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Hill School Donations Headed to Hurricane Victims

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Submitted Photos
Members of The Hill School hockey team load a bus full of donations to be shipped to Puerto Rico hurricane victims.








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

Members of The Hill School boys’ hockey team loaded Hill’s “Big Blue” school bus with supplies meant for Puerto Rico's hurricane victims Friday.

Loaded were: 60 cases of water; 24 large cases of diapers; 50 flashlights with batteries and extra batteries; 15 large boxes of canned food; 24 boxes full of dry goods ranging from cereal to Ramen noodles; and 12 large boxes of toiletries and personal sanitary items. 

Hill Instructor of Computer Science Damian Baraty, along with Heather Gelting, human resources director, and Lisa Demetrio, Sodexo dining manager, then drove the bus to Allentown to deliver the supplies to be shipped to Puerto Rico.

This effort was part of a larger endeavor led by Mrs. Demetrio’s neighbor, Ty Solis, a Pottstown resident and native of Puerto Rico. Solis’ family resides in Patillas, Puerto Rico, one of the many areas of the island that has suffered great devastation in the wake of Hurricane Maria.

In just 10 days, students, faculty, and staff, and the greater Pottstown community came together to support the people of Puerto Rico to collect the greatly needed items. After an initial call for assistance in an email sent to our community by Gelting, and publicity from local press, The Hill School’s Business Office and Gatehouse soon became temporary collection centers as Hill employees, parents, and community members generously dropped off basic need and emergency items, as well as monetary donations.

In addition to the collection, Quin Mastrangelo 2018, president of the campus Young Republicans Club, organized a bake sale to raise money for this effort.

Quin Mastrangelo, center, is joined by Heather Gelting and
Lisa Demetrio purchasing supplies in Costco.
His sale amassed $300, which was added to the contributions, for a total of $2,058. 

Quin accompanied Gelting and Demetrio to the local Costco to purchase additional items, which were included in the delivery to Allentown and then transported via a shipping container that Mr. Solis had arranged to have safely delivered to Patillas.

“We estimate that more than $3,500 of goods were donated on Friday, although it’s very hard to put a value on all the donated items dropped off,” remarked Heather. “It really was an amazing effort.”

Water for Puerto Rico | Grassroots Efforts Led by Hill Alumni

While The Hill drive has concluded, the need for assistance by residents of Puerto Rico is ongoing. For those still wishing to help, Hill alumnus and resident of San Juan, Alejandro Calaf Reichard and his Hill classmate, Ian Stewart, both class of 1996, have created a Facebook effort, Water for Puerto Rico

They are collecting various basic need and emergency supplies, in particular water filters and filtering systems. All items are being sent directly to Alejandro who will travel to the affected neighborhoods to distribute to those who need it most in Puerto Rico.

The efforts of Reichard and Stewart have reached across the world, thanks in part to their strong Hill ties and connections with classmates and other Hill alumni. What started as a small grassroots effort on Facebook to collect resources for clean water has now grown into a group nearly 400 strong with a growing list of initiatives, including connecting charitable organizations with donors and cancer patients with stateside hospitals.

“What started as one package being sent, has evolved into a group conversation on Facebook,” said Stewart. “From there it has grown into a group with more than 350 members. As of the first 30 hours, we estimate about $10,000 worth of supplies were in motion directly because of this group.”

While Reichard and Stewart are focused on the immediate needs of residents of the island, they also recognize that this is just the beginning, and they are committed to assisting with the reconstruction of Puerto Rico.

“After things get settled with water and the aid gets to the last person in need, the reconstruction begins,” noted Reichard. “Ian and I know the need here for helping people reconstruct their homes and lives is long, and it's a complicated issue altogether.”
Donations are dropped off in Allentown.

“We figure we can keep our initiative going by evolving it into getting building supplies to those who need it the most, in particular the basics which we can't make in Puerto Rico, including wood, nails, nuts, bolts, and washers,” he said.

If you are interested in learning more about how you can help, "Like" the Water for Puerto Rico Facebook page or request to join the group planning page. Reichard is very active on the page, posting updates, news, and videos of his travels. A “Wish List” of items also is available on Amazon.com, which can be ordered and shipped directly to Alejandro in San Juan.

Reichard plans to be at Patillas when the donations from The Hill School and Pottstown arrive on the island. The success of these endeavors truly is a testament to The Hill School’s concern for the greater good and the back of each, the strength of all.

Garden Award and Harvest Party at Mosaic Saturday

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The Mosaic Community Garden at 423 Chestnut St. has won the "Garden of Distinction Award" from the Pennsylvania Hosrticultural Society.









The Mosaic Community Land Trust's garden at 423 Chestnut St. will be awarded the Garden of Distinction Award from the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's "Gardening and Greening" contest, according to an email sent out by garden manager Daniel Price.

"This is due to the amazing community and plot holders that have put years of work into these gardens. You continue to showcase how beautiful of a community Pottstown truly is," Price wrote.

To celebrate that achievement and to thank all for an amazing year, the community is invited to the gardens' end of the season Harvest Party tomorrow, Saturday, Oct. 14th between 12 and 4 p.m. at the garden at 423 Chestnut Street

Similar to last year, the event is in conjunction with Haunts on High and Pottstown Arts Walk and is an open house for the entire community. Food and drink will be on hand, but pot luck dishes are welcome too. (Perhaps it’s something made from vegetables in your plot or home garden.) 

Feel free to invite friends and family and spread the word to your neighbors. All are welcome. 
A "Harvest Party" will be held from 12 to 4 p.m. Saturday

In addition to the food, there will be activities for children as well plant swapping for recreational gardeners that participated or would like to participate in next year’s garden contest.

"I want to thank each of you for being involved in our community gardens this past year. With the departure of Laura (Washington) and with me hitting the ground running in spring, the last six months have flown by," Price said in his email. "The entire community has been extremely welcoming and I’m eternally grateful for your energy, love and patience this year."

As the season winds down, registrations will available for new members as well as a sign up list for returning members from this or previous years. 

Mosaic is also inviting suggestions for names for their two gardens, one at 423 Chrstnut St. and the other at 615 Chestnut St..  

"As we move forward and grow, the goal is to get each garden to have it’s own identity and committee. I know myself and the Mosaic board would love to hear your ideas of what that would look like," Price wrote. 

Hopewell Honors Volunteer With Original Quilt

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Hopewell Quilters from left, Becky Hughes, Elverson; Eve Biamonte, Coatesville; David Blackburn, Hopewell Furnace NHS Site Manager; Lee Norman, Oley; Beth Shugar, Reading. Quilt recipient, bottom right Ellen Boyer of Pottstown.








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

A handmade quilt was presented to Pottstown resident Ellen Boyer at the Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site Visitor Center.  On Wednesday, Oct. 4.

The quilt was made by The Hopewell Quilters, a group of volunteers at Hopewell Furnace that demonstrate the art and craft of quilting to park visitors. Mrs. Boyer, a long time volunteer at Hopewell Furnace, has created historic costumes for events and activities at Hopewell Furnace for many years. 

Fabric used in the quilt was provided by Boyer and represented many years of her costume work at Hopewell. 

The quilt’s design, “Spools and Thimbles,” was purchased by Boyer and represents 305 hours of work to create it. 

“The quilt is a wonderful representation of how heritage, tradition, life ways, and volunteerism connect to the work we do at Hopewell Furnace NHS” said Site Manager David Blackburn.

Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site preserves and interprets an early American industrial landscape and community. Showcasing an iron plantation and its surrounding countryside, Hopewell Furnace was active from 1771 to 1883. 

The park’s facilities are currently open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week. It will return to a five day a week operation, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday, the week of Oct. 29. 

The Historic Site is closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. Hopewell Furnace is located five miles south of Birdsboro, PA, off of Route 345. Admission to the park is free. 

For more information, download our app, stop by the park's visitor center, call 610-582-8773, or visit the park’s web site at www.nps.gov/hofu.

Re-Learning the Lessons of the Vietnam War

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Watching the epic Ken Burns/Lynn Novick documentary "The Vietnam War" over the past two weeks has been both a revelation and a confirmation.

The confirmation? Politicians lie.

Duh.

What came as a revelation is something I think I also already knew but didn't want to face so baldly -- the depth of the lies politicians will tell and the lengths they will go to to preserve them, no matter the cost in lives, trust or treasure.

Watching, hour after hour, I confess to being constantly staggered by what they told the public, versus what they knew and said in private -- now known thanks to the passage of time.

There is no partisanship in this observation.

The first and formative lies were told by Democrats -- first by JFK, perhaps our most revered president, then by LBJ, who watched as his Great Society anti-poverty agenda was slowly crushed bneath the weight of a war he could not win and did not think he could not afford to lose.
THE ARCHITECTS OF WAR: JFK, Robert McNamara and LBJ.

Needless to say, Republican Richard Nixon was no slouch in the lying department, but by the time he began to tell his whoppers, no one could claim to have clean hands when it came to Vietnam.

There was nothing clean about it.

It was a dirty war, in reasoning, rhetoric and reality.

The soldiers in the field were fighting a dirty jungle war, with no front lines, no clear mission and, no end in sight.

How could a soldier, or anyone for that matter, be expected to maintain their composure, their
motivation, hell, their sanity, after crawling up hill through hellfire and watching friends die to take ultimately meaningless high grounds like "Hamburger Hill," only to have them abandoned by command days later,and quickly re-occupied by the enemy?

The government our soldiers were fighting to preserve in South Vietnam was filthy with corruption and the government that had sent the soldiers there to fight was making a mess of things back home.

Soldiers were shooting students, African-Americans were rioting in the streets and protesters at political conventions, thousands were marching both for and against the conflict and soldiers in Vietnam were asking themselves exactly what they were doing in Southeast Asia.

I was, I admit, admiring of the role the press played in revealing the lies and contradictions at the time.

Reporters like Morley Safer, Joseph Galloway and Neil Sheehan, risked their lives, their reputations and repeatedly spoke truth to power, over and over again, in their pursuit of the truth.

In all honesty, as proud as it made me to be a part of that profession, I don't think I would have had the balls to be a battlefield reporter during that war.

Without their steadfast reporting, most of the country would not have realized what was really going on in Vietnam, as opposed to the lies their government was telling them.

Civilian women and children were among those murdered at My Lai.
Sadly, pieces of that truth -- the comparatively isolated incidents of crimes and atrocities like the My Lai Massacre -- were too broadly applied to the returning veterans who had fought with honor as best circumstances allowed and were shunned by a nation which owed them a sincere apology.

The war, opposition to it, and Nixon's brilliantly perceptive "southern strategy" in winning the election -- recognizing and cultivating the deep desire of white suburbanites to just make it all go away so their lives could continue on as before -- combined to gouge deep divides in this country which are still visible today in red/blue states on election night maps.

And I fear the lessons of the Vietnam era are lessons we may forget because so much high school history only manages to get as far as World War II, or perhaps the Korean War. And so few people are curious to learn more about a war we "lost."

Worse yet, I fear this forgotten history is on the verge of being repeated as our leadership -- whose only consistent theme seems to be to undo everything accomplished by the previous administration -- shambles incoherently toward a mixed menu of disasters which may soon find us plunged into war, or environmental destruction or an unsustainable disregard for our less fortunate citizens, or all of the above and more.

I have seen some of the criticisms of the film, that it over-simplifies things or has left things out. That may be true. In fact, given the complexities of the time and the length of time it covers, how could that not be the case?

But born in 1964, I am too young to be the judge of that by personal experience.

My earliest memories of an awareness of the war are asking my parents, who were in the kitchen washing the dishes, how many wars America had won and how many had it lost and being puzzled by the meaningful look they exchanged.

Regardless, whether it is complete or not, it strikes me that the 20 hours of education masterfully assembled by Novick and Burns is as good a place as any to start learning those history lessons in the dwindling hope that we don't re-live it.

YWCA Hosting Week Without Violence Events

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by YWCA Tri-County Area.

How does violence against women and children impact our community? What resources exist for women and children in our community? What can we do to make positive change?

YWCA Tri-County Area will participate in Week Without Violence, Oct. 16-20, a national YWCA movement raising awareness of the devastating effects of violence in our society. 

As a part of its mission to promote peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all, YWCA Tri-County Area works to bring communities together to combat violence and injustice.

According to the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence, since 2006 Montgomery County ranks fourth among Pennsylvania counties in fatalities linked to domestic violence.

YWCA Tri-County Area will host a number of activities during Week Without Violence to raise awareness of violence in our community, and of the inequities, biases and “isms” that lead to violence:
  • "Persimmon Purse Bingo" from 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 20, at Norco Fire Company, 144 W. Schuylkill Road, North Coventry will raise awareness and support YWCA's Teen Dating Violence Awareness program, which helps teens learn about healthy relationships, and how to recognize danger signals from their dating partners. The color persimmon reflects the strength and confidence of YWCA. Register here: yw3caBINGO.eventbrite.com
  • YW’s Tri-County Area’s Early Education Center will host an open house and informational event from 3 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 19, at 315 King St., Pottstown. Representatives of the Women’s Center of Montgomery County will be on hand to offer information about gender-based violence prevention, support, and resources.
  • Young artists are invited to take part in a Youth Art Contest marking Week Without Violence. All youth grades 6-12 in the Tri-County Area are invited to submit original art celebrating YWCA’s mission of promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all.
  • Children from YW’s Early Education Center will take part in a Clothesline Project, a national project founded to raise awareness of violence against women. The children will create T-shirt- shaped posters promoting YWCA’s mission of peace, justice, freedom and dignity.

Artwork from the Youth Art Contest and the Clothesline Project will be displayed at YWCA Tri-County Area during an open house from 3 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 19, at YW’s Early Education Center, 315 King St., Pottstown, and at the Persimmon Purse Bingo event from 6 to 10 p. m. Friday, Oct. 20, at the Norco Fire Company, North Coventry.

YWCA Tri-County Area is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. YW3CA is a leader in advocacy for women and girls, works to eliminate racism, and empowers women through quality affordable childcare, adult literacy, and a host of programs to support the health and vitality of women, girls, and families.

Garage Bids Rejected, No Tax Hike, Insect Invaders

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Township commissioners made it official Monday night, rejecting all bids for the new $2 million public works facility at Heather Place.

Commissioners Chairman Elwood Taylor cast the only no vote.

He said characterizations of him being disappointed by the outcry from the Oct. 2 meeting at which many residents spoke out against the project were inaccurate. He said the township had been exploring the issue for many years and this was the outcome and he supports the process.

Nevertheless, Taylor said he looks forward to the alternatives produced by a committee of residents who volunteered to look into the matter.

Discussion of the township budget also indicated that in its current draft form, no tax hike is anticipated, although there was some spirited discussion about the annual cost of sewer service, voiced mostly by the audience.

And our friends in the insect family are really bugging folks in Upper Pottsgrove.

Township Manager Carol Lewis said the township is receiving lots of complaints about the invasive species spotted lantern fly, which comes here by way of Korea and is a danger to trees.

Commissioner France Kazalkovich, who lives in a townhouse development said "I have exactly one tree on my property, and it was covered from top to bottom with these things."

State Sen. Judy Schwank, D-11th Dist., will hold a hearing on this threat on Wednesday, at 9 a.m. and the hearing will be livestreamed on her web site (click here).

In the meantime, Lewis is pursuing a PECO grant to replace the ash trees on public property the township is expected to lose (those that were not harvested for lumber) to another invasive insect, the emerald ash borer.

Before I release you to revel in the live Tweets from the meeting, I would be remiss if I did not share a new term Township Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. invented, which talking about the intersection of the zoning ordinance as it relates to farm animals, and the animal control ordinance adopted this year -- "horse densities."

Evidently it relates to a "horses-per-acre" ratio, and not a measure of how dense your horse may be.

And without further ado, here are the Tweets:


No Water or Sewer Rate Hike Planned for 2018

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Let's face it folks. You read the above headline, you breathed a sigh of relief and moved on.

Well, for those curious souls who want a little more detail, I have a little more detail.

First, don't forget that the average Pottstown water bill went up 14 percent in July. (There is a link to that story below).

Second, both budgets are preliminary, according to Finance Director Janice Lee.

She said borough council must ultimately approve both and the sewer budget vote is nothing more than a recommendation.

"We don't even have the health insurance numbers yet," she said.

Nevertheless, here's where things stand.

The total 2018 water fund budget totals $6,884,272 as of Tuesday night.

The 2018 sewer fund budget totals $11,606,843 as of  Tuesday night.

Keep in mind, that includes several funds, such as street pipes, capital projects and more.

But unless there is a major change due to numbers not yet finalized, or council makes a big change (yeah, right!) what you're paying now for water and sewer is what you'll pay in 2018.

There was little else of interest except that utilities administrator Bob Plenderleith, a nice man who helped straighten out the numbers in the finance office, announced he is retiring in January.

He is very popular with the townships, which have grown fond of his accuracy, and I always found him extremely knowledgeable and helpful. Best of luck to you Bob.

Here are the Tweets.

Pottstown Air Force Jr. ROTC: A Tradition of Service

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

Pottstown High School Jr. Air Force ROTC Unit PA 951 believes in service to others above self. 

The 80-cadet unit under the command of Col. James Porter lives up to the words everyday. 

Veteran's Day ceremonies in Memorial Park.
During the first four weeks of school cadets volunteered for more than 10 projects all of which take place after school hours and on weekends. 

Everywhere there is a community event that needs assistance ROTC can be found giving a helping hand before, during and after the activity. 

From providing support to set up and clean up at events like the Library Book Sale, Carousel of Flavor,Airport Community Day, Pet Fair, Harrier Cross Country Invitational, serving as guides at both Pottstown and Pottsgrove High School Open Houses to providing an Honor Guard at athletic events and Veterans Community Day cadets can be found serving the community.
Helping out at Airport Day.

During the first month of school the Unit provided more than 750 hours of community service. 

Pottstown High School ROTC Unit has been recognized nineteen years in a row by the U.S. Air Force with the International Distinguished Unit Award , an award that goes to the top 10 percent of the more than 900 units world wide. 

Col. Porter said "I am proud of the young men and women of our unit, they are preparing themselves to become the future leaders of our country."

$500,000 Savings Pending for Pottstown Taxpayers

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If you blinked Thursday night, you might have missed the school board meeting.

The board was done with its work session in just over 30 minutes. Not sure if that's a new record but its darn close.

But even at that speed, there was some news to glean, the most significant of which is a pending savings of $573,591 as the result of a bond re-financing.

Board member Kim Stilwell said the finance committee has endorsed the plan and a vote Monday will move things forward.

Board Vice President Emanuel Wilkerson said that with the possibility of the loss of Pottstown Hospital from the tax rolls, the board should once again be asking the community for suggestions about how to economize.

(Last time the call when out, there were few responses.)

And, in the gloom and doom department, Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez said a potential cut to Federal Communications Commission funding at the federal level has the potential to cost the district because of federal funding it uses to buy electronic equipment.

But not to end on a dark note, another Pottstown teacher has used the district's housing initiative to buy a home here in the borough.

And with that, here are the Tweets.

Hill School Offering Trick or Treat Saturday

Pottstown High School Student Takes Oath of Office

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Magesterial District Justice Scott Palladino, center, swears in Johnay Cranford, the newest student member of the Pottstown School Board Monday night while her father John holds the Bible for her.


If you thought Thursday's School Board meeting was short, it was War & Peace compared to Monday night.

It was only 17 minutes long and would have been shorter if Ron Williams had been absent.

The one piece of good news to report was that Pottstown High School Junior Johnay Cranford was sworn in as the newest student member of the school board.

Aside from that, the board agreed with one vote on 17 of the 28 items on the agenda with a single vote.

The rest didn't take much longer.

Here are the Tweets.

Pottsgrove Ponders Future With An Extra $1 Million

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The Pottsgrove School Board has a problem we'd all like to have -- more than $1 million in surplus funds it did not expect to have.

Now the question they have to answer is what to do with it.

The short version of the story is they put off most of the decision, at the urging of board member Rick Rabinowitz, until after the election on Nov. 7.

Because there is the possibility of new board members coming on, it would be inappropriate to make long-term decisions that will have an impact on the next budget, without giving potential new board members the opportunity to weigh in with their vote.

What the board did decide to do is to put the $375,000 this year's budget had built built to take out of the retirement fund to help balance the budget, back into the retirement fund given that it was not needed, as it turns out.

The board had been projecting a $600,000 deficit this year, but instead it came in with a surplus added to the savings, depending on how you count such things.

Business Manager David Nester said the primary reasons for the surplus were, no big surprise, savings and additional revenue.

The real estate transfer tax provided a nice bump when Upland Square was sold to another owner and salary and benefit costs came in below their projections.

But you'll have to wait until after the election to find out where the money goes and I have a prediction -- some will go into the capital reserve fund, and none will come back to you in the form of a refund check.

Here are the Tweets.

Of Invasive Species and Competitive Ax Throwing

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Wednesday night's regional planning committee only lasted about 20 minutes, but a fair amount of things were covered.

A free regional traffic study by the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission will finally get underway next month, according to Montgomery County officials.

And the planners voted to endorse a letter asking for an increase in federal funding to fight the invasive spotted lanternfly species, now covering the trunk of a tree near you.

So far, Pennsylvania has received $5 million from the federal government but needs $50 million to effectively combat the Korean native.

County officials also reported that in the last few years, more than $360,000 has been awarded through state mini-grants to 18 different park improvement projects in seven of the eight municipalities that participate in the regional planning group.

Two items of interest also came up.

East Coventry Planning Commission Chairman Walter Woessner, Jr. reported that a New Jersey firm that auctions heavy equipment is looking at opening up an auction and storage facility on 100 acres at the corner of Route 724 and Frick's Lock Road, which has the potential to create a traffic problem during auctions.

And Pottstown Borough Councilman Ryan Procsal reported he met with the new owner of the Ellis Mills building in the 200 block of High Street in the borough.

They want to establish a "Reading Terminal Market-type" business on the first floor and host competitive ax throwing on the second.

Yeah, competitive ax throwing.

I will leave you with that thought.

Here are the Tweets.

Arboretum Hosts 'Haunted Woods' This Weekend

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Althouse Arboretum.

The community is invited for a night of screams and fears at the annual Haunted Woods event at the Althouse Arboretum in Upper Pottsgrove Township on Friday and Saturday night, Oct. 27 and 28. 

Parking will be available at the Hillside Aquatic Club on Moyer Road where a very short shuttle ride will take thrill seekers to the Arboretum. 

Once there, visitors will walk through the forest along candle-lit trails where the unexpected is waiting to happen. 

Upon exiting the woods, visitors can enjoy a marshmallow roast by the bonfires, food and drink, and watching scary movie scenes in the open meadow. The event is designed so that anyone can come by any time between 7 and 9 p.m. The cost is $7 per person.

The GreenAllies, a 501c3 nonprofit, is working with Pottsgrove High School’s Spark the Wave Club to sponsor the community event. 

GreenAllies is a national organization working to empower students to be sustainability leaders in their communities. It manages the Althouse Arboretum, a newly constructed community outdoor education center and preservation site on Upper Pottsgrove Township open space land. 

It is open to the public daily for hiking.. It is funded solely by grants and donations through the GreenAllies organization.

Hill Announces Scholarship for Military Students

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Photo Courtesy of The Hill School
Marshall Wallach with Amelia Sniffen, the first recipient of the Wallach Family Military Scholarship at The Hill School.


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

The Hill School is announcing an opportunity for high school or soon-to-be high school students who have a parent who is an active duty commissioned officer in the U.S. Armed Forces.

The Wallach Family Military Scholarship is a needs-based scholarship that was created by a U.S. Army veteran and Hill alumnus who attended The Hill, thanks to generous financial aid, and who wants to give back to other young people.

Marshall Wallach wishes to make such an opportunity available to additional students whose families’ have similar records of service to our country. The application deadline is Jan. 31.

Deep, life-long gratitude to The Hill School is only one reason why Marshall Wallach ’61 made a generous gift of $1.2 million to endow the Wallach Family Military Scholarship.

Marshall also was motivated by his patriotism; by a desire to increase understanding between the civilian and military sectors of U.S. society; and by his belief that students who have been exposed to the life-broadening experience of growing up as the children of career officers will enrich the entire Hill community.

Marshall was joined in making the gift by his wife, Diane, and sons, Marshall ’05, Forbes ’07, and Clark.

Amelia Sniffin ’19 arrived at The Hill in the fall of 2016 as the first Wallach Family Military Scholarship recipient. 

Amelia’s father, Colonel Peter Sniffin, is a member of The Hill School class of 1981 and a Chaplain in the U.S. Army. Amelia, now a fifth former (junior), grew up hearing about The Hill and dreamed of being at student at her father’s alma mater. However, it was not within her family’s reach until they heard about the Wallach Family Military Scholarship.

“I am so grateful for the Wallach Family Military Scholarship,” remarked Amelia. “Hill never would have been an option without it. I would encourage anyone who has the opportunity to apply for this scholarship to do so.”

The Wallachs’ benevolence funds an annual need-based scholarship that can cover up to 100 percent of each student recipient’s demonstrated need. The Wallach Family Military Scholarship is intended for a highly qualified student who is the child of an active duty officer in the U.S. Armed Forces and whose family has demonstrated financial need. Learn more about the Scholarship qualifications.

A self-described “Army brat,” Marshall said his family has long and strong military connections – and, in particular, U.S. Army Calvary connections. His father had a 30-year military career; he served under General George S. Patton in World War II and taught on the faculty of the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa. 

Marshall and his brother served in Vietnam, and their grandfather also was career Army. Marshall served three years in the U.S. Army as an officer, including one year in Vietnam.

Similarly, Amelia’s father, Colonel Sniffin, has served in the U.S. Army for nearly 30 years. He recently moved from South Carolina and accepted a position at the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., bringing the Sniffin family closer to Pottstown and The Hill School.

“The Wallach Family Military Scholarship is a way for me to give back to The Hill and to help another military family provide a Hill education to their son or daughter,” said Marshall, an Honorary Hill Trustee.

Marshall attended 14 schools before landing at The Hill as a fifth form student on financial aid.

Like Marshall, Amelia knows the challenges of moving frequently, as she has lived in five different states and spent more than four years in Germany.

“I’ve never been at one school for three years,” remarked Amelia. “Having the opportunity to attend The Hill School for three years and make friendships that I know will last a lifetime is a blessing.”

Knowing she won’t have to leave after a year has allowed Amelia to become more involved in The Hill community. She is a freshman prefect in Dell Dormitory; a member of the varsity girls’ basketball team; and a volunteer at the local Boys’ and Girls’ club.

“We really are fortunate to have Amelia as the first Wallach Family Military Scholar and she has made a great impact on our school community,” remarked Assistant Headmaster for Enrollment Management Tom Eccleston ’87.

“Amelia personifies everything we look for in a Hill student. She’s hard-working, an exceptional student, a committed athlete, an encouraging leader, and a genuinely nice person.”

Marshall credits Hill with providing the rigorous academic discipline he needed to succeed both at Dartmouth and at Harvard, where he earned his M.B.A. Marshall hopes The Hill experience will be pivotal to each Scholarship recipient’s life. 

He plans to get to know all recipients through occasional visits for lunch or dinner and through personal correspondence.

And, just as he has hoped, Amelia and Marshall, of Denver, Colo., have established a personal connection. The two have had the opportunity to meet and enjoy lunch together.

“It’s really cool to have a connection with Mr. Wallach,” Amelia said. “We email each other and share updates on our lives.”

“I am excited about inspiring other students through the Scholarship,” said Marshall, the president of Wallach Capital Advisors and director of a number of for profit and nonprofit boards.

Qualifications of the Wallach Family Military Scholarship
The Scholarship may cover room, board, tuition, books, academic-related travel expenses such as those incurred for experiential learning opportunities, and other required educational costs such as computer purchases.

At least one parent of each Military Scholarship student must be an active duty commissioned officer with not less than 10 years of continuous active duty in the U.S. Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marine Corps, or Navy. However, the 10-year minimum can be waived if the student’s parent died in the line of duty. The student is qualified to receive the Wallach Family Military Scholarship throughout his or her years of study at The Hill if certain criteria are met annually. 

Pottstown Working to Diminish Trauma's Impact

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Photos Courtesy of the Pottstown School District
Keynote speaker Casey O'Donnell, CEO of Impact Services in Kensington, addresses the Pottstown Trauma Informed Community Connection meeting at Sunnybook, Oct. 19.


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

The Pottstown Trauma Informed Community Connection focused on family engagement, community building, and the Social and Emotional Learning curriculum from Second Step in the Pottstown School District during a Connection Matters community meeting on Thursday, Oct. 19. 

Phoebe Kancianic and Kizmect Meade explain PEAK's
Family Advisory Committees.
Attendees ranged from families in the community, people representing the many non-profit organizations in the Pottstown area to school district employees to trauma advocacy workers in the greater Philadelphia area. All gathered to focus on how to make the Pottstown community stronger through learning about and reducing adverse childhood experiences, trauma, and toxic stress. 

PEAK Coordinator Valerie Jackson and Pottstown School District Superintendent, Stephen Rodriguez started things off by talking about the importance of building connections with families. 

Laurie Kolka, director of curriculum, outlined how a new program called Social Emotional Learning is being implemented featuring a video, embedded below, on what Pottstown elementary students are learning. 


Two Pottstown parents, Phoebe Kancianic and Kizmect Meade, provided an overview of the Family Advisory Committee, a group that connects the schools, the community, and parents through information, idea and resource sharing. They help organize events like the Let’s Talk community conversations, provide feedback to their schools, increase outreach to and involvement from the community, and more.
PEAK Coordinator Valerie Jackson and
Pottstown Schools Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez

Casey O’Donnell, CEO of Impact Services in Kensington, a neighborhood in Philadelphia, gave the keynote talk.

O’Donnell discussed the work his organization has done in creating a stable neighborhood and building community in Kensington by “sharing power.”

He referred to the many small organizations that will “help to institute that change” in building a safer and stronger community. In the end, reducing trauma and improving communities comes down to building relationships and working with families.

You can learn more about Pottstown Trauma Informed Community Connection (PTICC), a group organized through PEAK (Pottstown Early Action for Kindergarten Readiness) and the Pottstown School District, by visiting their website, http://www.pottstownmatters.org, or following them on Facebook or Twitter.

Education Foundation Announces Annual Campaign

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Foundation for Pottstown Education.

For the first time in the 33-year history of the Foundation for Pottstown Education, an Annual Support Campaign is being formalized. The goal of this year’s campaign is to not only raise $75,000 but also to raise awareness of what the Foundation does for the students of the Pottstown School District.

“Supporting the Foundation’s Annual Support Campaign is making an investment in our children, their education, and their future. We are committed to providing the children of Pottstown with opportunities where they can explore, learn, and achieve," said Tracey Brown, President of the Foundation. 

"Money raised in this campaign will make a significant impact in the amount of and types of educational opportunities the Foundation can support this year,” Brown said.

The Foundation’s ission is to support, promote, sponsor and carry out educational, scientific or charitable activities and objectives within or related to the Pottstown School District. During the past several years the Foundation has funded requests that are submitted by the School District teachers and principals.

Recently more than 90 high school students received partial funding to take the yearly AP tests after state funding was cut. 

Joe Rusiewicz is executive director of the foundation.
This past spring the Foundation funded half of the tuition fees for the Middle School Environmental Education Club to the Pocono Environmental Education Center after their funding was cut by a grantor. 

Additional funding was provided to elementary students to take a Rope Course developing leadership skills, purchase a robotic system and computer for the high school engineering program as well as paying for tuition fees for 30 juniors and senior in the Early College program who attend the Montgomery County Community College.

The Foundation also provided more than $28,000 in scholarships awarded annually not only to graduating seniors but to the elementary and middle school students who are recognized for outstanding achievement.

The Annual Support Campaign has been developed to ensure not only continuation of the projects already funded but in the hopes of creating more funding reaching all students in the school district. 

This campaign is part of the recent Strategic Plan that was developed with the assistance of more than 25 community leaders.

Joe Rusiewicz, Executive Director of the Foundation for Pottstown Education is working with the board and community leaders to develop the Executive Committee for the campaign. 

Art Green will chair the campaign
Art Green, a former Chemistry teacher and UniServ Representative for the Pennsylvania State Education Association has been recruited to serve as the Campaign Chair. 

Green is well known for many community activities including: Visiting Nurses Association, Fellowship House Farm, as a Secretary of the Spina Bifida Association of the Delaware Valley and as a former President of the Pottstown Regional Public Library, Pottstown Borough Council serving for six years. He was also involved in the Capital Campaign to raise money to build a new structure at St.. Aloysius Church. He completed a full 9-year term, the last 3 years as Chairman of the Board of the Pottstown Area Health and Wellness Foundation, and currently serves on the Board of
Pottstown Hospital.

The campaign is in the quiet phase, the initial phase raising funds internally from the Foundation Board of Directors, the School District and the School District Board of Education. The public phase of the campaign will begin in November with the Alumni, in December with Businesses and the final phase will be held with the public in January and February.

Visit www.foundationpottstowned.org for more information about the Foundation for Pottstown Education as well as following FPE on Facebook and Twitter.

Speaker to Outline Early History of Pottsgrove Manor

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

Join historian Dan Graham and uncover the story of the land between the time of William Penn to John Potts during this lecture at Pottsgrove Manor on Saturday, Nov. 4, at 1 p.m..

More than 70 years passed from the time William Penn received the charter for Pennsylvania in 1681 to when John Potts began constructing his manor home in 1752.

Dig more into the history of the land where Pottstown now sits, its origins, and how it changed throughout time with iron historian Dan Graham at Pottsgrove Manor during a special lecture “Penn to Potts: A Convenient Tract of Land.” 

Iron history lovers, local history enthusiasts, and those who want to learn more about what people were doing in colonial Pennsylvania will all enjoy this talk. Following the lecture, mingle and ask Dan Graham your questions. Visit Pottsgrove Manor to reveal the past of places that are familiar to us today.

Additionally, visitors can take guided tours of the manor and learn more about the Potts family and household through our current exhibit “Rise and Shine at the Manor.” Our Museum Shop is also open and full of unique gifts, 18th century replicas, books, and more!

This program welcomes all ages, and there is a suggested $2 donation per person for this event.

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route 100, just off Route 422 near the Carousel at Pottsgrove and Manatawny Green Miniature Golf Course, in Pottstown. 

Pottsgrove Manor is operated by the Montgomery County Division of Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites.

For more information, call 610-326-4014, or visit the website at www.montcopa.org/pottsgrovemanor. Like Pottsgrove Manor on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pottsgrovemanor.

$1.3M From Reserves Balances W. Pottsgrove Budget

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Photo by Evan Brandt
From left, West Pottsgrove Police officer Robert Radswallas, Det. Tim Roedner and Chief Matthew Stofflet.


Two West Pottsgrove Police officers and their chief were recognized Wednesday night by the Montgomery County Crisis Team for the role they played as part of the Western Montgomery SWAT team that dealt with a five-hour stand-off with an armed subject in Limerick in January in which no one was hurt.

Officers from each municipality involved in the SWAT team have been recognized at their respective municipal meetings throughout the year.

Police were recognized in another way Wednesday night, when the reading of the proposed $3,069,414 budget for 2018 included an $105,842 increase in the police budget, which now stands at $1,455,531, according to Township Manager Craig Lloyd.

An 18 percent increase in heath insurance costs for the coming year means a hike of $57,000, $36,000 of which is attributable to the police department.

Other costs, which Police Chief Matthew Stofflet chalked up to one new police cruiser and "the increasing cost of operations," includes a 2.5 percent raise for police personnel.

That comes on top of a 2.5 percent increase least year and a 3.5 percent coming in 2019, according to Lloyd.

With only $450,000 coming in from real estate taxes and another $448,000 from other taxes, balancing the budget without a tax increase will require pulling $1,367,079 from the reserves built up from host fees paid over years from the operation of the Pottstown Landfill which, despite the name, was never located in Pottstown proper.

This year's withdrawal is $80,000 than the $1.4 million required last year to balance the 2017 budget.

It must be nice to have a huge bank account created by imposing environmental risks on your neighbors.

One of these days, West Pottsgrove may have to learn to live within its means.

Here are the Tweets from last night's meeting.

Could Referendum Open Door to Fair Funding?

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So I think I get it.

The referendum question on the ballot next Tuesday is property tax reform in little pieces.

Unable to agree on a complete package that would replace the revenue from property taxes with something that didn't look like they might be raising state taxes, the members of the nation's second-largest, second-most expensive legislature punted.

But that's not necessarily all bad.

The Constitutional restriction against just offering relief to homeowners and farmers was a real-life legal hurdle and made the whole thing more difficult to pull off.

There were some dubious and, as always,
angry people at yesterday's forum.
If approved, it would only cost $7 billion to replace property taxes lost from taxing homes and farms.

That might be more doable in a statewide basis.

Also, it would allow school districts (and borough's, townships and counties) to still have the stability of property tax revenues on commercial properties.

Now granted, the open-ended nature of what happens next if this is approved is certainly worrisome, given that it would be in the hands of people who can't pass an annual budget on time.

And you can't really blame Pottstown Schools Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez for calling it "smoke and mirrors," when the very real problem of school funding and opportunity by zip code  remains largely unaddressed.

And he's right to say so.

The potential for shenanigans on this thing in Harrisburg, with this open-ended authority, is certainly very real.

After all, the General Assembly has a history of dumping problems downhill to avoid looking like they're raising taxes -- particularly education funding problems.

State Rep. David Maloney, left, is the prime sponsor of the legislation
which brings this referendum to a voting booth near you Nov. 7.
I mean the idea that Pottstown could replace its lost property tax revenue with a sales tax is laughable, and Marlene Armato was right to call them on it.

But consider this.

The legislature enacted the fair-funding formula then cheaped out on implementing it in full because
"it would be too much change too fast."

But what if the money coming from Harrisburg to replace the lost property tax revenue were to be distributed through the fair funding formula?

I mean, they're changing the whole system anyway. Isn't it the perfect opportunity to implement the formula in full?

I recognize, it's unlikely.

I mean after all this is Pennsylvania. We're not exactly a "can do" state.

And there are probably 100 obstacles I haven't thought of that would prevent it,

But still, it is a tantalizing thought and wouldn't it be easier to lobby for since its a major change being implemented already?

It's food for thought if this passes.

In the meantime, if you want to get confused, try following the Tweets from yesterday's forum which was supposed to explain it all..

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