterans, and workshops.

“All of our Military Friendly® award recipients set the standard for excellence,” said Daniel Nichols, Chief Product Officer of Victory Media and head of Military Friendly® development. 

“They offer exceptional examples of what it means not just to build a program that meets federal requirements, but one that serves the military and veteran community from classrooms to careers.”

Victory Media, originator of the family of Military Friendly® employment, entrepreneurship and education resources for veterans and their families, published its special awards for 2017 Military Friendly® Schools and Employers at https://militaryfriendly.com. For more than a decade, Military Friendly® ratings have set the standard for companies and colleges demonstrating positive employment and education outcomes for veterans and their families.

Companies and schools must have successfully completed a 2017 Military Friendly® survey and been designated as a 2017 Military Friendly® School or Employer to be considered for the Awards program. The names of awardees are published online at https://militaryfriendly.com and will be printed in the December issue of G.I. Jobs® or Guide to Military Friendly® Schools. To see a complete list of this year’s award winners, or to learn more about Military Friendly® ratings and how to participate, visit https://militaryfriendly.com.

A 4-Year Police Pact and More Homes to Watch Over

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Photos by Evan Brandt

Engineer Rolph Graf outlines for the commissioners the Spring Valley Farms plan that calls for 178 homes in the parcel on the lower left corner, and two other parcels, 40 and 43 acres respectively, that will be deeded to the township for open space.


Once again, the Lower Pottsgrove Commissioners demonstrated proficiency in local government by approving a major housing development; approving a major four-year police contract and expanding by 12,160 square feet Coventry Christian School on Pleasantview Road  -- all within a 30-minute meeting.

Those of us who suffer through long meetings thank them, although the pace was so swift that a reporter who stepped outside the meeting room to get the spelling of a name missed the entire adoption of the police contract.

And while there may be no honor among thieves, apparently there is among local journalists as Joe Zlomek, editor extraordinaire of The Sanatoga Post, immediately conveyed this fact to said wayward reporter.

So let's start with that.

The contract changes little except pay and health benefits, according to Commissioners Vice Chairman Stephen Klotz, who also heads up the police committee and had a hand in the negotiations.

The contract provides a 3 percent raise in the first year; a 3 percent raise in the second year; a 3.25 percent raise in the third year and a 3.25 percent raise in the fourth year.

Those increases will collectively add $203,000 to the township payroll after four years, said Township Manager Ed Wagner.

Currently the average salary on the police force is $56,241 and the highest is $91,112, said Klotz.

The 19 officers affected by the contract -- only Chief Michael Foltz is not in the union -- will continue to make no payments toward health insurance premiums, but they did agree to move to a new health plan offered by Aetna, Klotz said.

That plan, which has a high deductible for famlies, saves the township $162,000 over the course of the contract, thus off-setting all but $41,000 of the increased payroll costs.

The officers agreed to accept the high deductible plan because the township will pay 100 percent of the deductible costs incurred in the first and second years; 75 percent in the third and 50 percent in the final year of the contract.

A close up of the sub-division. The homes will all be located in the

parcel on the lower left corner, shown in faint outline.
Those costs, of course, will depend on actual experience and how much the officers and their families access their health care, making them difficult to predict.

Also significant in the whirlwind of voting Thursday night was the approval of Spring Valley Farms, a development at the corner of Bleim and Pleasantview roads on 143.67 acres.

The project has been in the works for several years and takes advantage of a zoning provision which allows the developers to cluster the homes more closely together than otherwise allowed in exchange for preserving open space from development.

That will occur on the two other parcels, at top and upper right, which total about 83 acres and will be deeded over to the township.

This is how the lots in Spring Valley Farms would be arranged
on the 143 acres to be developed.
This is a smaller project than the 500-unit Sanatoga Green, which has generated several headlines, but has been in the planning pipeline much longer.

It will also add to the cumulative total of the increases in traffic and potential increases in school population that have begun to catch the attention of regional planners and school officials.

Late last year, Pottsgrove Schools Business Manager David Nester told the commissioners that the district is concerned about how many students might move into the district to live in Sanatoga Green. The developers have forecast 58.

Although Spring Valley Farms is not likely to add nearly as many children, it certainly won't decrease the student population.

Answers may come in the form of a demographics study the Pottsgrove School Board also commissioned in November.

As for traffic, members of the Pottstown Area Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee are on the hunt for funding for a regional traffic study which will help predict the impact of large housing projects like Spring Valley Farms and Sanatoga Green in Lower Pottsgrove, as well as a project of more than 760 homes in New Hanover and a 241-unit project in Douglass (Mont.) Township which received preliminary approval on Tuesday night.

But enough of that, we know you're anxious to get to the Tweets, and here they are:

Soup-er Fundraiser Will Bowl You Over Saturday

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ArtFusion 19464's Soup Bowl will be held Saturday, Jan. 28 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 

If you haven't gotten your tickets yet, click here to get them before they're gone.

Tickets are $20 and include unlimited soup, bread, beverages and homemade desserts. 

Panera Bread will be donating their delicious baguettes again! 

As a thank you for supporting this fundraiser, you will take home a handcrafted ceramic bowl, created by the center's volunteers during this past year.

All funds help support the non-profit community art center.

For more information visit the web site, http://artfusion19464.org/, or call 610-326-2505.


Appreciation, Opposition & a Not-So-Secret Meeting

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Photo by Evan Brandt
The Pottstown High School Show Choir is introduced by teacher Thomas Marsden during the Jan. 23 2017 school board meeting during with the choir performed "Love Train" for School Board Appreciation Month.

It helps, if you're only going to have just one meeting in a month, to have five pages worth of business be lumped into one vote.

But then, I'm not complaining as I like to get home to my bed as much as the next guy.

There were a lot of items crammed into last night's school board meeting, but one of them, outlined at the very beginning by Acting Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez, slipped by pretty quickly, but it's important because it may indicate a shift away from secrecy.

The school board's "workshop" meetings that have, in the past, been closed to the public under the rationale that they are not violating the open meetings law because they don't "deliberate."

They've taken a little bit of heat in these pages and on the pages of The Mercury for that practice.

The board held another one on Jan. 19, but this one was different because it was open to the public ... they just forgot to tell anyone.

Hey, you don't expect them to get everything right the first time do you?

To his credit, Rodriguez threw himself on the grenade and apologized for the district's failure to place a public notice about the meeting. He tried to make up for it by outlining what was discussed at the meeting and the board even posted the meeting minutes on the district web site.

You can read them by clicking here.

A quick look reveals a there was presentation by Community Relations Director John Armato on "branding" the district and "telling our story," a look at board goals such as improving academic achievement, installing stadium lights, looking at early education options and, of course, "austerity."

On to regular business.

As you have no doubt read by now on the front page of today's Mercury, the board also adopted a formal resolution opposing President Donald Trump's appointment of Betsy DeVos as the U.S. Secretary of Education.

The board also approved about $216,000 of building repairs which I suspect I'll write about later in The Mercury, as well as settling a set of over-due tax bills on three properties owned by a man named William B. Fretz.

Some of you may recall he came to council last year and made a plea for a deal to get his properties productive again. They agreed and now, months later, the school board has agreed as well.

Three years before  pleading for a tax deal with local boards, Fretz was agreeing to a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in which he paid $6.8 million

And of course, there were performances by high school and middle school musicians in honor of School Board Appreciation Month. You can see videos of those in the Tweets below.

Pottsgroves Hires Shirk as New Superintenent

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William Shirk
Acting Pottsgrove Schools Superintendent William Shirk has good reason to smile this morning.

That's because he woke up with the word "acting" removed from his title.

At the helm since August, the Pottsgrove School Board made it official, and unanimous, Tuesday night by granting Shirk a three-year contract.

The contract will be good through June 20, 2020 and he will be paid an initial salary of $178,000.

His predecessor, Shellie Feola, was paid $180,000 a year, but left under a cloud of controversy and contention.

Since he took the reins, Shirk has gone out of his way to reach out to the district's teachers and to make them partners and collaborators in efforts to improve the district's stagnant test scores.

He listed that among his three major goals for the year, taking the long-sought step of setting specific percentages his team is now aiming to hit or surpass.

Those include getting state scores for grades 3 through 8 at or above state average
in moth and English.

He has also set an increase in proficient/advanced scores from 29 percent to 40 percent as a goal for first-time takers of the Algebra 1 Keystone test in high school; an increase from 70 to 75 percent for first-time-takers of the Keystone Literature test and from 61 to 66 percent for those taking the Biology Keystone.

School Board President Matt Alexander was joined by board members Bill Parker and Rick Rabinowitz in thanking Shirk for finally giving them goals that can be easily measured.

His other goals include a balanced budget; improved training for teachers and improved and more timely communication with all "stakeholders."

Whether or not his short tenure and goals have been the driver behind improved transparency at board meetings -- including detailed agendas that put votes into understandable context -- they are evident nonetheless.

He has also formalized offering official, on -the-record responses to inquiries from board members at previous meetings; another thing for which Parker enthusiastically thanked Shirk.

It was a busy meeting, with a review of the coming budget, and the mixed impact a property tax elimination bill might have on finances in Pottsgrove and the purchase of photo-voltaic solar panels to cap off the energy-efficient high school renovation.

You can find out about all those things in the Tweets below.

Getting the Big Traffic Picture

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Is this the traffic future of the greater Pottstown area? Perhaps not, if a proposed regional traffic study can propose fixes for the worst intersections.


It's already a given that trying to drive down Swamp Pike in the morning means you will be sitting in traffic.

Will it soon be a given that similar traffic loads must be borne by thoroughfares like Pruss Hill and Middle Creek roads? Some might argue that's already true.

Officials like Ed Reitz, member of the Douglass (Mont.) Township Planning Agency, and Tom Troutman of the Lower Pottsgrove Planning Commission would be among them.

"Traffic on the back roads, like Pruss Hill Road, is bumper to bumper now, when it used to be you were lucky if you saw a car every half hour," Troutman told the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee Wednesday night.

"The back roads are getting slaughtered from these developments," seconded Reitz who, like Troutman, has had a hand in approving them.

But a regional traffic study that may get started as soon as July may not address those back roads -- at least not yet.

John Cover and Matthew Edmond from the Montgomery County Planning
Commission informed the regional planners Wednesday night that the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission -- more often referred to as the DVRPC -- sets aside $60,000 a year to do work in the greater Pottstown and would be happy to undertake the regional traffic study the planners want so desperately.

The questions at hand now, of course, are what should it look like? What should it look at? What questions should it answer?

Initially some of the planners began outlining some of the larger housing projects which gave birth to this newfound concern -- Sanatoga Green in Lower Pottsgrove; Town Center in New Hanover; the Zern tract in Douglass (Mont.).

But each of those will generate its own traffic study said Cover.

Why not use the DVRPC study to identify the intersections and areas which will suffer the most from increased traffic and have the study focus on and prioritize them?

After all, you may live in New Hanover, but if you want to get to Route 100, chances are you're going through Douglass, so an improvement there helps a New Hanover driver as much as one who lives in Douglass, he pointed out.

The planners agreed, particularly after he pointed out that if DVRPC will put $60,000 a year toward the effort, the plan built on the studies can be updated and more likely to get funding either from the state or President Trump's planned increase in infrastructure spending.

Here are the Tweets:

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