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Pottstown Sophomore Takes 1st in Speech Contest

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Logan Ruyak, at right, beat these four competitors at the

Rotary Club district 4-Way Test Speech contest in Reading.
Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown Rotary Club

Logan Ruyak, a sophomore at Pottstown High School, placed first in the 4-Way Test speech contest on April 28, at the 2018 Rotary District-7430 Conference in Reading.

Logan’s first insight just seconds into her speech was that for all of the existing rules and explanation of the 4-Way test, it simply comes down to “how to separate right from wrong”.

Under contest rules, contestants are free to select any topic upon which to base their five- to seven-minute speech. Logan selected the divisiveness of political parties, which she took on with the focus and wisdom in an analysis well beyond her years.

Her choice of topic and comments resounded well among the 300 members, friends and guests of Rotary who were in the audience.

Logan’s competed against juniors and seniors on Saturday, with their topics as varied as climate change and educational inequality. 

The 2018 competition began in March with 100 students from 30 high schools, sponsored by 27 local Rotary clubs in the Rotary district comprising a large area in eastern Pennsylvania.
Logan and Pottstown Rotary member Mike Sloane, 

who coordinated the contest.

While awaiting results after the presentation, Logan publicly thanked her home room teacher in Pottstown, Diane Fox, for encouraging her participation in the contest. 

Fox and members of Logan’s family were then on hand to witness and congratulate the student on the winner announcement. 

Mike Sloane, the Pottstown Rotary Club’s coordinator for the contest, said that “Logan’s professional poise and demeaner already guarantee her success in whatever field she chooses. We are Pottstown Proud of Logan.” 

In addition to sponsoring the winning student, Mike Bright, President of the local Pottstown Rotary Club noted that the Pottstown Club stands out among the other 26 participating clubs “as the only local club sponsoring competitors from three high schools with Pottstown, Pottsgrove, and the Hill School.”

The Rotary International ethics test, characterized as “the 4-Way Test” asks four questions of everything we think, say or do:
-is truthful?
-is it fair?
-does it develop goodwill and better friendships?
-is it beneficial to all concerned?

Logan with family members, and Bright, Fox and Sloane.
The test has been translated into more than a hundred languages; one of its most well-known uses has been as the foundation for the annual speech contest for high school students.

The Pottstown Rotary Club is an active service club providing support by way of volunteers and financial donation for many activities in the area, including the Halloween and Fourth of July parades, scholarships, the Rotary Pavilion at Riverfront Park, Habitat for Humanity, the Pottstown Regional Public Library, and the Pottstown School District Walking School Bus, as well as its well-known international programs to ensure access to clean water and the elimination of polio.

Will YMCA Take Over West Pottsgrove Pool? Maybe

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It's been more than a year since anyone swam in the West Pottsgrove Community Pool.




It's that time of the year when the perennial West Pottsgrove question -- "will anyone run the township's community pool?" -- is asked.

And, as usual, the answer is: "maybe."

In attempt to make something good out of something bad, Permanent Pool Promoter (and township commissioner) Pete LaRosa, saw something good coming out of the pending closure of the Pottstown YMCA next month.

Although there are many in the community not ready to give up that ghost, LaRosa realized the YMCA could burnish its image by offering up a pool experience given that the two pools inside the North Adams building will soon be closed up inside.

But the deal is not done yet.

Township Manager Craig Lloyd told the commissioners last night that folks from the YMCA visited the pool this week and want some time to consider taking over its operation during the summer season.

Chairman Steve Miller hoped to force the issue a bit by asking for a decision by the end of the month, but the other commissioners said there is no point in rushing it since, in the past, the pool has opened late and could again.

On a technical note, this month we say goodbye to the extraordinarily useful program, Storify, which I used to gather the Tweets from meetings, as well as links to stories and videos.

Unwilling to give up and deprive you, dear reader, of the invaluable experience of reading a bunch of Tweets in order, I slaved through the night, working feverishly until figured out a way to create something similar -- and something I can embed here in the blog -- on Twitter itself.

It's a function called "Twitter Moments" (not that you care.)

But after some weeping and gnashing of teeth, I think I have the swing of things now, and the mighty Digital Notebook blog can continue rolling along as before without a single's day's loss of service.

All of which is by way of long-winded introduction to be able to once again say -- "here are the Tweets from the meeting:"


First-Ever Pottstown Eco/Vegan Fest Set for May 12

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the organizers of EcoFest.
Three out of every four Americans are looking to help the environment as they go about their daily lives, according to a 2016 Pew survey. 

They'll get a chance to learn how on May 12 at Pottstown's first EcoFest where the focus will be on lifestyle changes that have the biggest impact. 

The Pottstown EcoFest will be held from noon to 4 p.m., at Smith Family Plaza Park, 100 E. High Street, Pottstown.

Everyone of all ages and outlooks can enjoy shmoozing with chickens and baby goats, test driving an electric scooter, posing with an adoptable dog at the world’s premier BFF kissing booth, plus:
  • Dance to live music by Julia Othmer, Caitlin Jaene and Rick Denzien 
  • Hear a talk by Christina Pirello, cancer survivor turned Emmy-award- winning chef and host of Christina Cooks 
  • Get nutrition advice from Angel Santos, body-builder and organic farmer 
  • Enjoy delicious earth-friendly entrees, desserts, and smoothies from nine local businesses. 
  • Shop for Mother’s Day (locally-made chocolate, organic flowers, native plants, and more) 
  • Make Mom a gift with with Pottstown Art Center’s kids activities 
  • Choose from a variety of free saplings courtesy of Bartlett Tree Service 
  • Get faces painted for free by Kiwanis Club 
  • Earn a cookie from Crust Bakery by watching a video 
  • Create a menu of favorite foods from 90 vegan options at the Vegan Challenge 
  • Bring pets to a Blessing of the Animals 
The first 250 people to arrive at the EcoFest will receive a free tote bag with environmentally-friendly product and food samples. 

Local businesses and nonprofits will showcase food, products, services, and practices that protect people, animals and the planet. And vendors will set an example of green shopping by selling products made from eco-friendly materials, by using sustainable packaging, and by minimizing, recycling and composting trash. 

Rescue groups will also be there to find loving homes for animals.

Prospective vendors and non-profits can register at www.mobilizationforanimals.org. For more information or to volunteer, call: 267-647-4961 or email mfaevent@yahoo.com.


Morlatton Village to Host Living History Event

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Historic Preservation Trust of Berks County.

The Historic Preservation Trust of Berks County will host a living history event on May 19 at its Morlatton Village headquarters in Douglassville from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. 

Visitors can enjoy a variety of interactive presentations as well as tours of the Village and its buildings.

There will be several presentations going on throughout the Village:
  • The Chapter 21 Archaeologists, a volunteer group, will present new archaeological findings at the 1716 Mouns Jones House, including the newly uncovered root cellar. 
  • Volunteer Ken Biles’ Native American Artifact Collection will be on display as well near the Mouns Jones House. 
  • Trust volunteers will be offering guided tours of the White Horse Tavern, George Douglass House, Michael Fulp House, and the Mouns Jones House. 
  • At 10:30am, Trust volunteers Courtney Stevens and Susan Speros will give their program “Roots, Fruits, and Vegetables: Eighteenth Century Food Storage” in the White Horse Tavern. Visitors will have the opportunity to hear all about colonial foodways, including the use and purpose of a root cellar, and eighteenth century food preparation and storage. 
  • At 12 p.m. and 2 p.m., there will be a presentation of the new play “Searching for Betsy Ross” sponsored by the Chapter 21 Archaeologists on the grounds of the Mouns Jones House. 
Admission is a $10 per person suggested donation. Trust members and children 12 and under are free. All proceeds benefit the Trust. Please check our website -- www.historicpreservationtrust.org -- for updates on the event. 

The HPTBC is a non-profit organization that acquires, preserves, and maintains historically and architecturally significant properties in Berks County, Pennsylvania and educates Berks County and its’ visitors about the role these sites played in Pennsylvania and American history. 

The Trust seeks to foster community involvement and support in promoting awareness and appreciation of historic structures and encouraging their adaptive reuse. 

The Trust currently owns and maintains eight historically significant buildings in the greater Reading/Berks County area.Our office is located in the White Horse Inn on Old Philadelphia Pike in Douglassville. If you are interested in donating to the Trust call 610-385-4762 or visit www.historicpreservationtrust.org.




NAACP Assails YMCA Decision to Close Pottstown Y

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA CEO Sean Elliott, third from right, faces Johnny Corson, second from right, president of the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP, during a much-anticipated meeting between the two organizations Monday at the Pottstown branch, scheduled for closure next month.


Members of the Pottstown Chapter of the NAACP have left little doubt with officials from the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA about their feelings about the decision to close the Pottstown YMCA branch next month.

Monday evening, CEO Shaun Elliott and several members of the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA board of directors, accepted the invitation from Johnny Corson, president of the Pottstown Chapter of the NAACP, to hear more community input and answer questions.

The meeting began with an attempt by Elliott, who no longer responds to email queries from The Mercury, to close the meeting to the press and evict yours truly.

Here's a little of what that looked like:



But Corson said "it's our meeting," and that when he had first proposed it, he had said it would be open to the public and the press.

"Our meetings are open to the public and we have to be transparent. If there's anything you don't want the media to report, don't bring it up," said Corson.

And with that, NAACP members proceeded to demonstrate that whatever Elliott may not want to say, they had a lot to say.

"We will be left with nothing when you walk out of here," said Clifton Bradshaw, who repeatedly chided the YMCA officials for not understanding Pottstown's unique circumstances and comparing the Y's history of closing facilities in poor communities and building news ones in wealthy communities to the past practice of real estate "red lining" that segregated communities.

"I don't think you realize what you've done," said NAACP member Bobby Watson. "when you were racking up those

"The community was brought in AFTER you had a vote" to close the branch, said Bishop Everett Debnam of Invictus Ministries.

"Can I tell you what it looks like from 100 miles up?" said Bob Bauers. "In this country today, the 'have-nots' keep giving up more and more and you now look like an agent in that trend. From an airplane view, it looks racist. What else could we conclude?"

Corson said the NAACP believes that, whether the YMCA officials meant it or not, that the YMCA's action looks like discrimination, when low-income high-minority YMCAs are closed or marginalized while huge steel and glass structures are built in wealthier communities like Spring-Ford, Phoenixville and Upper Moreland.

Elliott, who did most of the speaking for the YMCA side of the discussion, argued that the organization also maintains facilities in Camden, and West Philadelphia.

"But those communities are already segregated," said Bradshaw. "What you are missing about Pottstown, which is a gem, is that its integrated."

Elliott said that operating deficits experienced by the Pottstown branch resulted in the larger organization spending $5 million at the Pottstown site in the last five years.

"As deficits were accumulating, who was responsible?" asked Watson.

"I think real costs come from corporate overhead," said James Konnick, a former president of the Pottstown YMCA board when it merged with Phoenixville in 2007 and a member of the task force formed last year and charged with making suggestions on how to continue services without maintaining the building.


Konnick questioned the board members about this high number and said if Elliott's figures are right, and the Pottstown site's deficits went from $200,000 a year to $800,000 a year, "why was board not asking questions about that? didn't that alarm you?"

Konnick and several other speakers said despite Elliott's assertions that annual fund drives benefitted Pottstown, that it seemed no effort had been made either to secure grants to pay for repairs with the building or local fundraising events.

"I've spoken with donors who said they haven't heard from the Y in 10 years," said Konnick.

"We don't get money from the government," said Elliott. (Last month The Mercury reported that Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCAs received $8 million in state grants since 2000.)

After explaining that the site's operating deficits prevented investment in the building's infrastructure, Elliott said "the operating deficit is not the issue, it's the building. What we can't afford is the building itself that requires so much money. We think it's better to spend money on people."

He said, as he has previously, that the building needs roughly $3.5 million in repairs almost immediately and $11 million total over 10 years. 

"The challenge is the building itself," said Elliott who responded that the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA does not face this problem at any of its other 18 branches.

"In 50 years, will Willow Grove be left to fall apart," asked NAACP member Larry Cohen in reference to the new $30 million facility being built in Upper Moreland Township. "I don't think so."

Elliott said his organization has secured a new site for childcare in Sanatoga, which most community members said would be too far for those in the borough who walk, but one board member responded that all but a few of the 112 who received childcare at North Adams Street has signed up at the new site.

He said his staff is also seeking a facility to rent for health and wellness services.

However, Corson and Debnam both said the NAACP does not accept the proposed concept of a "Y without Walls."

"That's like the Giant sayings its building is not sustainable, so they're going to have the produce section on Charlotte Street, and the meat section on King Street," Debnam said.

The group also heard from two Pottstown High School students about what the closure means to Pottstown's youth.

Senior Courteney Parry said the YMCA is a "safe place" for teens to go during the summer, a place where they can keep out of trouble.

"This is going to put kids on the street, this is their place to be, so they can be safe" said senior David Van Wallace Jr.

Here is some video of him speaking at the meeting:


The meeting broke up after more than two hours of talking, and Elliott said he would be willing to follow up with Corson.

"First Pottstown lost its community pool," said Corson. "They let the pool run down and then they said the same thing you're saying, that it cost too much. Then before we could propose a solution, they filled it in with dirt."

Then, said Corson, Pottstown lost the Ricketts Community Center when it was leased out to the Boys and Girls club whose rules were so restrictive of adult use "that I couldn't even work out with my son."

"This is the last place we have," said Corson.

"We respect your opinion and we've heard you loud and clear," said Elliott.
Technical note: I discovered today that Twitter Moments has a 50-Tweet max, so some of the Tweets from the beginning of the meeting, while still on Twitter, are not part of the round-up embedded below. Live and learn.


Boyertown Stadium, Tax Hike, Superintendent News

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Photo by Evan Brandt
SONGBIRDS: Boyertown School Board member Brandon Foose, right, stands with high school students Abby Arnold, Taylor Kuszyk and Sally Fetterman after being recognized by the school board for their performance in the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association Region V Chorus Festival.
Let's not mince words.

There are three major news stories to come out of last night's Boyertown School Board meeting, but let's cue up to the one everyone really cares about -- the stadium.

Those of you interested in your tax bill and who will lead the district in coming years, will just have to wait and skip down a bit.

The Stadium

Last night the school board voted unanimously for the option most favored by parents of student athletes -- to conduct the fall sports season in the high school's Memorial Stadium using temporary stands and temporary sheds, rather than rent outside facilities or hold them "at a neutral location."

The cost of that decision to taxpayers is $112,233.

The district will buy the sheds and some mobile bleachers to be given other uses once the stadium is repaired.

Some bleachers will be rented and set up on the track on the home side and Facilities Director William Gasper said the company that installed the track said the district's plan for a tarp, then plywood, then 2 X 6 board to distribute the weight of the temporary bleachers and the people sitting on them, should be enough to protect the track.

Parent Elyse Watts thanked the board for the decision, which will allow seniors in fall sports to play in the stadium they have known growing up as the home for Boyertown athletics.

She also noted that the timeline as it stands now looks like it could come awfully close to affecting the fall 2019 season and urged the board to move forward with all deliberate speed and efficiency.

Toward's that end, the school board's facilities committee will conduct a special meeting on Monday, May 14 at 6:30 p.m. in the high school cafeteria devoted entirely to one subject -- the stadium.

The public is encouraged to attend as the format will allow a break-out session that allows the public to speak directly to board members on a less formal face-to-face basis, said Interim Superintendent David Krem.

A New Superintendent?

Not much to report on this one.

After the leading candidate for the job, Juniata County School District Superintendent Keith Yarger, backed out of the job, the school board has gone "back to the drawing board," said Board President Donna Usavage.

She said since that happened, the board met at least four times in closed-door executive session to discuss the continued superintendent search.

Despite the fact that interim schools superintendent David Krem's term expires in June, the board intends to press forward and decide on a replacement for Richard Faidley, who left last year for a job in Wilson School District, before school starts up again in the fall.

"The board will do everything within our power to get that done," she said.

A Tax Hike Cometh

With the expected 6-3 vote, the school board adopted a preliminary final budget last night that calls for spending more than $119 million and would raise taxes by 5.4 percent.

The millage would increase by 1.35 mills under the proposed budget, leading to a tax rate in both the Montgomery and Berks county portions of the district of 25.37 mills.

For a home assessed at $100,000, that represents an increase of $136, which school board member Jill Dennin called "as pretty good deal" for a home with three children on which the district will spend thousands of dollars each year.

She and board member Brandon Foose both noted that the Boyertown district has see-sawed between low tax hikes and higher ones to then make up the difference.

"You can't have it all, a nice stadium, nice fields, nice music programs and have zero tax hikes," said Dennin. "You can have less staff, larger classrooms, or raise taxes to the inflation rate."

But board members Clay Breece, Ruth Dierolf and Christine Neiman, who represented the three votes against adopting the budget, said not enough had been done to cut costs, and said many residents in the district could not afford the increase.

Saying he thought the district has "squandered money," and that the proposed hike represents the largest single increase since 2002, Breece said if the board continues to raise taxes at that rate, "in five years, it will add $680" for the same resident with a home assessed at $100,000. "It really is a matter of math," he said.

Here are a few more comments he offered:


"I know there are constituents who can't afford this," said Neiman.

Board member Steve Elisier, who chairs the finance committee, said the district saved $208,000 by re-financing some bonds, and that there were also significant savings earned through retirements and lower health insurance costs.

The final budget will be adopted and June, and can be reduced between now and then, but not increased.

Also, while we're talking about money, the board voted unanimously to spend up to $250,000 on five new trucks for the district. The average age of a district truck is 17 years.

And now, without further ado, are the many misspelled Tweets from the meeting.

Recognitions, Incentives and a Surprise Resignation

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Photos by Evan Brandt
TOP COP: Pottstown's Police of the Year, Det. Michael Glauner, second from right, is congratulated Wednesday night by Dept. Chaplain Everett Debnam, left, Chief F. Richard Drumheller, center, and Deputy Chief Mick Markovich, right.
Last night's borough council work session was not lacking in issues proposals, congratulations and at least one very big surprise.

Don't worry, I won't keep you waiting.

If by chance you are one of the unfortunate few not to follow my live, typo-ridden Tweets on Twitter, then you may wonder what I'm talking about. Here it is straight.

Councilman Dennis Arms Resigned


At the end of the meeting, when council members offer comments, Arms uncharacteristically asked to go last.

First the good stuff, he said. Arms recent married and took great pride in having the entire affair taken care of by businesses inside the borough. He thanked them, and said they had all done a superb job.

Then, and this is always a bad sign, he started reading from a prepared statement and I fumbled to get my live video up and running, only catching the last part's of his comments.

Here's what I got in video:




Thankfully, Arms was considerate enough to have copies of his comments prepared ahead of time to hand out to the press. Here is everything he said:
I have lived in Pottstown my entire life and imagined living, working and retiring in this borough. I started my term in 2016 under the impression I might be able to make a difference in my hometown. Unfortunately the last two years have been more than
Dennis Arms, right, on the night he was sworn-in.
frustrating. On numerous occasions I have had someone on council ask what we are voting on the night of the vote, blatantly admit they do not understand the financial reports provided, and as a council, vote on items without seeking the information necessary to make a decision.
I want to thank the residents of Pottstown, especially those in Ward 4, for trusting me to make the right decisions. I hope that our local media and most important, residents, hold their local government accountable for their actions. Please accept this letter as my resignation as Councilor, Ward 4 for the borough of Pottstown, as well as all other committees/commissions I have been appointed to effective this evening as I will be moving out of the borough.
Best of luck Mr. Arms.

Because council did not vote to accept his resignation, which may happen on Monday, the clock has not yet started on choosing his replacement.

Although Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. did not weigh in last night, I suspect he will tell council the law gives them 30 days to make a replacement once they do accept the resignation.
The statue and proclamation prepared for
Det. Michael Glauner, Officer of the Year.

They may follow whatever process they wish to choose a replacement -- solicit applicants, conduct public interviews as they have in the past, or just pick someone out of thin air. The only requirement is that the person chosen lives in the Fourth Ward.

Should they fail to make a selection, a petition can be filed with a judge and the judge can make the appointment, but it is unlikely it will come to that.

Police Officer and Employee of the Year


The meeting started out on a higher note with the awarding of certificates, pins, resolutions, statues and plaques to two exemplary borough employees.

The first and more familiar was the presentation of the Police Officer of the Year to Det. Michael Glauner.

Here is the video of the presentation by Mayor Stephanie Henrick:




Afterward, he received a plaque with the proclamation, a statue, a pin and the warm congratulations of co-workers, family and members of borough council.

This was preceded by the Exceptional Employee of the Year award, which was presented to Laura E. Kline, who works at the wastewater treatment plant and was only hired in 2016.

Interim Borough Manager Justin Keller, left, 
congratulates Laura Kline, the Employee of the Year 
Interim Borough Manager Justin Keller said Kline is a very dependable and valuable employee of the Wastewater Treatment Plant.

"She will take overtime if no one else signs up for it just to be sure the plant operations are covered and to avoid others being mandated. Her knowledge of plant operations has been an asset in her troubleshooting ability. Laura is a valued and integral part of our Plant staff. She is respectful to her co-workers and can be found covering odd shifts as needed," he said in a release from the borough.

"Laura takes additional classes to uphold her wastewater license. She is responsible and accountable for her actions to ensure the wastewater is being treated efficiently and within the discharge limits. Laura is a great team player and all around employee. She goes above and beyond her job description and will go out of her way to help others. She is a great operator and takes initiative to learn new things to help her excel at her job,” he said.

Firefighter Incentives and New Fire Codes


Not to be left out, Fire Chief Michael Lessar Jr. was also in a position to make some news Wednesday night.

He first laid out a set of new requirements he would like council to adopt, including sprinkler systems and fire alarms for smaller new construction and for older buildings that experience a change of use.

Peggy Lee-Clark, executive director of the Pottstown Area Industrial Development Inc., the
Fire Chief Michael Lessar talks about his volunteer incentive plan.
borough's primary economic development organization, said she has concerns that some of those requirements may impede redevelopment of older downtown buildings because of the additional cost.

"Those buildings need a lot of love," she said, meaning it is very expensive to renovate the interiors up to code, and the additional cost of a sprinkler and fire alarm system may scare investors away from downtown Pottstown.

Lessar also asked council to implement an incentive system for the volunteer fighters. He laid out a point system, indicating that the borough has more volunteers than most, but he wants to incentive those who answer more calls, do more fundraising and get more training and certifications.

The maximum cost to the borough if all firefighters took full advantage of the program would be $45,000, but he said it is more likely to be $10,000 to $15,000.

Lessar said grants will be sought to cover the cost but, failing that, it would have to come out of the fire fund, which, he acknowledged, is pretty low on surplus funds.

There were some other interesting items, but you'll have to read the Tweets to find them.


$92M Phoenixville School Budget Hikes Taxes 3.18%

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With an 8-1 vote, and a dizzying array of failed amendments, the Phoenixville School Board adopted its final 2018-2019 $91.7 million budget Thursday that will raises property taxes by 3.18 percent.

For the average taxpayer, the budget will cost an additional $127 per year, said Chris Gehris, the district's manager of financial reporting.

Board member Lori Broker cast the only vote against adoption.

A total of eight amendments to adjust the budget were proposed, all but one of which would have added additional spending to the budget, but they all failed, half of them on close 5-4 votes.

But when the smoke cleared, nothing had changed. The final budget, and tax hike. remained the same as what was brought before the board in the first place.

The final budget was a reduction from the preliminary budget, adopted in February, that called for spending $94 million and would have raised taxes by 4 percent.

In the end, although some positions were eliminated, no teacher or administrator was laid off, said Superintendent Alan Fegley.

Also, rather than take money out of reserves as some school boards to do reduce budget gaps, this budget puts an additional $300,000 into the healthcare cost reserve fund and another $100,000 into the general budget reserve account, Fegley said.

But many things within the structure of the district changed, not the least of which was an administrative re-organization that lowered those costs by 14 percent and saved the district about $300,000, said Fegley.

Those cuts include the elimination of the assistant principal post at the high school, and a savings of $127,000 through the reorganization of the director of facilities position, made vacant by a retirement, said Fegley.

Gehris also helped cut the budget by re-negotiating the contract with the Phoenixville YMCA for after school care -- allowing costs to be allocated simply on how many days a week were used instead of a flat rate -- which reduced a looming 3.41 percent tax hike down to the 3.18 percent ultimately adopted.

Still, this budget does increase spending over the current year, which budgeted $89,894,409 in expenses. Next year's budget calls for spending $1.8 million more, or an increase of almost 2 percent.

In addition to the new administrative structure, the school board undertook a more extensive outreach to the community this year, said School Board President Lisa Longo.

In February, the school board's Community Budget Advisory Committee held a public meeting looking for input on the budget which was attended by about 50 people, she said.

In addition to ideas for budget reduction, such a ways to save on supplies, the community also spoke out against possible reduction in maintenance of athletic facilities and increasing class size, both of which would have saved money.

In addition to getting input, the meeting also helped the public understand the process and issues involved in putting the budget together.

"One of our goals was increased community awareness and it was really a great experiment," said Longo, who said she hopes it will be repeated.

That said, here are the Tweets from the meeting:


YWCA to Hold Tribute to Exceptional Girls May 19

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Art work is by Keirsten Hickey, a junior at Pottstown High School and nominee for an Exceptional Girl Award






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

YWCA Tri-County Area will honor 17 girls at its annual Tribute to Exceptional Girls at a brunch Saturday, May 19 at the Hill School in Pottstown.

The public is invited to attend; tickets are available online at ywcatricountyarea.org.

Modeled after YWCA Tri-County Area’s long-running and successful Tribute to Exceptional Women, Tribute to Exceptional Girls honors the achievements and accomplishments of girls who have an impact on their peers, in their schools, and in their communities.

Community members nominated girls in the following categories:
  • Arts– honors girls in grades 4 through 12 who have a love for art and the ability to express self-truth through artistic expression.
  • Health and Wellness– honors girls in grades 4 through 12 who promote, demonstrate, and encourage the importance of a healthy lifestyle.
  • STEM– honors girls in grades 6 through 12 who have a passion and who take initiative in science, technology, engineering and/or math.
  • The Coretta Scott King Award for Social Justice -- honors girls in grades 6 through 12 who are an agent of change by advocating, influencing and making an impact among her peers in the areas of social justice, peace, equality, and human rights.
  • Art work by Lily Garber, a 4th grader at Lincoln Elementary
    School who is a nominee for an Exceptional Girl Award.
  • Rising Star Award -- for girls who exhibit leadership qualities, and who are role models or mentors to her peers.

The Tribute to Exceptional Girls brunch will be from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, May 19, at the Hill School, 860 Beech St., Pottstown.

Nominees for the 2018 Tribute to Exceptional Girls are:
  • Sydney Benkler-Iglewicz, a fourth-grader at Westtown School 
  • Leah Blackwell, a fourth-grader at Lincoln Elementary School, Pottstown 
  • Saniyah Fox, a fourth-grader at Lincoln Elementary School, Pottstown 
  • Lily Garber, a fourth-grader at Lincoln Elementary School, Pottstown 
  • Madeleine Heidel, a fourth-grader at Rupert Elementary School in Pottstown 
  • Ciara Rios, a fourth-grader at Lincoln Elementary School, Pottstown 
  • Maya Evans, a sixth-grader at North Coventry Elementary School 
  • Bryn Hannah, a freshman at Coventry Christian School 
  • Emmerson Piacine, a freshman at Wyomissing Area High School 
  • Emme Wolfel, a sophomore at Pottstown High School 
  • Taylor Gilbert-Fisher, a junior at North Penn High School 
  • Emily Hart, a junior at Pottstown High School 
  • Keirsten Hickey, a junior at Pottstown High School 
  • Kasey Roberts, a junior at Boyertown High School 
  • Julianna Roseo, a junior at Pottstown High School 
  • Courtney Burns, a senior at Spring-Ford High School 
  • Alyssa Dlutz, a senior at Pottstown High School
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.

Love Thy Neighbor 5K Set for May 19

Hey 4th Ward, Here's Your Chance to Be on Council

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 As you have no doubt already feverishly read the Mercury account of council surprising us all and listening to its constituents about the new sprinkler system requirements, I won't bore you with the details here.

If you want to be bored with the details, click here!

Instead let's move on to the council vacancy -- the one made official last night when council unanimously and with very little comment (Councilman Ryan Procsal had the decency to thank Dennis Arms for his service) accepted the resignation of Arms, now a "former" Fourth Ward Councilman.

As many of you know, Arms surprised the crap out of everyone at the May 9 meeting by announcing his immediate resignation, and right after his wedding too. He must be serious about being happy.
Dennis Arms back when he actually wanted to be on council.

With the vote Monday, "the clock starts ticking," as Council President Dan Weand put it.

And as Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr. then explained it, council now has 30 days to pick a replacement.

Should council fail to do so, presumably because of a tie vote, the borough's rarely invoked Vacancy Board -- comprised of council and one other person, has another 15 days to act, said Garner.

Currently, the vacancy board consists of borough council plus Environmental Advisory Council Chairman Jim Derr, according to the borough web site.

Weand asked Interim Borough Manager Justin Keller to post the vacancy on said web site asking that any eligible Fourth Ward candidates apply for the post.

So here it is big-time Facebook talkers, your big chance.

All you holier-than-thou-know-it-alls carping about it being time to clean house, about how we need new faces, about how putting together a borough budget is no different than a household budget -- this is your moment.

Step up to the plate and take your shot.

Because remember what dear old Teddy Roosevelt said:



Oh, word of caution: No matter how you vote, you will piss someone off, someone will call you an idiot, and your phone messages and email will soon be clogged with complaints from your loving constituents.

And after 18 months, if you still haven't had enough, you'll have to win a popularity contest among your neighbors.

So hurry up and apply!

And with that, here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Pottstown Pride Gets You Free Baseball Tickets

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by a coalition of Pottstown non-profit organizations.

Local residents, plus anyone who wants to show pride in Pottstown, are invited to a night of baseball, local tributes and fireworks at the Reading Fightin Phils FirstEnergy Stadium on Friday night, June 15.

The event, dubbed Pottstown Proud Night, is sponsored by four local non-profits to promote the value of working together for the Pottstown Area community.

Three hundred FREE tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Each ticket will come with $2 in food vouchers to be used at the game. Transportation is available for those who need it. However, bus seats are limited and may fill up quickly with requests.

Special events at the game will include Ceremonial First Pitch by a Pottstown Teacher of the Year, Community Champion honors for student Citizenship Award winners, and local participants in the holding of the American flag for the playing of the national anthem.

Other festivities at the game include a pre-game concert by Downingtown School of Rock and post-game fireworks in the stadium, along with appearances by Fightin mascots.

The event is being sponsored by the Foundation for Pottstown Education, Pottstown Works at The Salvation Army of Pottstown, Pottstown Early Action Kindergarten, and TriCounty Community Network.

Ticket printing and food vouchers were donated by Complete Graphics Inc., 38 E. High St.

“Our goal in planning this event was to demonstrate that local nonprofits working together not only can benefit the people we serve, but also can display the pride of this town,” said Nancy March, director of Pottstown Works. “We want to offer families a night of fun to start the summer, while proving the value of teamwork among non-profit organizations.”

“We often see non-profit organizations working for the same goals but not necessarily working together,” said Holly Parker, executive director of TCN. “This project gave us a chance to plan one event that we could share in and practice collaboration.”

“This is a good opportunity for our school families,” said Joe Rusiewicz, executive director of the Foundation for Pottstown Education. “It’s also giving us an opportunity to honor Teacher of the Year winners and our outstanding student citizens.”

“We saw this as a great opportunity for our PEAK families to connect with each other and hope they will come out,” added Valerie Jackson, PEAK coordinator. “We urge everyone coming to the game to wear blue and white or their Trojan gear to show the world what Pottstown pride looks like.”

To get tickets, come to the Pottstown School District administration building, 230 Beech St. (use front entrance) from 3 to 5:30 p.m. on May 30 to June 1, or June 4-6. Ticket and food vouchers will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no limit to the number of tickets per family.

Game time is 7:15 p.m. against the Akron Rubber Ducks. The FirstEnergy Stadium plaza opens at 5 p.m. There is ample, free parking at the stadium, 1900 Centre Ave., Reading.

A bus donated by the Pottstown Area Health and Wellness Foundation will provide transportation for families in need who sign up early.

Perkiomen Creek Sojourn On Tap for June 2

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the law firm of Keenan, Ciccitto & Assoc. LLP.

The Perkiomen Creek Sojourn will be held Saturday, June 2, 2018, at 9 a.m.

The Perkiomen Watershed Conservancy has again teamed up with the law firm

of Keenan, Ciccitto  & Associates, LLP, located at 376 East Main Street in Collegeville, to conduct the canoeing and kayaking adventure down the Perkiomen. 

It begins  at the Conservancy Headquarters at the border of Schwenksville and ends at Hoy Park in Arcola. 

Every year, the Perkiomen Sojourn attracts more participants and becomes more interesting.

Andy Curtis, a Conservancy Board Member and expert canoeist, brings along a few friends and ensures that there are no disastrous consequences of tipping over in the river.

The scenery on this trip is spectacular. Each year an eagle or two is spotted, a mink is looking hungrily at some chickens, and herons are watching us as we pass by.

As the trip has grown in size, so has it become not just a pleasant ride, but an educational one. 

The Conservancy, generally at a lunch break, provides information on the organisms that live in the river and everyone participates in locating them and learning which ones indicate that the river is clean and unpolluted.

Free transportation is provided from Hoy Park, our take out site, to the Conservancy before the Sojourn, prior to launch. 
There are canoes and kayaks for rent. There is a safety instruction and the day before the event, the Conservancy makes a river run to ensure there are no obstructions.

Registration for members of the Perkiomen Watershed Conservancy is $35 and $55 for non-members.

Kayak and canoe rentals are $35. For further information and to register please visit www.perkiomenwatershed.org or call 610-287- 9383. See you on the river!

Pottstown School Board Nixes Uniform Policy

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I would like to pretend that the news readers care the most about from last night's budget was the adoption of a budget that hikes taxes 3.5 percent; or the naming of the Teacher of the Year for the Pottstown School District, but I would only be fooling myself.

The big news was not even on the agenda.

After more than 90 minutes of the usual school board antics, Emanuel Wilkerson brought up his favorite subject; the one that got him elected to the school board when he was still a high school senior and the subject, if last night was any indication, on which can wax on for quite some time.

Yep, you guessed right folks, it's school uniforms.

But here's the news part.

They made a decision.

Two of them.

Both of them unanimous.

Are we done with subject?

Finally?

Please, please please?

Board unanimity on the matter made Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez happy. Before the vote, he said the administration would carry out whatever policy the board decided best, but he implored them to be decisive.

"If you do this with a 5-4 vote now and then change your mind in June, you're really going to knee-jerk the district," he said.

Wilkerson's first motion was was take the dress code now in place at the high school -- which is technically "temporary" -- and make it permanent.

That passed unanimously.

The second motion, which was a bit trickier, would remove the school uniform requirements in the middle and elementary schools. It also charged the board's policy committee to come up with a comprehensive, "professional" dress code in time for the start of school in August.

Raymond Rose and Bonita Barnhill were the only board members to express a fondness for the uniforms, but Barnhill said she recognized it could be a financial burden and given the board had passed a tax hike earlier in the evening, decided to try to lessen the financial burden on parents.

Both Wilkerson and Vice President Katina Bearden said the issue had been discussed to death.

"It's been on the agenda ad nauseum," said Bearden, perhaps riffing on the irony that a matter of this magnitude was in fact, not on that night's board agenda.

"Our concern should be that the students are properly clothed, not what color shirts they wear. Our job is to give them the education that they need," Bearden said.

Parent Clinton Bradshaw told the board that the school uniform "carries a stigma. It is not very empowering for students when the neighboring school districts don't have them."

David Miller, who ran for the board and applied for the board seat made open by the resignation of Ron Williams, had the opposite view. He said the uniforms kept bullying down and instilled a sense of pride in the district.

Board President Amy Francis, who spearheaded the effort to establish the uniform policy in 2008, said she had done so with a desire to improve the district. At the time, she also touted the ability of uniforms to cut down on school violence.

However, she said, the issue had also dogged her through her many years on the board. "Different times," she said, adding "I'll be happy to have this issue decided."

And so it was.

We'll have coverage of the budget adoption and Teachers of the Year either in The Mercury or later here as neither topic deserves to be overshadowed by this silliness.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting.

Barth's Kelli Wolfel is Pottstown Teacher of the Year

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Photos by Evan Brandt
The 2018 Pottstown Teachers of the Year are, from left, Britney Oxenford from Rupert, Dana DiDonato from 5-6 middle school, Jason Bergey from 7-8 middle school; Jill Bolonski from Lincoln, (School Board President Amy Francis), Kelli Wolfel from Barth, (Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez), Kristen Ellis from the high school, Susan Hallman from Franklin and, of course, Trojan Man.






















“Enthusiasm and pride” are the words Barth Elementary School teacher Kelli Wolfel’s peers use to describe her work ethic, and they are just a few of the many things which helped her on the way to being named Pottstown School District’s Teacher of the Year Thursday.
Wolfel with School President Amy Francis
and Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez


Wolfel was one of seven teachers, each elected by teachers in their own school, who were recognized as part of the annual Teacher of the Year ceremony held by the school board.

“In the classroom, she works tirelessly to identify and meet the needs of each child under her care,” according to the narrative written about Wolfel for the ceremony.

“As a proud alum and Pottstown parent, her own children, both inside and outside of school, are a reflection of her core values,” according to the narrative, read aloud by Human Resources Director Deena Cellini.

“In addition to volunteering to serve on nearly every district-wide committee during her tenure at Pottstown, she is currently involved in Family Literacy Nights, the STEAM committee, Wellness/SEL programming, and the math curriculum adoption.”

Franklin's Susan Hallman

Franklin Elementary


“Arriving early and leaving late gives this teacher an opportunity to ensure that each of her students’ needs are met and it also gives the rest of the staff ample time to reach out to her for collaborative efforts,” is what was written about Susan Hallman.

“Her professionalism and positive energy go a great distance in making her colleagues see her as a perpetual “go to” person in the building, whether it is for brainstorming new strategies to use with students or best practices and data mining,” it was said of Hallman.

Lincoln's Jill Bolonski

Lincoln Elementary


Jill Bolonski “does not work in isolation. She recognizes the value in the idiom of ‘it takes a village.’ Whether it is the principal, intervention team, speech, occupational, or physical therapists, or the rest of the faculty and staff, this teacher recognizes the importance of each area in taking an initiative off the page and making it a living, breathing, dynamic program to benefit students’ academic and personal growth,” read the description of Lincoln’s nominee.

“She is regularly improving instruction and intervention by using data to establish high but obtainable goals for her students,” Cellini read, adding, “. The positive rapport she creates with students and parents alike is a constant in her career.”

Rupert's Britney Oxenford

Rupert Elementary


“Any good teacher will tell you that routines are crucial to a successful classroom. The routines and environment created in this teacher’s classroom are critical to having early elementary students grow and feel successful and cared for as they continue to challenge themselves to meet the expectations she establishes for each student, individual to their needs,” Cellini read about Rupert nominee Britney Oxenford.

“Her knowledge of strategies to help meet students’ needs is a resource utilized by many staff members who seek her expertise when they are seeking the right strategy for a particular student or just a better, more engaging way of doing things in their own classroom,” she said.

Pottstown Middle School's Dana DiDonato

Middle School
Grades 5/6


“Returning from a maternity leave to a team with two new members was not enough to shake this teacher from doing what she does best. With students and colleagues, she sets high expectations and commands respect,” is what Cellini had to say about Dana DiDonato.

“Regardless of the venue, 6th grade team meeting, math department meeting, or Sunshine committee; this teacher identifies the needs, the most efficient way to accomplish those tasks, and goes about doing it with a smile on her face.”

Pottstown Middle School Jason Bergey

Middle School
Grades 7/8


“For this teacher, excellence comes as a quiet force; a force that sees what needs doing and does it…without complaint or want of recognition,” Cellini said about Jason Bergey.

“New special education teachers utilize this teacher as a resource for academic as well as behavioral advice. His presence in a co-taught classroom ensures that not only special education students will gain extra support but that also regular education students who need extra support will have access to his instruction and attention. “

Pottstown High School's Kristen Ellis

High School


“This teacher has worked at all three levels throughout the district, starting as a third grade teacher, earning multiple teaching certificates, and moving into family and consumer sciences and most recently to the library,” Cellini read about high school nominee and 26-year veteran Kristen Ellis.

“With experience at all three academic levels, she is comfortable serving on committees that service our K-12 population including our Wellness program, participating in Healthy Bodies Healthy Minds; as a Family Literacy Night teacher, a Reading Olympics advisor, and even serves her fellow teachers as Treasurer for the Federation of Pottstown Teachers.”

Rupert Students Get Early Look at Possible Futures

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This Rupert student learns about being a firefighter.


Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown School District.
Student's learn about the dental health profession.

We have all faced the question of what we want to be when you grow up.

At Rupert Elementary School Principal Matt Moyer and his staff took that age-old question and turned it into a Career Day Fair for third and fourth grade students. 

With clipboards, survey sheets and pencils in hand, the students had a chance to visit with representatives of more than 30 different career paths and ask questions about their work and what education is need to enter the job market. 

 Moyer said, "this is a tremendous learning experience for our students, to speak face to face with so many representatives." 

Father and son lawyers Levi and Jack Wolf were 
on hand to talk about the legal profession.
Moyer added, "lawyers,veterinarians writers, photographers,bakers health care providers,firemen, members of the military and many more were on hand to give insight into their profession."

Steven Park, Pottstown High School's Director of Career Technical Education, attended along with student presenters who showcased each of the departments programs. 

"This was as much a learning experience for the high school students as it was was the Rupert students," he said. 

The future leaders of the country are in our classrooms today.

Maybe this Rupert student will be your X-Ray Tech some day.

$10K Donations Keeps In Ian's Boots on Track

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Last year, In Ian's Boots provided Sneakers, flip-flops and croc-style shoes are most in need in flood-ravaged Texas.

Blogger's Note: The following was provided by In Ian's Boots.

We are blessed and so grateful to announce that In Ian's Boots has been awarded a $10,000 grant from the Altria Companies Employee Community Fund.

This grant will allow us to pay our warehouse rent throughout the remainder of 2018 - which will allow us to continue to serve our community and the world. 

In Ian's Boots'"Shoebox" is the epicenter of our organization. Aside from storing over 60,000 pairs of shoes at any one time, the Shoebox welcomes people from our local community on the First Tuesday of every month to get shoes. 
 It is a Community Service site for everything from Churches, Scouts and National Honors Society volunteers to those needing community service hours through the legal system.

It is a center for education on volunteerism and local, national and global need.

And thanks to the Altria Companies Employee Community Fund (ACECF) it is funded throughout 2018!

ACECF was established to provide employees from the Altria family of companies an opportunity to be more actively involved in serving their communities. Employee volunteers make all ACECF funding decisions, and every employee dollar raised goes directly to support area nonprofits.

$107M Owen J. Roberts Budget Hikes Taxes 2.4%

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Photos by Evan Brandt
A LINE OF CHAMPIONS: Members of the Owen J. Roberts High School Track and Field Team, this year's PAC-10 Champions, were recognized by the school board at Monday night's meeting.


The Owen J. Roberts School Board unanimously approved a $107 million budget for the 2018-2019 school year Monday night that will raise property taxes by 2.4 percent.

The exact amount budgeted for spending is $106,878,490 and includes a $10 million capital budget and $7.1 million of debt.
TOPS IN BUSINESS: Some of the 26 Owen J. Roberts 

students who qualified/competed in the DECA
International Career Development Conference who were
recognized by the school board Monday night.

Chief Financial Officer Jaclin Krumrine said the tax hike is "at the index," or the maximum allowed by the state's inflation-based tax cap.

She also said the district did make use of any of the "exceptions" which state law allows districts to exceed their index, for things like construction costs of special education.

The board also unanimously adopted the millage rate of 31.2366 mills.

Those who pay their full tax bill by Aug. 31, are entitled to a 2 percent discount on the amount. Those who don't pay by Oct. 31, face a 10 percent penalty.

No one from the public spoke either for or against the budget.

However, there was one speaker of note -- Lucas Gray.

Gray is the student government executive council president. This was his last meeting as he is graduating and the school board presented him with a small gift.

He presented them with a appeal to stop behaving badly.

While thanking them for the opportunity, he confessed that he left almost every meeting feeling "frustrated and embarrassed."

Not because of anything he had done, but because of the board's behavior toward each other.

Lucas said he was disappointed "by the undertone of mistrust, the mudslinging" and the "petty jibes."

This behavior, he said, embarrasses a district "that deserves better."

Click this link to read more about the school's board's dysfunction.

And now, the Tweets. Amid them, you will find speeches by the high school valedictorian and two (? must have been a tie) salutatorians.

They're worth a look, successful scholars talking about the teachers who inspired them.

Attorney General's Help Sought in YMCA Fight

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Photos by Evan Brandt
About 40 people showed up for Tuesday's meeting called to find ways to prevent the closure of the Pottstown YMCA branch.



The fight to prevent the closure of the Pottstown YMCA branch soon may be taken up in Harrisburg.

At least two Pottstown Borough officials -- Mayor Stephanie Henrick and Deputy Police Chief Michael Markovich -- have contacted the office of Attorney General Josh Shapiro asking for help to prevent the closure.

Specifically, Henrick, an attorney, said she spoke with the office of the senior deputy attorney general for charitable organizations, which outlined the process for filing a formal complaint.

She said it has to be made in writing, and evidence provided, before they will investigate, something she hopes to organize shortly.

The Rev. Vernon Ross, pastor of Bethel Community Church,
said he once served on the board of the Philadelphia-Freedom
Valley YMCA and he is glad he no longer does given the
actions that board has endorsed.
Markovich, on the other hand, went straight to the top.

In a letter to Shapiro read aloud at the meeting by Invictus Ministries Inc. Pastor Bishop Everett Debnam, Markovich wrote "I have seen Pottstown get left behind when it comes to the rest of Montgomery County."

"Everything Pottstown offered its youth, seems to be closed," said Markovich, who was joined by Upper Pottsgrove Police Chief Francis Wheatley and Lower Pottsgrove Police Chief Michael Foltz in expressing concern that crime among juveniles my go up this summer if the YMCA closes.

"One thing that doesn't close, is the streets and the corners," Markovich wrote. "Once the children end up there, it is usually no turning back."

"It's a cycle," he wrote, "that we are trying to break. That's why we need to put the brakes on the YMCA closing. We're reaching out to you for help."

Further, Bob Stauffer, who was on the Pottstown YMCA Board of Directors in the 1990s, offered up a formal resolution calling for Shapiro's office to investigate what he says is behavior at variance with the YMCA mission.

Those were just a few of the more serious actions discussed during last night's second meeting of the coalition of activists and groups -- led by the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP -- working to reverse the decision by the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA to close the Pottstown branch on North Adams Street.

The meeting was held at the YWCA Tri-County Area on King Street.

Local attorney Bob Stauffer
holds a resolution calling
for an investigation by PA
Attorney General Josh Shapiro
Lawrence Cohen, who is both a member of the NAACP and the task force put together by the Y which defied instructions and argued to keep the branch open, has been penning letters to large donors of the Conshohocken-based organization to let them know how their money is being used.

These include the Mary Porter Foundation, the Christina and Lawrence Smith Foundation, Cigna Foundation, Comcast, Wawa Foundation BB & T Bank and Pew Charitable Trust to name a few.

And Shona Williams is in charge of writing letters to donors who have given $25,000 or less to the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA.

"We're raising our voices, and we have so many voices, so we can offer so many perspectives," she said.

One perspective the group hopes to harness are those of two members of the World Champion Philadelphia Eagles -- Chris Long and Malcolm Jenkins.

A letter from NAACP branch President Johnny Corson to the Chris Long Foundation begins with an important caveat: "We aren't asking for money."

Rather, Corson's letter is instead asking for Long to add his voice to the call for the Y to remain open. "We can't let this happen to our young people -- they need and deserve their Y -- for sports, mentoring, community, stability and opportunity," according to the letter.

From left Lawrence Cohen, Johnny Corson 
and Everett Debnam.
It also notes "the association recently closed an in-town YMCA in Norristown, leaving young people with a local Y.

Instead of serving communities where the need for  YMCA services is greatest, the Association is choosing to build 'county club' fitness centers serving wealthy suburbanites."

Despite the united voice of the community and its officials and remaining institutions, "YMCA management is ignoring the needs of our youth," read Corson's letter. "We need the power of your voice to help us stop this unnecessary closure that will devastate our community's young people."

Whether or not the star power of Chris Long or Jenkins can help reverse this course or not, there are also efforts underway to organize a march on the Philadelphia-Freedom Valley YMCA headquarters in Conshohocken in the hopes that the power of people can get the job done.

A date for the march has not yet been set, although Flag Day was mentioned as one possibility, so keep your calendars as open as you can folks. A date will likely be announced on the new Save the Pottstown YMCA Facebook page, which you can join by clicking here.

The march would be the perfect opportunity to deliver the petition calling for the Y to remain open, which now making the rounds and has already collected more than 1,200 signatures. You can sign that petition by clicking here.

The date of the next meeting has not yet been set.

Here are the Tweets from the meeting:

Regional Recreation and Sustainability Planning

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When I headed out to last night's Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee meeting, I glanced at the agenda and figured the big story would be Sanatoga Green.

Yawn.

Boy was I wrong.

It was on the agenda, but there was not much to say. It has been tinkered with, but remains the same basic plan.

More interesting was the presentation by John Lesher, chief environmental planner for the Montgomery County Planning Commission, who talked about Pottstown's sustainability plan.

It's the only one in the state, to his knowledge anyway, that includes both a borough and a school district, so let's polish our buttons on that one.

One of the more interesting snippets to come out of Lesher's talk -- we covered the plan fairly extensively back in January when it was adopted -- was how much the environment in which we live affects our health.
Here is the graphic.

He showed a graphic from a study that showed how much more important environment, lifestyle and special factors determine our lifespans -- more than genetics or infectious agents.

We spend 90 percent of our health money on medical care, but it is only response for 10 to 20 percent of how long we live or how healthy we are.

Here's the sound bite, "zip codes are more important than genetic codes" in determining our lifespan and over health, he said. Meaning that effort put into things like making Pottstown a nicer place to live actually help us to live longer.

Along those lines, the regional planners took an important vote and agreed to once again be the umbrella organization for the Pottstown Area Regional Recreation Committee and, hopefully, the retaining of director Michael Lane.

Upper Pottsgrove Township Manager Carol Lewis outlined that Lane and his predecessor, Justin Keller, had collectively obtained about $300,000 for each of the six towns that participate in in paying for his services.

Each town currently pays about $5,000, this due to a $100,000 grant from the state which expires next year, and a matching grant from the Pottstown Area Health and Wellness Foundation.

Next year, without the state grant, the price may rise to about $8,000 unless New Hanover and East Coventry -- the two towns which do not participate -- decide to jump into the pool with the other towns.

"Pottstown has definitely benefited from this," said Councilman Ryan Procsal.

The planners voted unanimously to continue to be the umbrella organization. Lewis said the recreation committee will make presentations over the next few months to the boards of the participating municipalities -- and the non-participating ones if they want to consider it -- to get their approval for the funding.

And now, here are the Tweets from the meeting:

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