Saturday, February 23, 2019

Spring-Ford Staging 'Once on This Island' March 1, 2

Submitted Photos



Spring-Ford Senior High School will stage a production of "Once on This Island," March 1 and 2.






Blogger's Note: The following was provided by the Spring-Ford Area School District.

Spring-Ford Senior High School invites the public to a production of "Once on this Island" for three shows on March 1 and March 2.

Set in the Caribbean, enter the world of Once on this Island as storytellers gather on a rainy night to comfort a little girl afraid of the coming storm. 

They describe the island they live on, once devastated by storms and flooding, and tell of a love story. 

It is the story of Ti Moune, a fearless peasant girl in search of her place in a world divided, and ready to risk it all for love. Guided by the mighty island gods, Ti Moune sets out on a remarkable journey to reunite with the wealthy young man who has captured her heart, proving that the power of love conquers the fear of death, and ultimately bringing the island together as one.

Showtimes are as follows:
  • March 1st at 7 p.m.
  • March 2nd at 1 p.m.
  • March 2nd at 7 p.m.
Tickets are available online or at the door: https://springford.seatyourself.biz

Friday, February 22, 2019

Pottstown Board Not Bored by 'Hairspray' Preview

Photo shamelessly pilfered from John Armato's Twitter feed.
Some of the 90 students who are part of the cast of the high school's upcoming musical, "Hairspray," perform for the Pottstown School Board Thursday night.


Sometimes its worthwhile to go to school board meetings just for the entertainment -- literally.

Before things really got too far along last night, the board and those lucky few who were in the audience, were invited into the auditorium to see the more than 100 Pottstown students participating in this year's musical do a few numbers.

This production is "Hairspray," and it will be staged for the general public March 1 and March 2 at 7 p.m. and March 3 at 2 p.m. in the high school's Davenport Auditorium.

Here is some video:



And here is even more video:



Photo by Evan Brandt

Math teacher and "Hairspray" producer Robert Decker
explains some of the particulars Thursday night.
High School mathematics chairman Robert Decker, who is once again acting as the musical's
producer, said 90 students will perform, more than 112 are participating.

Decker added that despite the quality of the last two musicals, "The Little Mermaid" and "The Wiz," the student performances have managed to get get even better.

After hearing them perform, it was easy to agree.

Then some other stuff happened at the meeting, blah, blah, blah.

You can read about it in the Tweets below. It's late and I'm tired.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Boyertown Library to Host Talk on the Need for Action on Election District Gerrymandering Reform

This is the winning map of Drexel Hill's Philip Hensley in the first Draw the Lines PA competition sponsored by the Committee of Seventy.





Blogger's Note: The following was provided by Fair Districts PA.

A presentation on "Making Your Vote Count - Redistricting Reform," will be made at the Boyertown Community Library. 24 N. Reading Avenue, Boyertown on Monday, March 4, at 7 p.m. by a Fair Districts PA - Montgomery County leader.

Rich Rafferty
Rich Rafferty, the Fair Districts PA – Montgomery County lead, will explain why gerrymandering reform is critically needed in Pennsylvania. He will also explain why the participation of a motivated citizenry across Pennsylvania is urgently needed in 2019 to change how our Congressional and state legislative maps are drawn.

“It’s important to remember,” Rafferty said, “that the 2018 Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision that forced a redrawing of our 18 Congressional district maps will expire in 2021 and the same Harrisburg legislative leaders will then proceed under the old backroom rules, resulting in another 10-year cycle of gerrymandered Congressional and state legislative maps. We need reform legislation to be adopted in 2019.”

American politicians have practiced gerrymandering, the intentional manipulation of election district lines to protect incumbents and secure partisan advantage, for more than 200 years. In a profound distortion of the Democratic process, recent advances in mapping technology and voter data collection have made it possible for those who draw district lines in Pennsylvania to capture voting districts and control election results well before a single vote has been cast.

Gerrymandering made PA a national laughing stock with the former
7th District mocked by many as "Goofy Kicking Donald Duck."
I always thought it looked more like the Bullwinkle District (below).
Politicians have been selecting their voters through mapmaking rather than voters choosing their political leaders at elections.

Berks County, with a population of 417,000, should have seven state representatives with election districts completely inside the county. Instead, the gerrymandered, 2011 district maps gave the county nine state representative districts, of which five are split across adjoining counties.

Likewise, Berks should have one to two state Senate districts within its borders; instead, Berks County has four Senate districts, three of which are split across adjoining counties.

Montgomery County, with a population of 826,075 residents, should have 13 state representatives
with election districts completely inside the county.

Instead, the gerrymandered, 2011 district maps gave Montgomery County 18 state representative districts, of which six state representatives partially represent Montgomery County and an adjoining county such as Berks, Delaware or Chester. Likewise, all six Montgomery County Senators also represent another part of adjoining counties.

For example, part of Pottstown is represented to state Rep. Tim Hennessey, R-26th Dist., and all of the rest of his district is in Chester
How the 7th evolved into a joke through Gerrymandering.
County.

The interests of Berks and Montgomery County residents cannot be adequately protected in Harrisburg when elected officials have divided county loyalties.

Carol Kuniholm, the co-founder and chair of Fair Districts PA, said, “by any measure, Pennsylvania is among the most severely gerrymandered states in the nation. This means diminished choice for all voters. Our distorted districts yield a less accountable government that is unable to enact policy solutions or accomplish even the minimum requirement of the job -- to agree on a reasonable budget.”

How Gerrymandering skews election results.
Fair Districts-PA endorses redistricting reform legislation that puts redistricting control in the hands of an Independent Citizens Commission, operating transparently and with a minimum of personal voter data.

Its reform legislation, which secured bipartisan majority support during the 2017-2018 Harrisburg legislative session, was blocked by those few legislative leaders. Fair Districts-PA is back advocating for legislation that must pass during the 2019-2020 session.

Time is short! All are welcome to attend this education event to understand the problem, the proposed solutions and how every citizen can help end gerrymandering in Pennsylvania.

Area Pennsylvania legislators have also been invited to attend.

The Boyertown Library is located at 24 N. Reading Avenue, Boyertown, PA. The telephone number is 610-369-0496.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Ways to Boost Pottstown's Fiscal Health Aired

Photos by Evan Brandt

This chart, part of Tuesday's presentation, shows how, if nothing changes, the borough's expenses will outpace its revenues and the fund balance surpluses will dwindle to deficits.


Despite finding that the borough is "doing pretty well" in terms of managing its expenses and trying to attract economic development, consultants looking for ways to make Pottstown's finances sustainable into the future said if nothing changes, million-dollar-deficits and tax hikes are on the way.

Those are the preliminary findings of a report on Pottstown's fiscal health undertaken as part of Pennsylvania's Early Intervention Program designed to keep municipalities out of fiscal distress.

The roughly 20-minute presentation Tuesday night was a broad overview of the findings that will be presented to borough council in detail on April 20 and provided the background for residents and taxpayers to ask questions or, more importantly, offer suggestions for improvement.
Kevin Brown suggested tax breaks for business.

Eight people did so.

It should be noted, however, that Tuesday night was not the only opportunity for input. An on-line survey of borough services -- which can be found here https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/PottstownCommunitySurvey -- will be open until the end of the month.

Those suggestions offered up Tuesday night varied from selling the water and sewer systems, as Limerick Township did this summer for $75 million; to offering tax breaks to bring in businesses; to allowing people to work on their homes without requiring a licensed plumber or electrician; to fixing up the roads and alleys to make real estate in town more valuable.

"The median income in Pottstown is $45,000, less than the state and the country, the source of revenue cannot be the residents," said resident Kevin Brown.

He said offering more tax incentives to attract business would take some of the tax burden off residential property owners.

Brown also suggested a "profit and loss analysis" for each department. "I understand we own the airport. Are we making money on the airport?" he asked.

Property investor Chris Dailey said the borough makes it difficult for people to do renovation and improvement work on their own properties.
Property flipper and landlord Chris Dailey.

A former Pottstown resident who now lives in Royersford, Dailey said in Royersford and Lower
Pottsgrove, he can get a permit to do work on his own properties and the municipality inspects the work when it's done.

"I flip a lot of houses and I do my own work. It doesn't matter if a monkey does it, if it passes inspection it should be OK," said Dailey. But in Pottstown only licensed plumbers and electricians can do work on properties.

He said he purchased a house in Pottstown and wanted to fix it up to sell to another homeowner, but requiring him to use licensed electricians and plumbers meant it would not be cost-effective.

"So I went down to Norristown, I challenged the assessment and got it lowered and then rented it out to Section 8, which is exactly what the borough says they don't want," Dailey said.
Sheryl Miller is worried about funding for the fire companies.

Former council member Sheryl Miller said she agrees that new businesses are coming to Pottstown, "but it seems like for every new thing that comes in, we take three losses."

Miller also said she hopes the study now being undertaken by EConsult Solutions and SRW Strategies takes a look at the underfunding of Pottstown's four volunteer fire companies.

That was a concern also raised by firefighters with the North End Fire Company.

Noting that the consultants said health and retirement might need to be cut, North End fire Company President Andrew Stiteler said it is the benefits and not the pay that is keeping the professional drivers in their posts.
North End firefighter Dave Saylor.

Fire Brigade Commander Dave Saylor said he hopes the study looks at capital expenses for the fire companies as well. "The days of paying for a $1 million piece of equipment with pancake breakfasts is over," Saylor said.

When it comes to the police department, the largest single expense in the borough general fund, Brooke Queenan, a senior research analyst with EConsult Solutions, said the department is not over-staffed.

She said while calls for service continue to increase, the rate of serious crimes has actually continued to go down. And while "quality of life" crimes are on the rise, Queenan said that is often do to having a very active police department that makes arrests.

Pottstown's Police Department was compared to those in Easton and Williamsport and while they have lower crime rates, they also have larger police departments, she said.

And merging with another department does not offer much promise of savings because the kinds of services a regional department can offer for less cost, a detective bureau or advanced technology, are already in place in Pottstown.

"This is already the most robust police department in the area," Queenan said.

Daniel Connelly, a director at Philadelphia-based EConsult Solutions Inc., offered an overview of their findings of Pottstown's financial and operation situation so far.

Most socio-economic indicators in Pottstown are

below the state and Montgomery County median.
The borough's median home value, median income, per capita income and percentage of owner-occupied homes are all below the average for both Montgomery County and the state, the study found.

It's unemployment rate is higher than both and its percentage of individuals living below the poverty line is twice the state rate and more than three times Montgomery County's.

Connelly said the borough's water and sewer funds are financially healthy, due large to planned 5 percent rate hikes in each of the next three years.

David Unkovic, an attorney with McNear, Wallace and Nuric told a resident who suggested selling those systems that a policy decision like that must be made by borough council and that it has ups and downs. The cash infusion might help address certain problems, like roads and other infrastructure as was suggested, but the borough would also lose control of setting its own rates and customers would be at the mercy of a private company in terms of rates.

The example of Limerick selling its sewer system for $75 million could be counter-balanced, for example, by the fact that it may lead to rate hikes as high as 84 percent, The Mercury reported in September.

In this chart, the red line represents expenses, the blue line revenues.
The borough's financial position is currently "relatively healthy," Connelly said, because of tax increases and containing overtime and health insurance costs, "however, trends show challenges ahead."

Putting pressure on the expense side are "legacy costs," primarily pensions and "post-employment benefits," Connelly said. Borough Manager Justin Keller cited an unexpected $1 million increase in pension costs last year as one of the drivers of the 9.5 percent tax hike for 2019.

"The borough will experiences deficits and deterioration of fund balance unless new revenue sources or other corrective actions are taken," Connelly said.

Re-structuring retirement benefits, controlling health insurance costs and reducing overtime costs offer the best options for reducing the cost side of the borough's budget equation, said Queenan.

The study will also likely recommend working closely with the Pottstown Area Industrial Development Inc. to promote the Federal Opportunity Zones included in the tax reform bill passed by Congress last year and signed by President Donald Trump.

Another suggestion is to continue work on remediating blighted properties and seeking more financial support for those efforts.

And with that, here are the Tweets.

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Pottsgrove Hosting 1st-Ever Competition Saturday


BLOGGER'S NOTE: The following was provided by the Pottsgrove School District.

Pottsgrove High School will be hosting its first indoor dance, twirler, and color guard competition this Saturday, Feb. 23.

This is the first year that Pottsgrove High School is fielding a competitive indoor color guard.

According to Marching Band Director. Shawn Campopiano, “we have chosen to host a contest again this year to showcase that to the community as well as raise funds that will go toward the expenses of their season and their trip to Wildwood, NJ, for the Atlantic Coast Championships (ACC's) in early May. “

The guard just earned second place this last weekend at Downingtown West High School, and will continue competing through ACC's, where they will go head-to-head against 24 other scholastic color guards for a chance to advance through prelims, semi-finals, and the elite finals competition held in the Wildwood Convention Center.

Their 2019 show is entitled "Starry Starry Night" and is meant to portray not only the aesthetics of Van Gough's painting, but the emotional transformation that comes with changing your mindset from negative to positive. 

The color guard is under the direction of Riley Davenport and Katelyn Guest.

The competition will take place in the Pottsgrove High School Gymnasium. Doors will open by 12:30 pm, the show will begin at 1, and will end with awards at 3. Tickets are $7 for adults and $5 for children. Children age 2 and under are free. Food and drink will be sold during the entire event.

The show is part of the Tournament Indoor Association's 2019 season. 

Information on that circuit can be found here. This link will take you to a schedule for the event that includes a list of what groups will be attending the competition.

Monday, February 18, 2019

Montco Offering Free Program to Protect Property

Blogger's Note: The following was provided by the Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds

Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds Jeanne Sorg is encouraging Montgomery County residents to sign up for FraudSleuth, a free monitoring program through her office that helps protects their properties from thieves and forgers.

“With heightened concerns about fraud in neighboring counties, the Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds office wants to ensure that we partner with homeowners to protect one of their most valuable assets—their properties,” Sorg said. “We have a free monitoring program called FraudSleuth that will alert homeowners when any documents are recorded against their property.”

FraudSleuth, is available to any Montgomery County homeowner. Similar to credit-monitoring services that are widely available today, FraudSleuth sends e-mail alerts to participating homeowners when any documents are recorded in their name or against a property.

“Montgomery County may not experience real estate fraud as frequently as other counties, but we want to be proactive in preventing any widespread issues,” Sorg said. “That is why we are proud to offer this program to all Montgomery County homeowners, free of charge.”

If you are a Montgomery County homeowner who would like more information about FraudSleuth, please call the Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds office at 610-278-3289 or visit www.montcopa.org/rod.