Showing posts with label Montgomery County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montgomery County. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2019

Invasive Plant Program Planned for August 10

Garlic Mustard is an example of an invasive species in Pennsylvania. It advances across the landscape at an average 20 feet per year, forming dense clusters that crowd out native vegetation. Native to Asia and Europe, garlic mustard was intentionally introduced to North America as a food plant and for its medicinal applications.








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

Come to Lower Perkiomen Valley Park on Saturday, Aug 10, at 8 a.m. for a park ranger-led program regarding invasive plants. 

Invasive plants are all around us, and they harm our ecosystems by crowding out native species and reducing biodiversity. Come learn how to identify these plants, what the most effective removal methods are, and how to properly dispose of them. This event is suitable for ages 10 and older.

Pre-registration is preferred. Call 610-666-5371 to pre-register. Participants should meet on the deck at the Park office. 

This event will be held rain, or shine. Participants should wear long pants and sturdy, closed-toed shoes. This is a hands-on workshop, so please bring work gloves, and be ready to tackle some of these invaders in the park.

Lower Perkiomen Valley Park is on New Mill Road in Oaks, Pa., and easily accessible from Egypt Road off of Rt. 422. The park is open year-round, except for major holidays. For more information about the park, please visit http://www.montcopa.org/index.aspx?nid=873. For further information about this program, please call 610-666-5371.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

A Phoenix Rises on Beech Street in Pottstown

Photos by Evan Brandt

VIPs gather Wednesday afternoon for the ribbon-cutting ceremony at Beech Street Factory.


A major thing happened in the neighborhood in Pottstown Wednesday where major things don't happen too often.

A veritable crowd of people want to live in the former

Fecera's warehouse, despite a recent shooting near there.
After more than a decade of sitting empty and slowly deteriorating, the 105-year-old brick building built as a shirt factory began its new life as an art center.

Once a symbol of the work that was once easy to find in Pottstown, it will now stand as a symbol of what determination can accomplish in a much more complicated world.

That building will be home to 43 apartments and ArtFusion 19464, and stand as an example of what it means not to give up on Pottstown, particularly in the neighborhood all too many feel is beyond help.
Judy Memberg with lobby furniture donated

by Fecera's Furniture, which once owned
the warehouse.

It's already working.

Judy Memberg, the steadfast hand on the tiller of Genesis Housing Corp., said the property behind the former Fecera's Furniture warehouse at the corner of Beech and North Evans streets has already been rehabilitated.

And a long-vacant home adjacent to the new parking lot has been purchased for rehab.

It didn't happen overnight, and it didn't happen in a vacuum.

It took a lot of people with their own agendas (and kingdoms) giving up a little territory and control and believing in something other than "what's in it for me?," or to be more Pottstown-specific -- "I'm not doing anything to help (fill in the blank)."
Erika Hornberg-Cooper, in green dress, 

welcomes visitors even as work on the space
continued Wednesday.

I guess $13 million can do that.

Congratulations to all and to ArtFusion 19464 for successfully pivoting from its long-held property on High Street into this space, located even closer to the population director Erika Hornberg-Cooper is focusing on helping.

Here are some Tweets from the ribbon-cutting Wednesday. Look for full-coverage in an upcoming edition of The Mercury.

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Is Acrimony the Cure to Voter Apathy?

Photos by Evan Brandt

An overwhelming voter turnout at two New Hanover polling places Tuesday can be partly attributed to the growth of housing in the township.



The lines at New Hanover Lutheran Church were unbelievable, and due in part to a lot of population growth in the township in recent years.

But how do you explain Upper Pottsgrove, where a massive turn-out of more than 80 percent
The line of Upper Pottsgrove voters at Pottsgrove Middle School

Snaked down to the end of the hall all the way to the front door.
occurred at the township's single polling place?

There has been no concurrent increase in this township's population. Lines were also more than an hour at Berean Bible Church in Lower Pottsgrove, due in part to reported problems with a voting machine.

But again, although large developments are pending there, there has been no surge in population in Lower Pottsgrove, or in Union, or in Amity.

So we're left to ask why was turn-out so huge?

Some might say voter anger and they would not be wrong I think.

Although they differed in almost every other way, those who voted for Bernie Sanders on the Democratic side, and those who voted for Donald Trump on the other, shared one common attribute -- they were angry at the status quo.
Maybe its time to heed the advice of Scott Major, pastor of

First Church of the Brethren in Pottstown, also a polling place.

In the Republican primary, the candidate of anger won the nomination, but not in the Democratic primary.

And so the candidate who wanted to up end the status quo faced off against the champion of the status quo, Hillary Clinton.

It meant for lots of sparks, lots of accusations of dirty tricks, lots of friction among neighbors and family.

Are we to conclude that this was what was needed to drive people to the polls?

Most of the voters I spoke with in my round of 10 polling stations on election day, did not seem particularly angry, although the ones who were definitely supported Trump.

Anger as antidote to voter apathy seems a dangerous path for a nation to follow, because to maintain it, the people have to be kept angry.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Pottsgrove Manor by Candlelight Sunday

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

The Pottsgrove Manor by Candlelight Tour will 
feature colonial music played on historical instruments
Revel in the spirit of the season at historic Pottsgrove Manor for the annual
Pottsgrove Manor by Candlelight Open House Sunday, from 2 to 8 p.m.

The public is invited to take a self-guided tour of the elegant 1752 manor house, where costumed interpreters will depict the colonial residents of Pottsgrove Manor.

As visitors make their way through the house, they will hear the strains of music played on historical instruments, see English country dancing, catch a whiff of the delicious smells in the kitchen as historical cook Deborah Peterson prepares authentic dishes at the open hearth and enjoy the beauty of the mansion lit by candlelight and bedecked with greenery.

Examples of colonial treats John Potts would have served.
Complimentary refreshments of hot spiced cider, colonial-style chocolate drink and cookies will be served at the end of the house tour.

Also, young visitors will be able to make free seasonal crafts to take home.

After exploring the house, guests may visit the museum shop for unique, historically-oriented gifts like locally made redware pottery and ornaments, reproduction glassware, handcrafted candles and soaps, along with books, toys and games.

Outside the manor house, built by Pottstown founder and ironmaster John Potts, the courtyard will be filled with the sounds of historic carols sung by colonial revelers (performing from 2 to 5 p.m.) while warming themselves by a bonfire.

The manor house will also be featured as a stop on the Pottstown Historical
English country dancing will also be on display Sunday.
House Tour, held that same evening at historic homes throughout the borough and requires the purchase of tickets.

However, a donation of $2 per person is all that is suggested for the Pottsgrove Manor event, which will be held weather permitting. No reservations are necessary.

Visitors are asked to park in the Carousel at Pottstown, 30 W. King St., or at Memorial Park, 75 W. King St.; a shuttle will transport visitors to and from Pottsgrove Manor throughout the event.

Handicapped parking is available in the museum's parking lot.

It looks too good to eat doesn't it? It is, these are not for
visitors to consume, but for display only.
Even if you can't make it Sunday, know that the house will remain decorated for the holidays in colonial fashion through Jan. 10.

Twelfth Night Mansion Tours are offered during regular museum hours, Tuesday through  Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, from 1 to 4 p.m.

Tours are given on the hour with the last tour beginning at 3 p.m. Groups of 10 or more should pre-register by calling 610-326-4014.

Pottsgrove Manor is closed Mondays and Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve and New Year's Day.

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 W. King St., near the intersection with Route 100, just north of the interchange with Route 422.

It is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department.

For more information, call 610-326-4014 or visit the web site at www.montcopa.org/pottsgrovemanor and like their page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pottsgrovemanor

Saturday, September 5, 2015

More Trees Please



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

Lower Perkiomen Valley Park is hosting a series of Wednesday Walks, the sixth of which, “Trees,” will take place on Sept. 16, 2015 at 9 a.m. 

The program will meet in the Main Pavilion. 

Themed Wednesday Walks occur the third Wednesday of the month, April through October. 

The pace is leisurely over flat, paved trails, and all ages are welcome.

Bid farewell to summer, and welcome autumn with a walk among the arboreal giants in Lower Perkiomen Valley Park. 

Visitors will trek along the Perkiomen Creek to see colorful maple, black walnut, hickory, birch, and other trees, and learn how deciduous trees prepare for winter.

Participants will need sturdy walking shoes and water, and are encouraged to bring binoculars to view the treetops and river. Preregistration is preferred.

This free event will occur weather permitting. Lower Perkiomen Valley Park is located on New Mill Road in Oaks, PA, easily accessible from Egypt Road off Route 422. 

The park is open year-round, except for major holidays. For further information about this program or to preregister, please call 610-666-5371, or visit the website at http://www.montcopa.org/lowerperkiomenvalleypark.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Free Hazardous Collection at Spring-Ford Tomorrow

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

The third recycling date for the collection of household hazardous waste sponsored by Montgomery County will take place Saturday, July 11, at Spring-Ford 9th Grade Center located at 400 South Lewis Road in Royersford, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. 

Free residential collection events are held outdoors rain or shine.

Toxic and flammable household chemicals are collected for proper disposal. 

Acceptable items include gasoline, oil, kerosene, turpentine, paint thinner, oil paint, stains, varnish, pool chemicals, herbicides, pesticides, antifreeze, caustic cleaners and solvents, mercury, thermometers, flares, fire extinguishers, lead acid batteries, rechargeable batteries, fluorescent tube light bulbs, CFL bulbs, mini propane canisters, and electric oil filled heaters. 

Containers will be returned upon request.

Do Not Bring:

Electronics, appliances, asbestos, explosives, ammunition, medical waste, radioactive waste, smoke detectors, items containing Freon, tires, or the following:
  • Latex or Water-Based Paint is not hazardous and can be placed in the trash once it is dry. Air dry latex paint or add absorbent material like kitty litter until paint becomes a solid.
  • Alkaline Household Batteries are not hazardous and should be thrown in the trash.
  • Prescription Medications should be disposed of in the secure drop boxes located in many area police stations, a list of which can be found in the Recycling Guide atwww.MontgomeryCountyRecycles.org.
  • Propane or Helium Tanks should be taken to locations listed in the Recycling Guide at www.MontgomeryCountyRecycles.org. Mini propane canisters are accepted at collections.
The remaining Household Hazardous Waste Events for 2015 are:
  • Saturday, Aug. 8 at Abington Junior High School, 2056 Susquehanna Road, Abington, PA 19001
  • Sunday, Oct. 18 at Lower Merion Transfer Station, 1300 North Woodbine Avenue, Penn Valley, PA 19072
For more information on the collection events, go to www.MontgomeryCountyRecycles.org or call the recycling line at 610-278-3618

The household hazardous waste events flyer is at: http://www.montcopa.org/DocumentCenter/View/8552.

Monday, July 6, 2015

Walks on the Wing

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

Come to Lower Perkiomen Valley Park on Wednesday, July 15, 2015 at 9 a.m for a fun and educational guided walk all about birds. 

This is the fourth walk in the Wednesday Walk series—themed walks which occur the third Wednesday of the month April through October. 

The pace is leisurely over flat, paved trails.

Lower Perkiomen Valley Park hosts an impressive array of migratory and year-round bird populations. 

On this walk, participants will search the park and river banks for signs of birds, from nests to woodpecker holes. 

Park staff will guide visitors to locations with interesting bird activity and guests can try their hand at identification. 

Binoculars can be provided for children, but adults may want to bring their own, more powerful set. 

All ages are welcome, so come out for a morning walk featuring fine feathered friends.

This free event will occur weather permitting. 

Participants should meet at the main pavilion. Please preregister by calling 610-666-5371. 

Lower Perkiomen Valley Park is located on New Mill Road in Oaks, PA, easily accessible from Egypt Road off Route 422. 

The park is open year-round, except for major holidays. For further information about this program, please call 610-666-5371, or visit the website at www.montcopa.org/lowerperkiomenvalleypark.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Free Tire Drop Off Saturday at Pottstown High



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

The final 2015 residential tire collection sponsored by Montgomery County will take place Saturday, June at Pottstown High School between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m.

Free residential collection events are held outdoors rain or shine.

This free event is open to Montgomery County residents only. No businesses. 

Six tires per vehicle is the maximum and rims are accepted, but off-road tires are not.

The Montgomery County Commissioners authorize this annual event to prevent tires from being improperly disposed of and to reduce breeding grounds for disease carrying mosquitoes. 

The tires that are collected will be shredded and repurposed by a local business into products such as road surface material, highway sound barrier wall material, and playground material.

For additional information, visit www.MontgomeryCountyRecycles.org or call the Recycling Hotline at 610-278-3618

The Residential Tire Collection flyer is at:http://www.montcopa.org/DocumentCenter/View/8535.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Cut from Commoners' Cloth


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

Pottsgrove Manor will show visitors what their colonial ancestors wore to work with a living history program entitled, “Clothing the Common Sort” today Saturday, Sept. 20,  from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. historian Deborah Peterson will give show-and-tell presentations explaining the clothing of laboring men, women, and children in eighteenth-century America.

Throughout the day, the site’s living history volunteers will demonstrate various colonial chores, including cooking at the open hearth, while dressed in their working-class attire. 

Some activities will be hands-on, and visitors will get a chance to try on some of the reproduction clothes for themselves.

This program is being held in conjunction with the Manor’s current exhibit of both reproduction and original 18th-century garments, “To the Manor Worn: Clothing the 18th-Century Household,” which can be toured on the hour during the program. 

There is a suggested donation of $2 per person for this program. 

The museum shop will also be open throughout the event and will be having a special one-day-only sale—10% off all sewing-related items!

The clothing exhibit can also be toured during regular museum hours through Nov. 2: Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. 

Tours are given on the hour. The last tour of the day begins at 3 p.m.. The site is closed Mondays and major holidays. 

Groups of ten or more should pre-register by calling 610-326-4014.

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route 100, just off Route 422, in Pottstown. 

Pottsgrove Manor is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department. 

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

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

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Dress for Success

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

The Mantuamaker is coming to Pottstown.

On Saturday, June 14, 2014 from 11:00am to 3:00pm, historic Pottsgrove Manor will host a living history program, “A Visit from the Mantuamaker.”

As a wealthy family, the Pottses would have likely hired a professional “mantuamaker”—that is a
dressmaker— to cut out, fit, and sew gowns for Mrs. Potts and her daughters. 

In this program, the Manor’s staff and volunteers will demonstrate the process of creating a gown from scratch, as well as other aspects of sewing and tailoring colonial garments. 

They will also be dressed in reproduction 18th-century clothing, giving visitors an up-close look at the fashion of the era. 

Visitors of all ages can try their hand at some of the needlework techniques and play dress-up in replica 18th-century clothing. 

This program is being held in conjunction with the Manor’s current exhibit of both reproduction and original 18th-century garments, “To the Manor Worn: Clothing the 18th-Century Household,” which can be toured on the hour during the program. 

There is a suggested donation of $2 per person for this program. 

The museum shop will also be open throughout the event and will be having a special one-day-only sale—10% off all sewing-related items.

The clothing exhibit can also be toured during regular museum hours through Nov. 2, Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.. Tours are given on the hour. 

The last tour of the day begins at 3 p.m. 

The site is closed Mondays and major holidays. Groups of ten or more should pre-register by calling 610-326-4014.

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route 100, just off Route 422. 

Pottsgrove Manor is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department. 

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

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

Friday, January 3, 2014

Follow This Thread

The holidays are over ladies. Back to work.





Pottsgrove Manor will host “Distaff Day,” showing the art of spinning fibers into thread, on Saturday, Jan. 11, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.,

From medieval times, the day after the Feast of the Epiphany was known to many Europeans as “Distaff Day.”

The distaff, a tool used in spinning, was a symbol of female industry, and Distaff Day was traditionally when women resumed their work after the Twelve Days of Christmas. 

During this program, visitors will see demonstrations of traditional spinning techniques and learn about the natural fibers that were used to make yarn and thread for textiles. 

This event will also give guests a chance to enjoy a guided tour of the manor house for the holidays, in the final “Twelfth Night Tours” of the season.

There is a suggested donation of $2 per person for this program. 

The museum shop will also be open throughout the event and will be having a special one-day-only sale – 10% off everything in the store!

The seasonal “Twelfth Night Tours” are running now through Sunday, Jan. 12, during regular museum hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

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

The site is closed Mondays and major holidays. Groups of ten or more should pre-register by calling 610-326-4014.

Pottsgrove Manor is located at 100 West King Street near the intersection of King Street and Route  100, just off Route 422, in Pottstown. 

Pottsgrove Manor is operated by Montgomery County under the direction of the Parks, Trails, and Historic Sites Division of the Assets and Infrastructure Department. 

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

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

Monday, September 23, 2013

The Constitution: Our Glorious Muddle

Debate.

Disagreement.

Compromise.

These are, perhaps the true cornerstones of the American Constitution over which our nation seems destined to wrangle forever.

It was a debate that was front and center locally last week at a local township commissioners meeting where, some argue, the nearest thing to an actual Democracy exists -- local government.

A resident of Upper Pottsgrove, France Krzalkovich, who was running for office and subsequently lost in the May primaries, petitioned his local township board of commissioners in February to adopt a resolution in support of 2nd Amendment rights, but which also contained the trappings of a long-standing Constitutional debate that revolves around the 10th Amendment.

A refresher:

Second Amendment: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

Tenth Amendment: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

What seems clear at first, quickly becomes less so once you start asking questions.

For example, does this mean a state law regulating firearms violates the 10th Amendment? Is the purpose of the 2nd Amendment only to have a militia? Does "well-regulated" mean gun laws are Constitutional?

The position advanced by the resolution Krazalkovich brought to the commissioners -- similar to a group of people who believe the 10th Amendment should justifies everything from legalizing marijuana to tossing Obamacare and legalizing same-sex marriage -- is pretty simple, and, at the same time, not.

Let me give summarizing it a try: If the second amendment says the right to bear arms shall not be abridged, and the 10th amendment says any power not designated to the federal government falls to the states, then any federal gun law violates the 2nd Amendment and thus, is unconstitutional.

(His thoughts on the subject are outlined in an April 19 letter to the editor published in TheMercury. You can read the full letter by clicking here.)

Several of the commissioners took a run at this and their positions can, for the most part, be read in their entirety in the minutes of the Aug. 19 commissioners meeting (not yet on-line, so, no link).

The two who voted in favor of adopting the resolution -- Russ Noll and Herb Miller, both of whom are running for reelection on the November ballot -- took different approaches to their support.

Noll said he feels the majority of the township residents support such a resolution and said after 15 years in local government, he had seen too many requirements come down from state and federal sources without the re-sources to pay for it.

Miller argued that guns help when police can't get there in time and took two lessons from history: noting that the Brown Shirts began by registering guns in Germany, Austria and Poland, and then took them away so when the Nazis invaded, they had less defense. He also said the Japanese did not invade the west coast of the U.S. because they believed too many Americans had guns and would take up arms against them.

Commissioner Peter Dolan, an attorney, argued that the landmark Supreme Court case of Marbury Vs. Madison established the precedent of "judicial review," putting the question of what is and isn't Constitutional in hands of the courts, not local governments.

Commissioners Chairman Elwood Taylor, a retired history teacher and former Marine marksman, issued a lengthy argument against the resolution arguing first, that the nation (and Pennsylvania) had already rejected "nullification;" that such arguments had been used to justify everything from segregation to the recent issuing of same sex marriage licenses in Montgomery County; and pointed to the trouble that followed in the Schuylkill County Borough of Gilberton when the council there adopted a similar resolution at the urging of their police chief Mark Kessler, who has since become famous for posting obscenity-laced YouTube videos and arming citizens as part of a Constitutional Security Force."

I was not able to attend any of the meetings where this debate unfolded, so I can't speak to the tone, but, on paper at least, I have to congratulate all sides on conducting a thoughtful and civil discussion on subjects about which reasonable people can disagree.

Clearly, there is plenty of room for argument which is really, I believe at least, by design of the founders.

They were truly brilliant men, but perhaps the apex of that brilliance was to recognize that they could not predict the future and they did not have all the answers.

(Or, they were just politicians who wanted to go home and just fussed around until they got vague language everyone could agree to....)

In either case, it seems to me that one of the dead-ends of Constitutional debates has to do with determining the "intent" of the founders.

In all likelihood, the only measure of their "intent" we can agree upon is that they were trying to hold the world's newest and largest Republic together. Everything else was probably up for grabs.

In other words, maybe they wrote the Bill of Rights so vaguely to say in essence: "we did what we could, you figure out the rest as it becomes necessary."

Much of the language in the Constitution is vague because the founders could not agree on anything more specific.

Having lived through the confusion and fractiousness of state-run governments under the Articles of Confederation, those who came together in Philadelphia had neither unity of purpose, nor unity of opinion.

James Madison
Many thought they were charged simply with tweaking the Articles of Confederation while others, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton chief among them, had a more radical idea.

(Today, it would called "an agenda" in dark and foreboding tones....)

Both Hamilton and Madison felt the country needed more central control to prevent too much democracy at the local and state level, which was causing chaos at the national level.

(In later years, Madison chafed under federal "overreach" and backed the efforts by his mentor, Thomas Jefferson, to establish state nullification of federal laws, while Hamilton never wavered from the belief that a strong central government -- and strong central bank -- were America's best hope for greatness.)

But even on the subject of a strong central government, they were agreed on the need, but not on the manner.

Hamilton, the most anglophile of the founders, wanted a single legislative branch and something as close to a Britain's Constitutional Monarchy as he could get away with.
Alexander Hamilton

Contrary to his later positions, Madison at first envisioned the national government as a kind of referee among the states, striking down some of the more knuckle-headed of the state laws and brought about by "excessive democracy."

But perhaps more important to the "intent" question is the broader issue.

Even if we could with any reasonable degree of accuracy determine the "intent" of the founders, why should the "intent" of 18th Century ideas, which included the preservation of slavery, be guiding us in the 21st century?

For example, I think the "well-regulated militia" clause of the 2nd Amendment is too often ignored by gun-rights advocates and that the founder's "intent" was for citizens to be armed so they could serve in the army if called.

Remember that at the time, "standing armies" were anathema to many of the founders (not Hamilton) and viewed as being among the very causes of the wars they fought. In other words, "if you've got 'em, you'll feel compelled (or tempted) to use 'em."

Nevertheless, I've come to the reluctant conclusion that the language of the 2nd Amendment is nevertheless clear: that Americans, for better or worse, are allowed to carry guns.

Rather than argue over what the founders intended, however, as if they are some sort of dieties whose "intent" must be worshiped despite 200 plus years of history and some awfully good arguments that its time for some new thinking; we should instead be asking a question that they themselves asked in their own times: "should we maintain the status quo or should we make some changes?"

Certainly, the ability to make amendments to the Constitution is evidence of their recognition that change may be necessary.

And we've made changes, with slavery and, twice with prohibition.

Instead of arguing what the founders "meant" when they penned the 2nd Amendment (or any other amendment for that matter), the question we should ask is "do we need to change it?"

After the inaction that followed Newtown and, now, the Washington, D.C. Naval Yard, I have little hope that we will be having a substantive discussion on that question any time soon.

But the genius of the U.S. Constitution, either by design or happy accident, is that we can have that discussion as the world, and our Republic, evolves.

We can even have that discussion at a local township commissioners meeting.



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Managing Your Green

Fragmented forest space, like this, has too many edges to be
effective forest.
So as it turns out, all open spaces are not created equally -- at least not when it comes to the wildlife and natural services they are intended to perform.

In short, round is better.

That was just part of the lesson Peter Williamson, vice president of preservation services for the Natural Lands Trust, had for the Pottstown Metropolitan Regional Planning Committee recently.

Williamson was there to talk about the various aspects of open space management with which municipal officials may not be familiar.

Now in its 60th year, Williamson said Natural Lands Trust has 41 preserves and one quarter of them are in Montgomery County.

Better to have one large forest, like this.
One thing those years have taught the preserve managers, Williamson said, is that
fragmented open space does not provide the range or benefits or larger sized preserves, and further, that "edges" reduce that effectiveness even more.

For example forest edges allow more light and more invasive species to protrude deeper into the forest, reducing its effectiveness at water retention and as habitat for native species, he said.

Invasive species are perhaps the second largest problem facing preserved open space, both in meadows, marshes and forest.

Dumping fast-moving storm water into streams, causes
erosion like this.
Another challenge is deer which are multiplying in southeast Pennsylvania with no natural predators and eat everything below six feet high.

And lastly, there's storm water.

For many years, storm water was something engineers wanted to get rid of as quickly as possible. Then, when it was realized the sudden influx of high-velocity water to streams was damaging, it became necessary to hold or retain the water, to allow it to be absorbed into the ground and released through the ground as stream base flow as a more constant rate.

A healthy stream bank looks like this.
Any municipality that owns or manages open space, therefore, faces these challenges, Williamson explained.

When considering meadows, he provided several recommendations.

Only mow twice a year, around St. Patrick's Day and the Fourth of July. This allows the grasses to provide cover to animals that need them.

"Mow the edges, along roads, and it gives the property a managed feeling without impacting the wildlife," he suggested.

Also, plant a mix of warm and cool season grasses, so the meadow is more weather resilient and green for most of the year.
Mowing a meadow along the roadside, gives it
a managed look while preserving habitat.

To learn more, particularly about storm water management, mark your calendar for May 30.

That's when the organization's annual "Green Futures" event will be held, this year right here in Pottstown at the Montgomery County Community College's Pottstown Campus.

Click here for details and sign-up information.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

A Victorian Christmas

I've written about the candelight tour of Pottsgrove Manor this Sunday, but there's is another Christmas tour you can take the day before which sounds just as cool and is, once again, the property of Montgomery County and available to us because of the foresight of those who preserved it.

It is at Pennypacker Mills in Schwenksville.

The Victorian Christmas Open House will be held on Saturday, Dec. 8 from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. 

The event is free and includes a number of special elements.

A Visit with Santa

It wouldn’t be Christmas without a visit with Santa Claus! He’ll listen intently to everyone’s wishes and send them off with a candy cane afterward. Bring a camera for a one-of-a-kind picture that will make a great Christmas card!

The Sounds of Music

Experience the music of the Christmas season with the ringing of bells! Enjoy the Christmas music of the Limerick Chapel’s “Ring of Praise” bell choir on the mansion porch as they capture the spirit of the season for all to enjoy. 

At 5 p.m, the Montgomery County Community College Chamber Choir will sing Christmas songs to entertain everyone as they approach the mansion.

The Museum Shop at Pennypacker Mills
A Home Dressed in Victorian Splendor

Of course, the star of the tour is the house itself.

Delight in walking through a beautifully decorated home, resplendent in shimmering gold and silver ornaments, ribbon flowing through garlands, striking centerpieces that mix the colors of nature with the striking embellishments that only the Victorians could imagine, all enveloped in the glow of oil lamps. 
Stop at each room as interpretive guides share fascinating details about Christmas one-hundred years ago, before there was electricity in many homes. See how the Pennypacker family used the shine of Dresden ornaments, the shimmer of cut glass and swirling glass icicles, and the richness of holiday colors throughout their welcoming home.

Discover the simple cedar Christmas tree, which has been cut from the property. Beautifully decorated with imported, hand-painted glass ornaments, gleaming glass icicles, shiny beaded garland, and memorable homemade ornaments.

Family and Friends

Living historians await guests at the front door and inside the rooms at the Pennypacker mansion, providing visitors with a glimpse of the social history of the holidays. Wrapping presents, toasting the holidays, singing along with the music box, and performing servant duties add a meaningful element to the atmosphere of this special night.

A Yuletide Dinner 

See how the Pennypackers dined on turkey and all the trimmings. At thirty-two cents per pound, turkey was considered an expensive holiday treat for most families. The holiday décor reflects the opulent decorations of the Victorian Era with shiny ribbon, bowls of fruit, and candelabras that added a luminescent glow to the room.

A Child’s Wishes
The second floor guest area hosts a “putz,” a Middle Eastern landscape with a nativity scene and the three wise men is on display. 

In many homes, the wise men would be placed on the opposite side of the room from the putz and each week children would move them closer to the manger scene until they “arrived” on Christmas Eve. 

In one bedroom, find what children wished for in the 1900s: a porcelain doll, dollhouse, rocking horse, teddy bear, tin toys, and a child’s tea service. Long stockings are filled with small presents for children to discover. Christmas candy in many forms including clear toy candy, ribbon and rock candy, candy canes, and marzipan are some of the traditional treats that families shared during the holidays.

Pennypacker Mills is located at 5 Haldeman Road in Schwenksville. 

For information and directions, call 610-287-9349 or visit the Pennypackers Mills page at http://www.historicsites.montcopa.org/

Pennypacker Mills is operated by the Montgomery County Department of Assets and Infrastructure, Parks and Heritage Services Division. The site offers year-round guided tours, education programs, changing exhibits, seasonal events, and craft workshops.

Click here for information at the site throughout the year.


Friday, July 27, 2012

How Do You Spell "S-U-C-C-E-S-S"?

Spelling Bee contestants Justin-Beasley-Turner, left from
Pottstown  Middle School, with Zachary Bright and
Edgewood Elementary  Principal Calista Boyer.
Zachary was one of only seven elementary students in
Montgomery County to qualify
for the county-wide competition.
Blogger's Note:  More good things going on in Pottstown schools that you wouldn't know about if not for John Armato.

Upon spelling the word "scenario," eighth grader Justin Beasley-Turner became the Pottstown Middle School’s annual spelling bee winner.

The competition was witnessed by the entire student body, teaching staff, and a large contingent of supportive parents.

It took 10 grueling rounds for Justin to be named the top speller of the school. With a total of 18 students competing, the task was not an easy one.

Students throughout the middle school were initially given a test using 20 words from the Scripps Spelling Bee List. Students correctly spelling the most words were invited to participate in the next level of competition.

Eighteen students in grades 6, 7 and 8, accepted the challenge; including Carlos Fuentes Brown, Kiersten Heverly, Rachel Martin, Abigail Richter, Soaad Elbahwati, Brandon Heller, Tyrees Hudgen, Sara Levengood, Bryan Nussbaumer, Dan Nussbaumer, Marvin Pearson, Mahmood Annable, Hunter DeBlase, Marinah Johnson-Mauras, Dajon Oglesby, Erica Piechota, and Bryant Wise.

All participants met weekly during the four weeks leading up to the Spelling Bee competition. They practiced hundreds of words and tested each other in friendly competition.

Spelling Bee coordinator Kim Petro provided the needed support and encouragement during the practice sessions.

Master of Ceremonies for the Spelling Bee was Maureen Russell, word announcer was Kim Petro, and judges included teachers Mary Ann Hill, Lois Sanders, and Desiree Schwoyer.

Justin was deemed the winner after going head to head with runner-up Marvin Pearson for the last four rounds of competition.

 He then went on to represent Pottstown Middle School in the county-wide competition held in Norristown and placed 10th.

Justin was joined by Edgewood Elementary fifth grader Zachary Bright. Bright was one of only seven elementary students in the county to qualify, winning the spelling bee at Edgewood Elementary School for the third straight time

Bright successfully spelled "macaroni" and "nestle" to ultimately advance to the third round and finish in a tie for fourth.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Gerlach Picks a Pony


A day after Democrats made history in Montgomery County by taking a majority of the county commissioner seats, Republican Congressman Jim Gerlach (R-6th Dist.) made a choice.

He chose moderation.

He endorsed Mitt Romney as the Republican candidate for president.

His choice is very understandable. 

The announcement was made through his re-election campaign, a near-permanent enterprise made necessarily by the razor-thin margins with which Gerlach has won reelection three times.

It is not yet clear (to me at least) what Gerlach's new Congressional district will look like, but if history is any teacher, it will be shifted to include even more loyal Republican voters.

His current district includes Pottstown, but not the three surrounding Pottsgrove townships, which were sliced off and handed over to a Lehigh County-based congressman, Charlie Dent, during the last redistricting 10 years ago.

He has another portion of Montgomery County, which has an increasingly Democratic-leaning voter base, but that has been offset each election by heavy Republican votes in Chester County and, to a lesser extent, Berks County -- but only barely.

As I reported last month, during his entire tenure in the House of Representatives, of all 1,740 general house election races since 2002, Gerlach's reelection has been the only one in the country decided by less than 5 percentage points each time.

Gerlach knows close calls well, which is perhaps why he tried to make lemonade from lemons and parlay his long political career into a brief run for governor. (He also knows, apparently, that as goes Philadelphia and the surrounding suburbs, so go Pennsylvania elections.)

It's unclear whether Gerlach offered his support for Romney (or was asked for it) before or after the only Montgomery County candidate associated with the Tea Party (Jenny Brown) also received the lowest vote total of the county commissioner election.

A call to his campaign office seeking comment was not returned.

Nevertheless, when viewing the wild fluctuations and turbulent personalities involved in this year's Republican contest -- Herman Cain, Rick Santorum, Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul -- it's probably not surprising that Gerlach chose safety.

His only other real choice in a year in which more far-reaching Republican initiatives and candidates were defeated at the polls, was Jon Huntsman. But here again, Gerlach was smart enough to pick the candidate more likely to win.

Here is the announcement as it appeared in my e-mail in-box:

Mitt Romney today announced the support of Pennsylvania Congressman Jim Gerlach.
“President Obama’s massive stimulus bills have not helped Pennsylvania,” said Mitt Romney. “Instead of creating jobs, President Obama has just increased government spending. I will work with leaders like Congressman Gerlach to cut spending and get our economy on the right track so that Pennsylvanians know their children will have a bright future.”

“It is clear that President Obama’s policies of the last three years have failed,” said Congressman Jim Gerlach. “At a time when our budget deficits have skyrocketed and unemployment remains dangerously high, we need a radically different approach in Washington. Mitt Romney has demonstrated that conservative leadership and solutions can fix the problems our country faces. I look forward to working with him to address these issues.”