Saturday, November 17, 2012

Obama Landslide at Lincoln Elementary!







Blogger's Note: School information mogul John Armato has sent us the following information about election results at Lincoln Elementary School, where President Barack Obama was the preferred candidate.

The students at Lincoln Elementary School learned valuable lessons about democracy in our country by studying the electoral process and participating in a school-wide mock election for the presidency of the United States.

Second grade students, under the direction of teachers Leslie Swartz, Heather Kurtz, and Jill Bolonski, organized the school-wide election.

Second graders were particularly excited in the days leading up to the election. Lessons in class gave students an understanding of the political parties, conventions, debates, campaigns, and electoral votes.

Each class signed up for a time to vote. Students were issued voter registration cards and as the classes approached the voting booth they were greeted by second graders who served as poll workers.

Students were given ballot sheets to cast their vote and expressed a great deal of excitement to vote for their favorite candidates.

“This experience involved learning across the curriculum for Lincoln second graders, providing a look at ‘election vocabulary,’ writing experiences, problem solving, and an overview of our American government," said Lincoln Principal Treena Ferguson. "It gave them a meaningful and relevant connection to an important event in our country and left a lasting impression on becoming a responsible citizen.”

The results of the election saw Barack Obama the winner, by a landslide, earning all 50 of the school’s electoral votes and a popular vote margin of 263-47.

(Blogger's Joke: I will leave to you gentle reader to ponder the irony of Gov. Romney's "47" votes.)

Second grade teacher Leslie Swartz evaluated the activity as a tremendous success.

 “The entire school benefited from the activity because it was relevant to what was happening in our nation, it provided an opportunity for teachers to discuss the political process, and students were able to see how a group of citizens come together in a peaceful way to exercise their right to vote; something they will do one day as an adult.”

Friday, November 16, 2012

Lilies of the Field

Blogger's Note: This is NOT Sally, but just some random cow to give you an idea of what we're talking about here. The rules of the International Cow Chip Bingo Federation prohibit the sharing of any participating bovine up to 30 days before the big drop.
Flags, female football and closely watched cow poop.

Who says Pottstown doesn't know how to have a good time?

And best of all, it's going to raise money too.

"But wait Digital Notebook," you say with breathless excitement.

"How can I experience these wonderful things? Will I have to drive far? Is it Black Tie? With beer be served?"

Nope.

Nope.

And nope.

If you're free this tomorrow evening, you're in luck. And if you have plans, well, break them.

Because the Pottstown Trojans Touchdown Club's Fifth Annual Cow Chip event starts at 4:30 p.m. sharp and if you're not there, you lose out on the chance to win $1,000.

Yeah, you read that right -- "Cow Chip."

When the spirit moves Sally,
we'll have a winner.
Think about it. When was the last time where a cow did its business mattered this much?

Better yet, when was the last time it earned you $1,000?

Well that's what's at stake when old bovine Sally is led onto the field.

A grid has been prepared and the deeds to just one of the squares goes cheap -- only 20 bucks!

Where ever Sally finally lightens her load, that's who wins.

It's that simple.

Now, knowing that the suspense of such an event might stress the faint of heart, the folks at the Touchdown Club have arranged for lighter fare, which, as I said before, begins at 4:30 p.m. (Gates open at 4 p.m.)

That's when the Pottstown Middle School football program struts its stuff with a game of flag football.

Last year's Powder Puff competitors.
Sally takes center stage at 5 p.m. and she has 30 minutes to let fly and make some lucky deed holder very happy. (Ironically, the property to which the deed belongs is decidedly less happy).

Then, in addition to the pep rally, you can also watch a Powder Puff football event from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.

Hot dogs, hamburgers, fries and drinks will all be for sale and a donation at the gate will help raise money for the American Cancer Society.

Needless to say, this happens at the Pottstown Football field behind the middle school between Franklin and Washington streets.

Come on folks, its good wholesome family entertainment and demonstrates the moral fiber of the entire Pottstown community, not to mention measuring Sally's actual fiber intake....

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Three Thoughts

A photo grabbed from the video I shot at Tuesday's borough council meeting. Shown are three plain clothes police officers confronting the bearded man on the right who attempted to comment on the appointment of Police Chief Mark Flanders as Pottstown's new borough manager. He had failed to follow council's procedure and sign up to speak at the beginning of the meeting and he was asked to sit down and quiet down.




















So I think it's fair to say, that I've been to my share of public meetings.

More than most.

And I also think it's fair to say that I've been at meetings where audience members were "disgruntled."

But it's not often that I see a plain clothed police response used to deal with  a disgruntled audience member.

Capt. Rick Drumheller
But that's what I saw Tuesday.

"Disgruntled" was the word Police Capt. Rick Drumheller used when I asked him why he had asked members of the police department's Community Response Unit to be at Tuesday's meeting.

“I thought there might be some disgruntled members of the audience,” Drumheller told me Tuesday when I asked why police were there.

But more I thought about that answer, the more questions it spawned.

The first one that sprang to mind was "since when does 'digruntled audience members' require a police presence?"

In more than 25 years of municipal reporting, I have seen borough council presidents, school board presidents, solicitors,township supervisors and managers of all stripes deal with irate members of the public without the need for police intervention.

It's in the job description.

Heck, in the Reporter's Handbook, "irate" and "audience member" are often listed as synonyms.

Let's face it, most people don't come to a municipal meeting, as thrilling as they are, unless they're pissed off about something.

On rare occasions, when an item on the agenda is controversial, I can understand it.


Rick Rabinowitz addresses the Pottsgrove School 

Board. At police presence at meetings like this, 

could be rationalized.
For example, I recall Rick Rabinowitz archly noting the presence of Lower Pottsgrove Police Officers at a Pottsgrove School Board meeting at which the "centers" approach to elementary education was to be voted upon.

It had been controversial for months, and some meetings had ended in shouting.

But what was on council's agenda Tuesday that was so controversial that plain clothes police officers were required to blend in to the audience, as Drumheller described it, to deal with .... what? A riot? Unlikely in the extreme.

The second thought that came to mind was that in addition to Flanders and Drumheller, I counted at least three and possible four police officers in the room.

There are only two possibilities. They were being paid, or they weren't.

If they weren't being paid -- which is unlikely when you consider their contract does not allow them to even work the Pottstown Halloween Parade without getting four hours overtime -- then, as Flanders explained during the parade debate, they were not authorized to use any police powers.

I suppose its possible they were just there for fun or out of civic curiosity and were asking the man trying to ask council a question to be quiet and sit down as fellow citizens ... but then since so few of our police officers live in our town they wouldn't really have standing as "residents."

Which leads me to conclude they were being paid.

If so, I have to wonder if having three or four on-duty officers attend a public meeting at which the most crime that is likely to occur is overly boring political speeches, is a terribly good use of taxpayer resources.

Who was on the street? Was the borough council meeting the top crime priority in Pottstown Tuesday night?

Given that, at least until April when he resigns as chief, every single person in borough hall will answer to one man, I would certainly hope this display of police power is not going to become the norm.

Which brings us to my third thought, perhaps most important one in the long haul.

Much like the ham-handed Pottstown School Board, which complains about a lack of public involvement and yet shuts the public out of every issue in which it actually takes an interest, borough council has been heard to complain that it can't get volunteers for its boards, or interested residents at its meeting.

I would venture to say that the elderly gentleman, whose name I wish I knew, who stood up in the back of council meeting room Tuesday was an interested resident.

No where on the agenda or in the meeting room, does it indicate that if you want to address council, you must sign up to do it at the beginning of the meeting.

Those of us who have spent years at such meetings sometimes forget this.

Also, as an aside, I think that asking people to comment on items before its clear what's going to happen with them, is not really the best way to get the most insightful comments from your constituents.
Number 4 on the agenda was how Flanders' appointment was listed.
How is a member of the public supposed to comment intelligently
on this matter when its contents are a mystery until the
comment period is over?

Case in point, although we had reported several times in The Mercury that Flanders was likely to be appointed, Tuesday's agenda mentioned only a motion to name "an individual" as the new borough manager.

What's the rationale for secrecy? As Council President Stephen Toroney noted in his own carefully noted time line of events, Flanders was made an offer in early October. Not only did council know, but, apparently, the police force knew.

Why is the taxpaying public purposefully kept in the dark and, when it's finally clear what the vote will be, told it's too late to comment?

Which brings us right back to my third thought.

As a veteran audience member of countless council meetings, I frequently have witnessed Toroney ignore the rules he cleaved to Tuesday night, to allow people to address council out of turn.


The aim of meeting rules should be to facilitate

useful participation by the public, not prevent it.
And, as someone in the audience noted Tuesday night, council has the ability to vote to waive its own rules and could easily have allowed that gentleman to express his thoughts, or ask his question.

Any member of council could have made that motion and, as a privileged motion, it would have taken precedence and required an immediate vote.

It's a sad truth of Pottstown civics, and probably everywhere else too, that people don't pay attention until the last minute. But that does not release public officials from their responsibility to seek and bend over backwards to hear what their constituents have to say -- particularly in a public setting.

Certainly, council veterans like Toroney learned this long ago. And if, as they so often say, they want to hear what people think, that sometimes means listening when the people want to say it, not just when its convenient for council to hear it.

It was, to unearth an old cliche, the loss of a "teachable moment." As a teacher at the Western Center for Technical Studies, one would hope that Mr. Toroney would recognize and act upon such moments when they occur.

What possible conclusion could that man reach when he went home Tuesday night, but that council is more interested in its rules than his thoughts? Or, worse, that the rules are designed to prevent useful comment rather than to encourage it.

Why would he ever show up at another meeting to participate in his local government or, perhaps more worrisome, trust that the police will be interested in what he has to say should he require their services?

The incident, which I recorded on a video I have posted below, was also evidence that, if only because it was inconvenient, council was not interested in allowing or hearing more public comment on their decision to appoint Flanders.

I just hope the police weren't there for the same reason.


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

That Warm Feeling Inside



From left, Barth Principal Ryan Oxenford, Jay Rumler from Exelon, Cindy Salerno from Exelon, Linciln Principal Treena Ferguson Lincoln Principal, Donna Christman from Exelon and Ruper Principal Matt Moyer.




Blogger's Note: Another timely submission from Pottstown Schools Information Meister John Armato:

Thanks to the efforts of the employees of Exelon’s Limerick Generating Station’s “Operation Warm” and the “Coats For Kids Foundation,” over 250 Pottstown School District elementary students will have new coats to help them stay warm during the winter months.

On hand to accept the coats on behalf of the Pottstown School District were Ryan Oxenford, Principal Barth Elementary; Treena Ferguson, Principal Lincoln Elementary; and Matt Moyer, Principal Rupert Elementary.

Tom Dougherty, Limerick Site Vice President, said, “Every child deserves a winter coat to keep them warm and healthy during the cold winter months. At Limerick Generating Station, we have always been committed to helping our neighbors and community through a variety of charitable initiatives. Partnering with the Pottstown School District on this initiative demonstrates the power of working together to meet local community needs.”

Operation Warm and the Coats For Kids Foundation have a focused mission to provide new winter coats to children.

Their vision is that every child wearing a new winter coat is warm, feels valued, and is healthy, able to regularly attend school and enjoy active outdoor play, even on cold winter days. Through funding from local businesses and corporations, Operation Warm provides coats to the local community.

Oxenford noted, “These coats will go a long way in helping many students be able to enjoy the feeling of warmth on a cold winter day and eliminate a distraction to their ability to learn. We appreciate the opportunity to work with all of our local partners to ensure that every student has an equal opportunity for success.”

Exelon’s Limerick Generating Station is located two miles southeast of Pottstown, PA, Exelon’s Limerick Generating Station Unit 1 and Unit 2 produce a total of 2,345 net megawatts (MW) of electricity - enough energy to power more than two million average American homes.

The station employs approximately 860 workers and annually donates more than $600,000 to charitable and local community organizations.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Pottstown, the Economic Development Winner


Representatives from Chamber Member Companies with Significant Anniversaries from left to right: Jeff Graber and Lauren Graef, Graber Letterin’ Sign Co.; Adele Klein and Ashley Hoke, Klein Transportation; Susan Keddie, Visiting Nurse Association; Megan Bauer, Coventry Corners; Stephen Longacre, The Longacre Co.; Julie Keilman, Greater Reading Economic Partnership

Blogger's Note: The information below was provided by the Tri-County Area Chamber of Commerce. However, before we go to that, a comment from interim borough manager Mark Flanders.

Wednesday night Flanders told borough council that "for the first time in the many, many years that I have been going to the chamber's economic development luncheon, the winners of all three economic development awards went to Pottstown businesses."

He added, "it does show things are moving forward. We hear a lot of negative about Pottstown, but there is a lot of positive going on here and people need to pay attention to that as well."

Now on to the chamber's release:

 TriCounty Area Chamber of Commerce Members gathered at Sunnybrook Ballroom in Pottstown for the Chamber’s Annual Economic Development Luncheon on Nov. 1.

The keynote speakers for this event were from the office of the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry.

Susann Morrison, an executive assistant for unemployment compensation programs and Gwenn Dando, policy director for unemployment compensation, worker compensation, and workforce development gave their perspective along with the information needed to understand the system, Act 60, the recent bond sale, and how all initiatives are working to provide a stable financial future for the commonwealth.


Mark Flanders, interim Pottstown Borough
Manager, left, and John Vestri,
Director of Operations at VideoRay, LLC
At this year’s luncheon, the Chamber presented five awards to local businesses related to economic development:


The Economic Development Award went to VideoRay LLC. This award is presented to a project that provides quality land use improvement, generates economic benefits for the community, and has the potential for creating new jobs.


VideoRay is the largest volume producer of “remotely operated vehicles,” or ROVs, in the world.

VideoRay, which has between 30 and 40 employees, will move from a 5,000 square foot barn, into 32,000 square feet of flexible office and light manufacturing space, purchased for $275,000, in the Borough of Pottstown in the former Levitz building on High Street.



Steve Bamford, Executive Director, PAID, Inc.
and Peter and John Giannopoulos,
Managing Partners of Sly Fox Brewing, Co.
The Economic Impact Award went to Sly Fox Brewing Co., Inc. This award is presented to an organization that provides a significant contribution to the economic vitality of the communities that the Chamber serves.

Their Royersford location was sold in 2011 and Sly Fox opened a 50-hectoliter, 30,000 square-foot state-of-the-art brewery on the Circle of Progress in Pottstown in January 2012, investing over $6 million and housing more than 20 employees.

A Tastin’ Room was also opened in Pottstown to attract patrons from near and far.

The Environmental Impact Award went to Cigas Machine Shop, Inc. This award is presented to a business who is taking a “green” proactive approach for a more sustainable business environment.



Michelle Maher,
Human Resources Manager,
Cigas Machine Shop, Inc.
Cigas Machine Shop is a leading manufacturer of high quality stainless steel plate products for industrial, commercial and architectural applications.

The Pottstown building was purchased in 2007 in the Pottstown Industrial Complex which previously housed the old Bethlehem Steel Building.

The 100,000 square foot Pottstown facility underwent extensive renovations including conventional and solar heating; daylight harvesting; rainwater harvesting; and also the facility is a zero energy building – large roof areas are ideal for solar panels generating clean, renewable power making the building an energy producer rather than consumer.


The Regional Planning Award went to Boyertown, Colebrookdale and Pike Townships. This award is presented to two or more intergovernmental agencies that develop and implement a multi-organizational plan that fosters smart growth.

Rod Martin, left Chairman,
TCACC and Jake Lea,
Chairman of the Joint
Zoning Board Committ
The Boyertown, Colebrookdale, and Pike Joint Zoning Ordinance divides Boyertown Borough, Colebrookdale Township, and Pike Township into various zoning districts with varying regulations for each district.

 The ordinance was created with consideration for the character of the borough and Townships, and the suitability for particular uses and structures in the various districts.

The Legislator of the Year Award went to State Representative Marcy Toepel. This award is presented to an elected official for their leadership in helping to create and/or support a pro-business environment.

Toepel brings her experience from county government and the private sector to the state Capitol. Toepel had 100 percent voting record and took tough stances on issues of importance for the business community, including voting for tort reform and two no tax budgets. She has a clear understanding of how government can negatively impact the economy.

Nine companies were recognized at the Luncheon for their significant anniversaries and their commitment to doing business here.
  • Malvern Federal Savings Bank -125 years
  • St. Aloysius School - 100 years
  • Visiting Nurse Association of Pottstown & Vicinity - 95 years
  • The Longacre Co. - 90 years
  • Klein Transportation - 55 years
  • Coventry Corners - 30 years
  • Community Music School - 20 years
  • Graber Letterin’ Sign Co. - 20 years
  • Greater Reading Economic Partnership - 10 years
For more information, visit www.tricountyareachamber.com or contact 610.326.2900.