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Trojan Man Takes to TV to Fight Cancer Monday AM

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Fighting cancer has been one of Trojan Man's major causes for some time now.


Trojan Man, the big-headed Pottstown High School mascot who seems to be everywhere at once, will be on your TV screen Monday morning if you have it tuned to the right channel.

At 9:30 a.m. Feb. 20, the ubiquitous Trojan Man will appear on Good Day Philadelphia on Fox 29. He has been invited to take part in the Lace Up and Twist Away Childhood Cancer national tour by Mascots 4 a Cure, according to a post on Dave Woodley's Facebook page.


Dave Woodley with a photo of the first time Trojan Man
became something more than a mascot.
Many of you will remember that Woodley is the high school's Management Information Systems teacher as well as a 2003 graduate of the school.

As The Mercury reported at the start of this school year, it was Woodley who has led the charge to transform the school mascot from a guy in a dorky costume who does push-ups at football games to a region-wide symbol for community involvement.

Not one to waste an opportunity for doing good in the City of Brotherly Love, Trojan Man will then head over to Rosa's Fresh Pizza with $472 raised in Pottstown where he will buy 472 slices of pizza for the homeless.


Acting Pottstown Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez
got some help from the Color Guard for his video.
After lunch, Woodley posted that Trojan Man will take part in a Lace Up and Twist Away Cancer Rally at the iconic Liberty Bell.

On Feb. 27, TM will participate in his first hospital visit with Mascots 4 a Cure at duPont Hospital as part of the national tour.

Throughout 2016 and into this year, Woodley has affiliated Trojan Man with “Mascots For a Cure,” which has teamed up with the #TwistChallenge to raise money to fight childhood cancer.

Some of you may recall “the ice bucket challenge” of two years ago, a video craze which swept the nation and, in the process, raised more than $42 million for research into ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The “#TwistChallenge” works on the same principle.

A video is taken of a person or group of people dancing to “The Twist” for 36 seconds in recognition of the 36 children who are diagnosed with cancer each day, according to the campaign’s statistics.

(Here is the video made at all four Pottstown Elementary Schools)


That video is posted on social media with challenges being made to another group or individual. Those participating making a donation.

(Here is Acting Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez's video:)



Not to be outdone by Rodriquez, or the elementary schools, or even the Pottstown School Board, which also twisted to fight cancer, all of Pottstown High School undertook the challenge at the Pep Rally in September.


Apparently, all this twisting has not gone unnoticed and now Trojan Man will join other mascots on television tomorrow morning to help raise even more money to fight childhood cancer.

Won't you tune in and watch and perhaps donate?

Well done Trojans.

Still Time to Get Tickets for the Golden Apple Gala

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Photo Courtesy of TriCounty Active Adult Center.

The 2016 Golden Apple Gala









Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the TriCounty Active Adult Center.

The fourth annual Golden Apple Gala is less than one month away. This event raises money for the TriCounty Active Adult Center as they work to support older adults in the greater Pottstown region.

“We are planning another exciting event,” said Brian Parkes, executive director of the center. “Attendees will be treated to some great music, and we have a local award-winning couple demonstrating ballroom dancing.”

This year the event will honor Peggy Whittaker and the memory of Dr. Richard Whittaker.

 “The Whittakers have been incredible supporters of our center, and of our community, and we are excited to be able to honor them in this way,” said Parkes. “We will be making a very special announcement at the Gala that will cement their legacy of generosity and positivity in Pottstown.”

This year’s event will be held on Saturday, March 4 at Brookside Country Club in Pottstown. Betsy Chapman will be featured on the harp, and the West Chester Swing Kings will provide entertainment after dinner. 

Bill and Patti Underwood have been

dancing together for 25 years.
A ballroom dancing demonstration will be presented by Patti and Bill Underwood, who have been dancing together for 25 years. The Underwoods are competitors in American Smooth and American Rhythm. 

They recently won the Amateur American Smooth Championship at the Ohio Star Ball., and they have also been the National Senior lll American 9-Dance Champions in 2007-08, 2010 & 2013.

Beer and wine, hors d’oeuvres, and a choice of entrees are included in the $130 per person ticket price. 

 Reservations and sponsorships can be purchased at www.GoldenAppleGala.org, or by calling the center at 610-323-5009 x101.

The silent auction features original artwork, gift certificates, and many other valuable items.

All profits from the event will support services for older adults in the tri-county area, including a free daily lunch, professional assistance from trained staff, and exercise and social programs that help keep seniors active and independent.

Major supporters of the Golden Apple Gala include Joe & Linda Voytilla, Patient First, Thrivent Financial, BB&T, Pottstown Memorial Medical Center, Kreibel Security, David G. Garner, Esq., kultivate, Knies Insurance Group, State Representative Tim Hennessey, Lawrence J. Gribb, D.M.D., Keller Williams Realty Group, Edwards Business Systems, and O'Donnell, Weiss & Mattei, PC.

The TriCounty Active Adult Center serves adults age 50 and better with programs and services including information and referral assistance, a daily lunch, exercise programs, social activities, and much more. The Mission of the TriCounty Active Adult Center is to enhance the well-being of older adults by providing services and activities that promote an independent and healthy life style. 

The TriCounty Active Adult Center has nearly 2,500 members residing in the tri-county area. Anyone living in the tri-county area (Berks, Chester and Montgomery Counties) who is 50+ years of age is welcome to join the center. Learn more at www.TriCountyAAC.org.

Hate Crimes on the Docket in Steel River Show, Talk

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Steel River Playhouse.

Steel River Playhouse will be presenting "The Laramie Project" opening March 10, 2017.

This production is about a young gay man who was beaten and tied to a fence and left for dead for 18 hours in Laramie, Wyoming in 1998.

Matthew Shepard was barely alive when he was found tied to the fence and taken to the hospital where he died just a few days later. 

His life and death became a national story and the work that the Matthew Shepard Foundation has done since his death has been instrumental in strengthening hate crime laws and raising awareness of the violence that the LBGTQ+ community faces.

The cast and crew of this production had the opportunity to meet with Jason Marsden, the Executive Director of the Matthew Shepard Foundation. 

Jason was a friend of Matthew's and could talk directly to the person Matthew was as well as the amazing work that has happened in his name since 1998.

It was an incredibly moving experience and discussion. Steel River wants very much to share that experience with as many in the community as possible.

Steel River is excited to welcome Marsden to Pottstown for the opening weekend of "The Laramie Project."

Opening weekend events

Jason will be joining us for an opening night reception on Friday, March 10 at 6:30 pm. All who have a ticket for that night’s performance are invited.

Jason Marsden
On Saturday, March 11, SRP is pleased to welcome the LGBT Equality Alliance of Chester County. 

Members will enjoy a wine and cheese reception before the show. A 50/50 raffle will be held at each show; proceeds benefit the Alliance’s mission.

Mr. Marsden will lead community discussions after the play on both nights to discuss with the audiences their reactions to the production and issues directly affecting the LGBT community, including hate crimes, discrimination, and the effect on LGBT youth, among other topics.

LGBT Equality Alliance Board President, Rachel Stevenson will also help facilitate on March 11.

Here is how the community can help

To facilitate the visit and community talk-backs, SRP must raise between $1,000 and $1,500 to cover travel expenses for Marsden. SRP is asking for donations from the community to help.

Donations may be made by (1) visiting the SRP website at www.steelriver.org, (2) by contacting Lauren Pierson-Swanson, Development Director, at lauren@steelriver.org, or (3) by mailing checks directly to Steel River Playhouse at 245 East High St. Pottstown, PA, 19464.

All donations received will fund Marsden’s visit and the production of The Laramie Project.

Leena Devlin, managing artistic director for Steel River Playhouse, noted that “The Laramie Project” was the first show the theater selected for its 2016-17 season. “It was a non-negotiable for us,” Devlin said.

“We built our season around this powerful piece. Unfortunately, hate crimes against LGBT have not been declining at rates that anyone would want,” as noted in numerous reports published after the terrible nightclub shooting in Orlando last year.

There is still so much work to be done, and this production – as well as the visit from Jason Marsden – will help Steel River to advance awareness and engage the community, which is a key part of their mission as a theater. If this play, and these talks by Jason, can change just one person’s mind about how they feel about LGBT individuals, or encourage one young person to feel safe coming out, we will have helped to effect positive change.

The mission of the Matthew Shepard Foundation (www.matthewshepard.org) is "to erase hate by replacing it with understanding, compassion, and acceptance." Jason Marsden has served in his role as Executive Director of the Foundation since July of 2009. During his time as a reporter with the Casper, WY Star-Tribune prior to joining the Foundation, he became friends with Matthew Shepard, and in the aftermath of Shepard's murder he came out publicly in this newspaper's pages. He speaks frequently to schools and organizations about issues of importance to the LGBT community.

“The Laramie Project” opens Friday, March 10 and runs through Sunday, March 26 with 11 performances, including four matinees. Showtime is 8 pm (Thu/Fri/Sat) and 2 pm (Sat/Sun). Tickets are $29 for Adult, $24 for Senior (65+) and $17 for Student. Tickets can be ordered online at www.steelriver.org. Discounts available for groups of 10 or more.

About The Matthew Shepard Foundation

Through local, regional and national outreach, Matthew Shepard Foundation empowers individuals to find their voice to create change and challenge communities to identify and address hate that lives within their schools, neighborhoods and homes. Their work is an extension of Matt’s passion to foster a more caring and just world. They share his story and embody his vigor for civil rights to change the hearts and minds of others to accept everyone as they are.


About Steel River Playhouse

Steel River Playhouse is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) charitable education and performance facility that seeks to strengthen community, inspire creative exploration, educate, and entertain, through the presentation of quality performing arts events and education for diverse audiences. Designated as a “gateway” performing arts center, Steel River provides affordable, high quality performances, comprehensive educational offerings, and enriching volunteer opportunities in all aspects of theatre arts.

The organization embraces emerging and established artists, and supports community by serving as a magnet destination for economic development and a platform for shared experiences by diverse audiences. Students and volunteers of all ages and backgrounds are encouraged to explore and grow their skills by working side-by-side with professional instructors, performers, directors, and designers.

Pot Zoning, Boy Scout Bridges and Animal Laws

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Members of Boy Scout Troop 129 are honored by the Upper Pottsgrove Township Commissioners in recognition of the scout's construction of a second bridge over Fox Run in Hollenbach Park.



There were a total of four different meetings I could have attended last night.

I chose Upper Pottsgrove Commissioners over Douglass (Mont.), Lower Pottsgrove Planning and a joint meeting between Pottstown Borough Council and the school board -- all because of one word.

That word is Marijuana.

Not that I wanted some, but because a commissioners discussion about zoning for it was on the agenda.

It is a hot topic these days. In fact while I was listening to the commissioners talk about whether they wanted to zone for it locally, or through the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee -- which meets tomorrow -- an entrepreneur was proposing a grow facility in Limerick Township.

You can see some of that discussion in the Tweets below thanks to my colleague Eric Devlin, who was covering that meeting.

The Upper Pottsgrove discussion was fairly brief and inconclusive, but that fact that there is also a a grow facility being proposed in West Pottsgrove, makes it all part of a larger discussion on the issue.

Look to future issues of The Mercury for that.

In the meantime, the Upper Pottsgrove Commissioners were plenty busy in their own.

They approved an easement for a property no one owns to allow for the proposed Mattress Factory on Commerce Drive so the business can go to closing on the building ... I know, don't ask.

Commissioners also discussed tax breaks for volunteer firefighters, a discussion that is also underway in Pottstown.

They also added $15,000 to the price ceiling for engineering work on the proposed new public works building and discussed sewer work and paving in the Regal Oaks subdivision and whether to require residents to connect to the system. No decision yet on that one.

Discussion was also had over forming a regional code of appeals with other municipalities and how the township gets revenue from a billboard located on township property. They didn't like the latest proposal.

And then there was adoption of a new noise ordinance in the township -- a long-time coming -- as well as the draft for a new animal nuisance ordinance, which is not yet ready for adoption.

You can read all about it in the Tweets below.

Now, can someone tell me what happened at the other three meetings?

Is the Pottstown Metropolitan Region Going to Pot?

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Photo by Evan Brandt

Montgomery County Planner Donna Fabry explains how Pennsylvania has been divided into six zones to ensure that the first state licenses for growing medical marijuana are distributed evenly across the commonwealth during a presentation Wednesday night to the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee.



I literally cannot throw a stone in any direction this week without stumbling across a story about medical marijuana.

It was discussed Tuesday night at the Upper Pottsgrove Commissioners meeting AND at the Limerick Supervisors meeting, and again last night at the regional planning committee.

A bad picture of the inside of a grow facility from Fabry's

presentation to the regional planners.
It will be discussed tomorrow night at the Lower Pottsgrove Commissioners meeting, according to this post in the Sanatoga Post.

I hope I'm not getting paranoid. I hear that can happen sometimes.

Anyway, given that this is the open period for applying for the two state permits that will be awarded in the seven-county southeast region, I guess it makes sense.

But they sure do seem to want to be located in the greater Pottstown area.

The discussion last night centered around zoning and whether the eight
Pennsylvania will not allow dispensaries here to have

cute pot-related names like this one in Montclair, N.J
No sense of humor. Darn Quakers.
municipalities that comprise the regional planning committee want to zone for both the grow facilities and state-licensed dispensaries individually or on a regional basis.

No consensus was reached other than to go back to their respective boards and get their input before making a decision.

Also on the docket was discussion of building proposals made in Montgomery County in the past year.

Long story short? They are up from the low around 2010 during the housing crisis.

Lower Pottsgrove and New Hanover had the most housing units proposed in the region, thanks to Sanatoga Green, Spring Valley Farms and the Town Center plan in New Hanover.

The market for age-restricted housing seems to have collapsed, Realtors can't sell the units. Most seem to prefer age-targeted, which lacks the legal restrictions to keep the young-uns out, according to Montgomery County Planner Donna Fabry.

And the group also discussed the idea of having a regional code of appeals board. The Universal Building Code requires townships to have them, but many don't.

And, when the Owen J. Roberts School District briefly challenged a decision by East Coventry Township for the construction of a new elementary school, the township had to scramble to put one together.

Douglass (Mont.) has one and has used it several times, said Township Manager Pete Hiryak, but most other towns don't and are interested in the idea.

Berks County maintains one that local municipalities can join if they wish, said Montgomery County John Cover, who promised to draft a proposal for one the Pottstow-area municipalities can look over.

Other than that, it's time to scroll through those world-famous Tweets!

Pennsylvania-based Medical Marijuana Grow Facility Hopes to Take Root in Lower Pottsgrove Bunker

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Bunker Botanicals wants to establish a medical marijuana grow facility 20 feet underground in this Cold War bunker off Porter Road.



The latest medical marijuana grow facility to make headlines this week wants to truly be an underground operation.

Last night, the Lower Pottsgrove Township Commissioners voted 3-1 to send a letter of support to the state for a proposal to establish a facility in a Cold War-era bunker 20 feet beneath the surface of the ground.

Originally built by the phone company to withstand a nuclear attack, the bunker was once full of what is now vintage equipment that would have allowed vital communications to continue after a nuclear attack.

It has since become an "attractive nuisance," a place for teens to hang out and a canvas for local graffiti artists, said Commissioner Ray Lopez.
Geoff Whaling address the Lower Pottsgrove Commissioners

But Robert Basile and Geoff Whaling would like to transform it into a 50,000 square-foot underground grow facility for Pennsylvania's newly legalized medical marijuana.

Basile, who owns at least one nursing home, said he became interested in medical marijuana because of the relief it offers several senior-related ailments, such as dementia.

Geoff Whaling, who would managed the facility, has spent much of his energy in previous years advocating for the passage of a medical cannabis law in Pennsylvania and said he is pleased that the 17 medical conditions it is authorized to treat is the largest number of any state that has legalized marijuana.

"One of the things you have to remember is we're making medicine," Whaling told the commissioners. "There is a great demand for this in Pennsylvania."

But its unclear how great the demand will be since patients will have to be "qualified" to receive a prescription from doctors, who are also just getting up to speed on the use of the cannabis products as medicine.

Whaling's initial estimate is between 65,000 to 120,000 patients statewide as things get up and running.

Pennsylvania's law allows no plant material to be distributed under its law "so you won't see bags of marijuana like you do in Colorado," said Whaling.

Rather, all Pennsylvania's products will be in the form of pills, ointments,
Whaling outlines the specifics of the proposed underground 
medical marijuana grow facility for the commissioners.
tinctures and other medicinal products. That's what will leave the grow facility in an unmarked black van less than once a day, Whaling told the commissioners.

As for security, being underground certainly limits access, but there will also be a fence and two full-time security guards, said Whaling.

The facility will initially employ six people at first and eventually employ up to 15 when the space in the bunkers is fully utilized, he said.

"When I first heard about it, I thought it was going to be like a smoky opium den," said Lopez, who said he has since visited the facility and been educated about the operation.

"It's more like if Merck was making an application," he said mentioning the Montgomery County-based pharmaceutical giant.

The facility "would be a real win-win for the township's tax base and for the company," Lopez said.

But not everyone was convinced.

Fire Marshal Lew Babel noted there is only one fire exit.
The commissioners accept a $2,500 donation from
the Pottsgrove Soccer Association for a new lawn mower.

That, plus not having enough information about security, convinced Commissioners Vice Chairman Stephen Klotz.

"I'm not going to debate medical marijuana," said Klotz. "I don't agree with it, but that's not why I'm voting no on this motion."

That issue, plus a $2,500 donation from the Pottsgrove Soccer Association to help with the purchase of a new lawn mower for the township, were the primary issues of the night.

So here are the Tweets:

Ben Franklin Helps Pottsgrove Manor Rise and Shine

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Pottsgrove Manor

Pottsgrove Manor's new exhibit, "Rise and Shine at the Manor," opens on Saturday, March 4 at 1 p.m. with a visit from Benjamin Franklin.

At 1 p.m. visitors will have a chance to meet founding father Benjamin Franklin, as portrayed by Bill Ochester.

Learn about Franklin’s contributions to everyday life, including the idea of Daylight Savings time!

After the lecture, visitors can take a guided tour of Pottsgrove Manor and the new exhibit.

As the first rays of the morning’s sun streamed through the windows of Pottsgrove Manor, the house would already be busy with a myriad of early morning household tasks and the rituals of starting another day.

See how the humble activities of daily life differed from- or were often remarkably similar to- the activities we are familiar with today.

There is a suggested donation of $2 per person for the lecture and tour.

Visitors can also take a guided tour of Pottsgrove Manor and the “Rise and Shine at the Manor” exhibit during regular museum hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

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

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route 100, just off Route 422 and is  is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department.

For more information, please call 610-326-4014, or visit the website at www.montcopa.org/pottsgrovemanor.

Like Pottsgrove Manor on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pottsgrovemanor.

Pottsgrove Teen Crowned Crowned 2017 Pennsylvania USA Ambassador Miss

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Faith Drumheller
Blogger's Note:The following was provided by USA Ambassador

Lower Pottsgrove resident Faith Drumheller, 16, has been named as the 2017 Pennsylvania USA Ambassador Teen by the Tampa based USA Ambassador Pageant.

She will travel in July to Innisbrook Resort in Tampa, Florida to represent the Keystone State and compete in the 2017 national pageant where the contestants will be scored in four categories.

During the national competition, individual interview with judges comprises 35 percent of the score, onstage chat 15 percent, with evening gown 25 percent and fashion wear 25 percent as the remaining categories scored to detennine the winner.

In addition to the overall compulsory competitions, delegates may enter optional competition categories of Natural and Glamour Photogenic, Fit and Fabulous, Runway Modeling, Community Service, Academic
Achievement/Resume, and Spokesmodel.

"The USA Ambassador system is a charity driven organization with a mission to promote success through leadership, integrity, character and confidence," Drumheller said, "and pageantry is a great opportunity to gain valuable experience in important life skills such as being interviewed and presenting yourself with poise and confidence in a business setting."

Exemplifying the mission of the USA Ambassador system, charity and service are a part of Faith's everyday
life. She's an active volunteer at the Keystone Villa Retirement Community, as well as a dedicated and committed tutor for elementary students through a program known as Project Purpose.

The charity she holds closest to her heart is "In Ian's Boots," a charity that collects and provides shoes and winter boots to those in need.

Faith is a 10th grade student at West-Mont Christian Academy and a year-round volleyball junkie.

Her journey in pageantry got off to a super start in 2016, as she competed for the first time, winning both an Overall Beauty title as well as Most Photogenic competitions.

Faith is thrilled to be a part of the 2017 USA Ambassador "BeTheGood" family, and will compete at nationals to win a prize package that includes a cash award, and three exciting national trips that include a cruise, a trip to Washington, DC and a holiday trip to New England.

Additionally, the prize package contains a national photo session and the opportunity to appear as a national titleholder in the prestigious Pageantry Magazine.

Jazz Bands 'Superior' and 'Outstanding' in Boyertown

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Photo courtesy of Missy Weber
The Pottstown High School Jazz Band performed at the 47th Annual Jazz in B-town Jazz Festival at Boyertown Area Senior High School on Saturday.


Hello faithful readers, and welcome to another season of Pottstown High School Jazz Band coverage in The Digital Notebook -- a little bit later than it should be, and a little bit lamer than it used to be.

But we'll get to that later.

Thanks to the Twitter account of the Middle School's 7-8 Jazz Band, I learned late Sunday that our junior jazzers not only earned a "Superior" ranking at the 47th annual Jazz in B-town jazz festival Saturday at Boyertown Area Senior High School, but also Best Rhythm Section and a solo award for Alto Saxophonist Kishan Patel.

Good going. Unfortunately, the videos posted of the 7-8 Band on the Pottstown "Band Peeps" Facebook page could not be captured for inclusion here.
Photo by Evan Brandt
Jazz band representatives Eddie Butler and Casey Mest
are congratulated on their ranking by Boyertown Band
Director Brian Landgon, a former Pottstown music
teacher and friend to our program.

Later in the evening, the Pottstown High School Jazz Band received a rank of "Outstanding," which, for the uninitiated, is above "Excellent" but below "Superior," in the world of jazz band rankings.

They were up against some stiff competition Saturday, particularly from the Quakertown and North Penn Navy Jazz bands, each of which were ranked superior and captured most of the section and solo awards.

"I hate them, they are so good," one envious Pottstown Jazz Band member was overheard to say of North Penn.

The three pieces played by Pottstown were, "Things Ain't What they Used to Be,""Summer Never Ends," which is a feature piece for senior trombonist Kyle Kratzer (who I have known since I coached him in soccer, many, many, many years ago) and ending with "Hit the Bricks.")

And this is where technology failed me as it did last week in Phoenixville.

Photo courtesy of Missy Weber
Pottstown senior Kyle Kratzer, who intends to
attend Millersville University to become a music
teacher, performs "Summer Never Ends."
In Phoenixville, I tried an experiment.

For those new to our Jazz Band coverage, know that I live-stream videos of the performances on a Twitter-related program called Periscope, for those who may not find the blog or only follow me on Twitter, and might not be able to make it to the performances.

So in Phoenixville, the first festival of the season, I tried live-streaming Pottstown's entire performance, instead of stopping between songs like I usually do.

It broadcast but did not save to my iPhone as it is supposed to, I'm not sure why.

You see the problem with Periscope video is it expires after 24 hours, so I usually upload it from my phone into my YouTube account so the videos can be watched any time after the 24 hours are up.

The visual quality ain't hot, but hey, you go a jazz performance for the sound right?

So that's why I did not post about the Phoenixville performance, where the band received a "Excellent" rating. That and the fact that Pottstown was on about 5:30 p.m. and the event did not end until 10 or later. A guy's gotta sleep you know.

I often try to record or at least broadcast some of the other area schools The Mercury covers because I'm nice like that.

Photo Courtesy  of Missy Weber

The rhythm section of the Pottstown High School Jazz Band.
So when it came time for Boyertown, I resumed my old ways and broadcast three different songs individually but the last one, "Hit the Bricks" was not saved on my phone for reasons I won't pretend to understand.


So I did some Internet searching and found a program called "webrecorder" which allowed me to preserve the Periscope video of "Hit the Bricks." Like the other YouTube videos, it is embedded in the Storify of my Tweets down below, but I warn you the sound quality is poor.
Photo courtesy of Missy Weber
Some of Pottstown's brass and sax players at work in Boyertown.

I also recorded all three performances by Boyertown, even though, as the hosts, they were not graded as part of the competition.

Also because director Brian Langdon, who cut his musical educator teeth as a Pottstown music teacher, always has so much fun and elicits great performances from his students.

It may also have something to do with a great feeder program, like the one Langdon initiated for Pottstown. The Boyertown Elementary Jazz Band played between some of the high School performances and they were pretty darn good for little kids!
Photo by Evan Brandt
The Boyertown Elementary Jazz Band played a few tunes between high school performances.

Of course, because technology likes to taunt me, all three of Boyertown's performances saved to the iPhone and are posted the usual way below.

Photo courtesy of Missy Weber
She was even kind enough to shoot a picture of my son,
senior Dylan Brandt, during one of his solos. Thanks!
And, as an extra treat, I also recorded (and posted below) one of the three pieces played by Pottstown's own Sunnybrook Dance Band, of which Langdon is a member, and which has closed out ever Boyertown jazz festival performance that I've ever attended.

As an additional note, perhaps you've noticed that some of the photos here were taken by Missy Weber, whose son Julian has gamely moved from the trombone to the keyboard and whose daughter Emily is the bass player for the band.

She posted it on Pottstown's "Band Peeps" Facebook page and graciously allowed me to grab them for this post.

I urge others who take photo or video to contact me and make it available to help promote and celebrate the jazz band. The email that is attached to this blog is evanbrandt01@gmail.com

As you might imagine, it's hard to take photos and shoot video at the same time, as things move along at a pretty good clip at these jazz events. So if you have photos or video that you think are good, I would be happy to use them.

Chances are if you've shot full video, it's better than mine and I would just as soon preserve yours as mine. I just like to get them as quickly as possible so the coverage can be immediate.

And, you'll get the same pay I do ... that would be the satisfaction of throwing a spotlight on our school's musicians in something remotely reminiscent of the way we so breathlessly cover high school sports.

So without further ado, here are the Tweets and video below from Jazz in B-town.

Open Questions About Open Space In New Hanover

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Photo by Evan Brandt
The scouts of Den 73 were lucky. They received their commendations for building a free library box and the collection of 400 books early on in last night's three-hour meeting.



When you only have one meeting a month, it can go long. Last night, the New Hanover Supervisors meeting went on for almost exactly three hours.

But it didn't take all that long for a little news to leak out.

It seems that the Valley Forge Tourism and Convention Board's feasibility study calling for a multi-use sports complex -- that would generate $100 million in economic impact in the first five years -- was interested in property in New Hanover.

The Wassamer tract, located behind the township building on Route 663 and purchased with public open space money to prevent a housing development, might a location to consider, according to the tourism board.

They were perhaps drawn to the location by the two-year-old master recreation plan which shows something like that.

So they called the township and a few officials went down to talk to them.

But that didn't sit well with Supervisor Charles D. Garner Jr., who wanted to know why the meeting happened, what was discussed, and why something like that would even be considered in New Hanover Township.

He also pointed out that given that the tract was purchased with tax money raised specifically for the preservation of open space, turning it into a mega-sports complex might not even be legal, much less advisable.

Commissioners Chairman Phil Agliano and Commissioner Andrew Kelly said it was just a conversation, no commitments had been made and Agliano apologized for not informing the board ahead of time.

In other news, the supervisors agreed to guarantee a $2 million loan for the sewer authority to replace the west branch sewer interceptor, adopted a hiring policy and fired an employee and suspended another.

You'll find it all in the Tweets below.

Champions and Challenges in Pottsgrove

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Photos by Evan Brandt
The Pottsgrove Falcons football team stopped by the Pottsgrove School Board Tuesday night to thank the board for the team jackets purchased after their championship season in District One of division AAAA.




A two-hour school board meeting Tuesday night touched upon many newsworthy subjects, not the least of which was congratulating this year's football Falcons.
Falcons Coach Rick Pennypacker addresses the board.

The team stopped by Tuesday to thank the board for the jackets, awards and monetary support in terms of equipment and uniforms, and to be congratulated on their season.

Also on the docket was a report on enrollment projections for the district, made more urgent in the past year by the approval of one 178-unit development and the consideration of another -- this one with more than 500 housing units -- in Lower Pottsgrove.

The report, delivered at a fast pace by Tracy Healy, owner and president of Ohio-based FutureThink, essentially said that Pottsgrove could expect as few as 25 new students in the next couple of years, 262 or "somewhere in the vicinity of 3,700," which, if I may say so, is quite a range.

Healy said her projections for the students generated by the two  projects, are larger than those made by the developer, based on a number of factors, including their estimates.

The board immediate agreed to authorize Business Manager David Nester to attend the next township commissioners' meeting and share this information with the board.

The district administration figures it has about three years to see how things begin to shake out and hopes to come up with a plan for dealing with possible scenarios -- including new construction or re-districting -- by the start of the next school year, said Nester.

The board also spent some time discussing the perennial shortage of substitute teachers and debated how to address the problem after Superintendent William Shirk provided some further information on the matter as a follow up to a discussion earlier in the month.

Oh, and former technology director Michael Wagman's replacement, Anthony Bickert, was hired at an annual salary of $102,285.

Here are the Tweets:

West Pottsgrove OKs $200K Sewer Settlement

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How much township business can you conduct in 40 minutes?

As it turns out, a fair amount if you are the West Pottsgrove Township Commissioners.

Perhaps the most fruitful thing to occur in that short period of time was an agreement to settle with Rettew Assoc. engineers for the under-engineering of the Grosstown Road sewer pump station.
The Grosstown Road pump station is located adjacent to
the parking lot at the township building which is, obviously,
on Grosstown Road.

The board agreed to a settlement amount of $212,500 with the firm that designed upgrades to the sewer pump station that were, evidently, inadequate to the flow of sewage.

At least three years of problems, including sewer back-ups into the basements of two or three unfortunate households, led to the litigation.

During heavy flows, and heavy rains, the township has to bring in auxiliary equipment to push the sewage through the system to the treatment plant in Pottstown at a fast enough rate to avoid those back-ups.

The fix to the station is estimated to cost $168,000 and the difference between the two figures would cover legal and engineering fees for the fix. But no mention was made of covering the cost of bringing in extra pumping equipment.

In other business, the commissioners voted to extend for three months the five-year-old trash collection contract with Waste Management Inc. to allow for more time to prepare bids for the next contract.

The board also voted to double the rental fee for the pavilion at the township building from $25 to $50 to help defray the costs of clean-up incurred by township staff.

Also, a new Community Day Committee was formed and community members and businesses are being asked to join to help improve the annual celebration. Those interested should contact the township manager's office at 610-323-7717.

And here are the Tweets.

Zoning Hearing Digs Deeper into Quarry Issues

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Photos by Evan Brandt
This map shows the first quarry proposal on the left, which has already received zoning approval, and the second, called GR-IV, on the right, which is the subject of the current zoning hearings in New Hanover. Hoffmansville Road splits the two sites. The road at the bottom of the maps is Church and Coleflesh Road is at the right.



The seemingly endless zoning hearings on the 18 acres that Gibraltar Rock would like to open as a second quarry site continued Thursday night with an expert paid by the quarry company disputing testimony from an expert paid by the township.

By strange coincidence, they disagree on several key points.

Currently at issue is the proximity of the site, called GR-IV, to the former Good's Oil site off Route 663, north north of Big Road, the source of significant groundwater contamination in the area.

For months, the two sides have been arguing about whether a quarry operation would have an effect on the contamination or not.
This map, created by the quarry company's consultant, 
EarthRes, shows the area of groundwater draw-down
for each 50-foot level quarry digs.

The quarry expert insists the flow of the contamination "plume" is flowing southwest, under Route 663.

The township expert says the action of pumping groundwater out of the deepening hole in the ground may well draw the chemical contamination into the pit and thus discharged into a tributary of Swamp Creek, which empties into Perkiomen Creek, a source of public drinking water.

Thursday night was scheduled for Lou Vittorio, the quarry's expert from the firm EarthRes, to rebut testimony from the township's witness, Toby Kessler, from Gilmore Associates.

At the next hearing, on April 6, at 6:30 p.m., Vittorio will be cross-examined by the township's special attorney on the case, Robert Brant.

Among the more notable things Vittorio said are that the state recently asked the company to update the chemicals it will test for in its monitoring wells around the proposed quarry site.

This request, which Vittorio said the company has agreed to, comes on the heels of the discovery in July of a concrete vault on the Good's Oil property containing many of the chemicals which polluted neighbors wells as well as some new ones -- primarily pesticides and petroleum products.

He also said that not only does the quarry's discharge permit from the
Gibraltar Rock witness Lou Vittorino, in the foreground,
testifies Thursday to the New Hanover Zoning Hearing Board.
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection need to be renewed every five years -- when the state can make changes to the monitoring and treatment requirements with which the quarry must comply -- but also every time the quarry opens a new "lift," which is another 50 feet down.

His point is that "in the unlikely event" that contamination reaches the quarry pit, there are many opportunities for the state to react and impose new restrictions or a treatment regimen.

Kessler has already testified that the company's treatment regiment is inadequate for the chemicals in question, particularly a suspected carcinogen called 1,4 dioxane.

The hearing ended with Ross Snook, a relatively new arrival in the 17-year quarry saga, who was earlier this week appointed as chairman of the township's newly reinvigorated Environmental Advisory County.

Some of Lee Hallman's samples.
He submitted evidence from the federal Agency for Toxic Substances Disease Registry which he was prevented from submitted two months ago on the grounds of a technicality.

The evidence had to do with the health effects of groundwater contamination at Camp Lejune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, and the health effects linked to that contamination. Snook's point is that the Lejune chemicals are similar to the chemicals at issue at the Good's Oil site, such as volatile organic compounds like TriChlorEthylene, or TCE.

He also brought along a man named Lee Hallman, who briefly outlined some of the pre-historic Native American artifacts found on the site of both the first and second quarry proposal sites.

He also brought along samples which he said could be as old as 9,000 years, adding "the site is crucial to Pennsylvania pre-history, which we know so little about."

However his testimony was undermined when he admitted he did not know that the Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission has already declared that the quarry operation will not cause any harm to the state's archaeological resources.

Every Penny Counts in Rupert Classrooms

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Photo Courtesy of Pottstown Schools

Nicole Valenti's third grade class at Rupert Elementary School.








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

The students and staff at Rupert Elementary School understand the importance of helping others and the value of every penny counts.

They participated in The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Pennies for Patients fundraising campaign, to help patients with blood cancers and fund research for blood cancers. 

During three weeks in February students brought in pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, and even dollars to school to help the L.L.S. mission to cure leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkin disease, and myeloma and improve the quality of life for patients and their families. 

They can be very proud of themselves for raising $1,612.29. Three classes raised over $100 each and earned a bronze pennant for their class room. 

Molly Callaghan's class earned $100.66; Nicole Leh's class collected $109.16 and Susan Paravis's class collected $179.06. 

Nicole Valenti's class raised the most, $335.80 and earned a gold pennant, a $50 gift card from Office Depot for the class room, and a pizza party for her students. 

"I am very proud of our students and staff for caring for those in need," said Principal Matthew Moyer. "They are learning valuable life lessons and given us another reason to say Proud to be from Pottstown."

Kid's Author 'Chips' In for Read Across America Day

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Photos Courtesy of West Pottsgrove Elementary School
Children's author Kathy Miller brought along her friend Chippy the Chipmunk for a visit to West Pottsgrove Elementary School on Read Across America Day.

Blogger's Note:The following was provided by West Pottsgrove Elementary Principal Terri Koehler

March 2 has become a big deal at West Pottsgrove Elementary School. 

March 2 is the birthday of beloved children’s author Dr. Seuss and is now celebrated in many schools as Read Across America. 
Green Eggs and Ham was on both the
reading menu and eating menu.

This year we were pleased to have award-winning author, Kathy Miller, join us for our celebration. 

Ms. Miller uses nature photography as the basis for her children’s stories about Chippy the Chipmunk. During her presentation Ms. Miller showed the children how she takes the photos, what makes a good photo and shared how the children could use a photo to “find their stories.” 

Ms. Miller also talked about wild birds and showed an example of how chipmunks build their burrows underground. Chippy the Chipmunk even made an appearance and greeted the children as they exited the assembly. 

Following the assembly, we hosted a lunch with Ms. Miller for the top readers in each classroom. 

During the lunch the children got to learn more about the work Ms. Miller does to build her stories. Following the lunch, Ms. Miller then spent the afternoon meeting with the students that had purchased her books and took time to autograph each and every one!

In addition to Ms. Miller’s visit, there were many more things going on in the building to celebrate reading and Dr. Seuss, including a choice of green eggs and ham for lunch! 
Students, teachers and parents all Read Across America on March 2.

There were classroom activities, special mystery readers and our second grade students read to our kindergarten students. 

It was capped off in the evening during our family night at the book fair. This was more than an opportunity for families to shop the book fair, West Pottsgrove believes in using this an opportunity to foster our love of reading and literacy with our families. 

Adopting a camping theme, West staff, volunteers, Terri. Minotto, Julie. Farris and Breanna Flora gathered children around a “campfire” and shared stories about camping. 

Following the stories, there were camping inspired crafts led by Christine Reisner, Jean Randall, Leah Quigley and Mrs. Tomaselli. Mrs. Harrison, building reading specialist, planned and organized all of the activities and events for the day. 

 The author visit and special lunch were made possible through the generosity of the West Pottsgrove PTA.

Free March 12 Lecture at Hopewell Furnace Explores the Lonely Lives of the Forgotten Charcoal Colliers

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A collier's work was lonely and took place in the woods.










Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site.

Who were the Colliers? What did they do? Where and how did they live?

These and other questions will be explored as the Friends of Hopewell Furnace host local historian Spencer Claypoole’s presentation on the lifestyles of these famous charcoal making men and women. 

The free program will begin at 2 p.m. in the Hopewell Furnace Conference Center on Sunday, March 12.

Three hundred years ago iron was first produced along the Manatawny Creek in Pennsylvania. 

Charcoal is a key ingredient. Colliers created that charcoal in the Pennsylvania wilderness of today’s Berks and Chester counties. 

For most of the year, Colliers lived in remote areas of the woods. The rest of the time they lived in houses some of which stand today in North Coventry.

Claypoole will help provide insight into what that life was like.

A member of the North Coventry Township Historical Commission for over 25 years and chairman since 2000, Claypoole is also a member of the Board of Supervisors. 

In 2012 the Owen J. Roberts Education Foundation gave Claypoole its Community Service Award. 

And in 2016 The Chester County Historical Preservation Network, of which Spencer was a past member, awarded him the Jane L.S. Davidson Award for historical preservation. 

Spencer holds a Masters degree in social work and has worked for close to 40 years with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania during which time he wrote and gave talks on the importance of local history to the growth of our nation.

Established in 1994, the Friends of Hopewell Furnace is the official non-profit fundraising arm of Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site. A 501(c)3 citizen organization, its mission is to support the preservation, maintenance and programs of Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site. 

Donations to the Friends may be tax deductible according to the rules set by the Internal Revenue Service. For more information visit the Friends web site at www.friendsofhopewellfurn.org.

While at Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site visitors are encouraged to go into the village, tour the buildings and learn about iron making and why Hopewell Furnace is important to our nation’s history. 

Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday, the park is located five miles south of Birdsboro, PA, off of Route 345. 

For more information stop by the park's visitor center, call 610-582-8773, visit the park's web site at www.nps.gov/hofu, or contact the park by e-mail at hofu_superintendent@nps.gov.



A Douglass (Mont.) Blog Post About Nothing

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Photo by Evan Brandt

State Rep. Marcy Toepel, R-147th Dist., addresses the Douglass (Mont.) Township Supervisors meeting Monday night, but she had nothing to report.


In a meeting reminiscent of the "Seinfeld" episode where George and Jerry pitch a TV show about nothing, the Douglass (Mont.) Supervisors had little to discuss Monday night.

State Rep. Marcy Toepel, R-147th Dist., was home from Harrisburg and stopped in, but what did she have to report?

Nothing.

Township Solicitor Bob Brant?

Nothing, (although one wag in the audience asked aloud how much that will cost us.)

Public Works Director Michael Heydt?

Nothing.

Boy was this going to be a short meeting, and it was.

There was something of consequence, however.

Josh Hagadorn, the engineer from Gilmore Assoc., announced that bids for the new public works building are out on the street.

The board rejected the first set of bids at the Feb. 21 meeting. The new bids will be opened on March 27.

The board also voted to hire Bob Dries, the part-time zoning and inspections supervisor to be the township's construction supervisor at a rate of $45 per hour.

Supervisors Chairman Anthony Kuklinski said the township has budget $900,000 for the project and "we will pay for it out of general funds and it will not cause a tax increase."

Dries said the project will take between four to five months to complete. It will be built at the same location as the current facility, 108 Municipal Dr., which will be demolished.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Getting Your Financial House in Order for Free

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Blogger's Note:
The following was provided by Genesis Housing Corp.

Warmer weather is coming soon and there has never been a better time to “Spring Clean” your credit.

Learn the best ways to reduce your debts. Learn how to improve your credit scores. Make good decisions with your money. Learn what they never covered when you were in high school!

Genesis Housing Corporation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit community development corporation, will hold FREE classes covering those subjects on Wednesday evenings, March 15th, March 22nd and March 29th from 6 to 8 p.m. at the YWCA Tri-County building, 300 King Street, Pottstown, PA 19464.

Register for free classes at www.genesishousing.org.

The classes are designed to help to:
  • Understand Credit -- Information on credit scores, improving your scores, re-establishing credit and dealing with debt. (Wednesday, March 15, 2017).
  • Money Management– Information on preparing realistic budgets that are more than just monthly bills, prioritizing spending in tough times and understanding how current spending impacts your future financial options (Wednesday, March 22, 2017).
  • Home Buying Basics -- Understand the home buying process – what lenders require, types of mortgages, selecting good lenders and realtors, Agreements of Sale, home inspections and first- time homebuyer grant programs (Wednesday, March 29, 2017).
Nikki Holcroft, an award winning and certified housing counselor, will teach the classes. 

Holcroft has more than twenty-five years experience working as a housing counselor, mortgage banker and community lender. 

Holcroft has worked with Genesis Housing Corporation since 2001 and teaches monthly classes on credit, money management and the home buying process. Holcroft also provides individual housing counseling sessions to help clients achieve their financial goals. 

Holcroft has worked with families to restructure their mortgages, avoid foreclosures and reduce their debts.

Registration can be made online at www.genesishousing.org or by calling Genesis Housing Corporation at 610-275- 4357. 

The Pottstown classes are funded, in part, by BB and T Bank through the PA Neighborhood Tax Credit Program. Additional funding was provided by Montgomery County.

Genesis Housing Corporation’s housing counseling programs provide free classes and individual counseling helping over 10,000 clients. 

Monthly classes focus on topics not taught in regular school including understanding credit, credit repair, money management, saving plans, grant programs and understanding the home buying process including selecting a realtor and finding the best mortgage.

Since 1994, Genesis Housing Corporation has served Montgomery County as a 501(c)(3) non-profit community development corporation and is dedicated to the development of affordable housing, the revitalization of neighborhoods and educating consumers on housing and financial issues. 

Genesis Housing Corporation is approved by PA Housing Finance Agency (PHFA) and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for housing counseling. 

Genesis Housing Corporation is an approved agency for many programs including the Montgomery County First-time Home Buyers Program and the Norristown First-time Home Buyers Program. 

In addition, Genesis Housing Corporation has developed affordable housing by rehabilitating vacant homes, developing apartments and by building new housing for income eligible families. Genesis Housing Corporation also renovates existing owner-occupied homes for eligible households for the Montgomery County Homeowner Rehab Program.

For more information on Genesis Housing Corporation programs, call 610-275- 4357 or visit www.genesishousing.org or on Facebook (www.facebook/GenesisHousing).

Putting the (Medical) Pot in Pottstown

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I would be lying to pretend that the big story from last night's borough council meeting was NOT a proposal to establish a medical marijuana growing facility in the 700 block of Queen Street.

It was.

And chances are, you already read all about it my story in The Mercury here, so I won't be repetitive here in the blog. (I mostly wanted to use that headline...).

But there were a few other things of interest that happened, so let's talk about those.

First, Council President Dan Weand finally got his numbers about new jobs in the borough.

Some of you will recall that his goal for 2016 was 100 new "living wage jobs" in the borough. And it looks like at least part of that goal was accomplished.

Using tax figures from Portnoff Associates -- figures that were evidently not easy to get -- Weand reported that in 2015, the borough had 10,440 jobs and 2,777 of them were held by borough residents.

In 2016, Pottstown had 11,716 jobs, of which, 2,846 of were held by borough residents.

That means the year-over-year increase was 1,276 additional jobs, 69 of them held by borough residents. Now how many of them were "living wage jobs?" Well that, apparently is a mystery for the ages.

But given that Weand is running for reelection this year, you won't be surprised to know he took a victory lap anyway. "I think that's pretty impressive. I had not realized we had grown so much," he said.

Also of interest is Council Vice President Sheryl Miller's crusade to lower the 10 percent late fee for late water and sewer bills -- something which she has announced she has personal experience resenting.

Arguing that the fee is over the top -- most utilities charge a 1 or 2 percent late fee, she said -- Miller wants it lowered and some people on council, Dennis Arms and Joe Kirkland, seem inclined to agree. More on that next month, apparently.

During his report, Borough Manager Mark Flanders announced that police and codes officers will team up through September, visiting borough residents systematically, finding out what their problems are, identifying some, then returning for follow up.

That means if your house has code violations, and they get spotted during these walks, you will get a grace period of about two weeks to take care of them before a citation gets issued.

Flanders said this will be an ongoing enterprise.

And finally, as the meeting wound down, Arms, recalling past glories of The Digital Notebook, asked a question the notebook asked in 2015 -- Why Do We Need Wards?

That post, written when both Ross Belovich and Arms were running for the Democratic nomination for the Fourth Ward seat, noted that if everyone ran at large, both could have been candidates for council.

Arms said with petitions circulating and local elections coming up, its a good time to talk about it. "I know I get calls from people in other wards," he said.

Anyway, on to the Tweets:

Let's Talk: Social and Emotional Learning

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

Did you know that children have a better chance of success in and out of school when they have healthy social and emotional relationships with others?

Did you know that it takes just one healthy relationship to make a difference in a child’s life? 

Well, the good news is that all of this is true and much more. The Pottstown School District recognizes the benefits of these facts and is doing something to make a difference.

A 2017 Spring Let’s Talk Community Conversation Series has been planned in each of the four elementary schools to address parents’ concerns on “Helping Our Children Grow Socially and Emotionally.” 

This year, the Pottstown School District introduced a Social and Emotional Learning Curriculum in volunteer classrooms. The plan is for all class rooms to participate during the 2017-2018 school year for grades Pre-K to 9th. 

The conversations will begin to share how the social and emotional program will benefit ALL students and allow parents the opportunity to learn what is happening in the schools and how they can use parts of the program at home while providing their own input.

Here's a video the school district produced to tell you a little more.


The Let’s Talk series will not only allow parents a time to talk with other parents but will allow families to enjoy a FREE meal and have opportunity to win FREE prizes while their children participate in an entertaining show. 

FREE childcare and Spanish interpreters will be available at each school for these fun filled and informative events. The Let’s Talk conversations are FREE and available to families in the Pottstown School District and will be held at:
  • Elizabeth B. Barth Elementary March 16, 2017 5:30 to 7:30
  • Lincoln Elementary March 27, 2017 5:30 to 7:30
  • Rupert Elementary March 28, 2017 5:50 to 7:30
  • Franklin Elementary March 30, 2017 5:30 to 7:30
The Our kids...Their Future or Let’s Talk conversations are supported by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and the University of Pennsylvania Penn Project for Civic Engagement. 

The grant has enabled the school district to work with the community-particularly families, as well as the local agencies and community leaders who serve them to determine how the home school partnership can be strengthened, to find out what can be done to increase family participation and to improve support for ALL children’s growth and development from birth through elementary school.

For more information and to learn more, please contact Valerie Jackson, PEAK Community Engagement Coordinator at 610-256-6370, vjackson@potstownsd.org or visit www.pottstownschools.org.
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