Nov 22, 2019
South Whitehall Retains Enemy Of The Dam
Public wise, there are not many happy campers in South Whitehall this week. Passage of the large Ridge Farm housing project, at the corner of Walbert and Cedar Crest, has angered many objectors.
Come January, with one exception, there will be a brand new board of commissioners. Unfortunately, the one remaining, Tori Morgan, is IMO Wehr's dam's biggest enemy... Put another way, she is the Wildands Conservancy's best friend. As an advocate for Wehr's Dam, I had no doubts that it was she who assured the Wildlands Conservancy that their plan to demolish the dam would be pushed through by the commissioners back in 2014. As I outlined in previous posts, the township is now essentially conspiring with the Wildlands to undue the will of the voters, who had approved a referendum to save the dam.
I'm not very appreciated at municipal meetings. Although I would prefer to be diplomatic, usually whatever brought me there has me agitated before I stand up. South Whitehall has a special treat for those who wish to be heard, their courtesy of the floor is at the end of the meeting. By then I must wipe the foam off my mouth before I speak.
The newly elected commissioners (and one appointed) may be having second thoughts.
Nov 21, 2019
Journalism In The Valley Of Sacred Cows
Alan Jennings has announced his new program which is facade grants to rental properties in the 200 block of N. 10th Street. The program has also targeted a second unannounced block for rehab. Alan apparently still has his bank arm bending skills in tact, as TD Bank will be supplementing the grants. The big question is what happened to that tide rising NIZ? When the state tax funded NIZ was approved, it was promoted as promising an improved center city, beyond its 125 acre confines. If this benefit never materialized, what do taxpayers get for our money? Alan was on the original board of the NIZ. If he started this non-NIZ improvement program, he must have little faith in the NIZ's real ability to raise the tide.
The local media, especially the Morning Call, has a history of sheltering their pet politicians and projects. Ed Pawlowski was kept on a pedestal until the FBI raided city hall. Articles about the NIZ have been limited to soft promotion, rather than hard analysis.
With the continuing consolidation of the newspaper industry, the Morning Call editors worry about their pensions, not truth, justice and the American way.
shown above the editor's office at the Daily Planet, with Clark Kent in background
UPDATE: The Parkland Press has printed my letter concerning Wehr's Dam. The Morning Call, protecting the Wildlands Conservancy, has ignored my concerns about the township not respecting the voter's referendum in regard to the dam.
Nov 20, 2019
Saving The Queen City Airport

When I grew up on Liberator Ave., I would walk up Catalina Ave. toward school, which was at the end of Coronado. The streets were named for the Vultee-Consolidated WW2 planes, and the neighborhood was next to the airport built as part of the war effort. Vultee Street was built to connect the hangers with the Mack 5C plant, which was given over to Vultee-Consolidated for plane part manufacturing. Today this small airport is known as Queen City, and is threatened by Mayor Ed Pawlowski.
1944 was the first full year of the operation for the company's Allentown, Pennsylvania factory. Consolidated Vultee handled over $100M in wartime contracts at their Allentown plant where they produced TBY-2 Sea Wolves, components parts for B-24 Liberator bombers and other essential armaments and products for the war effort.Pawlowski covets this unique part of our history to expand the tax base. What he doesn't understand is that more housing or commercial space is not in Allentown's best long term interest. Unfortunately, long term interest is not a term understood by our current leadership. There is a whole development of started houses off S. 12th St. and Mack Blvd. which were never completed. There are filled in foundations on 8th Street, also never completed. More housing is the last thing both the real estate market and school system need. Likewise, the existing commercial sector has been struggling to maintain an acceptable occupancy rate. Queen City airport is an unique asset to Allentown. If LVIA does successfully expand, a separate airport for small planes is very desirable for safety. Considering Pawlowski's predetermined objective, I question whether he should have been appointed to the LVIA Board.
above reprinted from 2011
UPDATE NOVEMBER 20, 2019: Queen City Airport ended up being retained by LVIA. Ed Pawlowski was only finally dislodged from Allentown by the federal authorities. This blog takes pride in having recognized his schemes for what they were, long before the local politicians or press.
Nov 19, 2019
Breaking Some Eggs

I'm afraid that once again some eggs got dropped in the 2007 recipe for molovinsky on allentown. Don't blame this chef if the politicians and newspaper don't always deal from the top of the deck, and I take notice. This blog realized early on that Zahorchak's Pathway to Success was anything but, and apparently responded appropriately, considering his departure before school ended. Along the way, The Morning Call helped itself to one of my reports, and defended the snatch. Those dropped eggs are a mess. Speaking of eggs, one of my favorite posts of the year was titled Boxing Eggs. In that post, I recall working in my father's market, and the ride there. Such posts allow me to introduce Allentown history, and share photographs of that by-gone era. I also promote 95 year old boxers, who fought in the 1930's. Occasionally. I get to combine history and current political mistakes, such as in Saving the Queen City. I also stretch the recipe to advocate, be it for the abused former merchants of Hamilton Street, or the neglected WPA park structures.
above reprinted from 2012
UPDATE NOVEMBER 19, 2019: This blog is in its twelfth year of breaking eggs. With the departure of Tucker Yarn and Kruper Appliance, the former mercantile district is now completely gone. Federal authorities have made my criticisms of Mayor Pawlowski now unnecessary. I do continue to criticize the NIZ, and the Morning Call continues to defend and promote the status quo, whatever that may be. Speaking of the paper, my opinions are once again not welcome there. I have changed the policy here on the blog...I no longer accept anonymous comments. Although it has reduced the number of comments substantially, I believe it adds to the page's credibility. I will continue with the recipe. Caution, floor slippery with broken eggs.
Nov 18, 2019
9 Years Later At Allen High

Margie Peterson did an excellent profile this summer(2010) on the Allentown School Superintendent applicants. Who finally got the job, John Zahorchak, would have been my third choice, out of the four candidates. Zahorchak impressed the School Board because he was the Pennsylvania's Secretary of Education. Two other candidates had experience in running large inner city school districts; Zahorchak's previous hands on experience was in little Johnstown. Although we're not a large city, we have the large "inner city" problems. Zahorchak's Harrisburg position was a political appointment by Rendell. I suspect the Board thought he would know the ropes in terms of grants; Apparently he does. Allentown is getting a grant of $2.5 million for a few years. To qualify for the grant, the school district must "fire" principals, either in underperforming schools or those who had a position more than two years. One of those to be "fired" is Allen's principal, Keith Falco. Falco is the glue which keeps the lid on Allen. Falco would be charged with organizing a special school for over-achievers. Zahorchak also wants a special school for disruptive students; that better be a big building......
..... I do know that Falco does an excellent job in discipline at Allen High, which needs it. To relocate him to a gifted honors environment seems to be wasting his talent. To do this, to chase a $2.5 million grant for a few years, suggests a bureaucrat who spends too much time reading the Professional Educator Journal.
Zahorchak said if he doesn't raise the test scores in three years, fire him. John (Zahorchak), we don't really want to fire you now, but we don't care that much about the standardized test scores. What we care about is kids walking home from school and not beating each other up. We care about kids being respectful to the neighborhood as they walk. We care about long term taxes, not short term grants.
above reprinted from October of 2010. A few years later the school board would end up buying out the underperforming Zahorchak's contract.
GUEST UPDATE BY SCOTT ARMSTRONG NOVEMBER 18, 2019: Who could believe the city of Allentown could become more dysfunctional than it already was? Thanks to ASD Superintendent Thomas Parker and the board, it has. They instituted "Restorative Practices" (a policy in which traditional discipline is replaced with empathy and smiles) in the face of a dismal nationwide track record. The result - - in the words of two Allen teachers I spoke to -- has been chaos. And recently, that chaos has been spilling out into the surrounding neighborhoods on a daily basis. Residents are now constantly disrupted by large groups of loud and unruly students. There is daily hookah pipe smoking on the streets, alleys and park; students lounge on our porches, casting litter about and vandalizing property. In the past few months, this disorder has compounded, resulting in more dysfunction. Cars roaring their engines and racing on our streets; drugs bought and sold in plain sight. Dismissals have gone from bad to worse and often every available police patrol in the city is needed just to break up fights and other mob actions. The result is a community with almost zero quality of life during school hours. This new situation is exhausting and frightening residents, becoming an unnecessary drain on police resources, and degrading the students' educational environment. Scott Armstrong
Nov 15, 2019
Democracy Being Subverted in South Whitehall
When Wehr's Dam was inspected by the state in 2012, it was rated "overall in good condition." We are now being told that it needs a $million dollars worth of repairs. What happen to the dam in the last few years? Nothing structural happened, but it has been submitted to much deception.
In 2014 the Wildlands Conservancy approached the township commissioners with a proposal to demolish the dam at the Wildlands expense. Demolishing dams is one of their general goals, and they make an administrative fee from grants they find for such projects. Because the dam is so historical and unique, a grass roots effort began to defend the iconic structure. Nowhere else can you see water flow over a bridge and under a covered bridge in the same spot. The Wildlands is very connected to the township. At that time a son of one of Wildlands directors was park director of South Whitehall, and the Wildlands helped create the township park master plan, which called for the dam's removal. Because of the public outcry, the commissioners placed a referendum on the ballot in 2016 concerning the dam's future. Because they linked keeping the dam with a $600,000 loan and tax increase, they felt the voters would condemn the dam for them, with no political consequence. To their surprise, the beloved dam survived the referendum. With this unexpected obstacle, the Wildlands then presented the state DEP with a report claiming that the dam has much bigger structural defects than observed by state inspectors. By now the former park director, a son of a Wildlands director, had been promoted to head of the township public works. He and the township made no effort to defend the dam, and have accepted the Wildlands engineering recommendations without appeal or protest. Because of these shenanigans, the current price tag to repair the dam is now a $million, exceeding the amount approved by the voters in 2016.
It is apparently necessary for residents of South Whitehall to once again defend their history. When the referendum passed in 2016, they thought that the cherished dam was saved. They underestimated the arrogance in that township building, and perhaps overestimated the integrity there.
The Wildands Conservancy is a local sacred cow which is protected by the local press. The Morning Call has been refusing to print my letters to the editor. The reporters have been declining to return my calls. I have been pressing this issue for the last two weeks because I know how the Wildlands operates. As soon as they get the green light from the commissioners, their hired excavator will breach the dam the next day. Our history and that magic spot will be a pile of rubble within hours.
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