I have decided to once again allow anonymous comments on the blog. While a commenter can establish a pseudonym, whose identity is unknown to both me and other readers, there remain those more comfortable with the anonymous option. Comment moderation will continue; that is, comments must still be approved for publication. While the blog office opens very early on weekday mornings, it also closes early in the evening. Comments submitted after 6:00pm will not appear until the following morning.
Jan 28, 2022
Allentown (Water) Goes Private... Anonymous Comments Now Accepted
UPDATE: The Morning Call apparently felt compelled to issue a statement, and posted their announcement of the pending sale two hours after this post. They quote an unnamed source saying "If this done right, this will solve the pension problems overnight, but we must install proper oversight and control." Allentown has no experience with doing things right, or with oversight and controls. We are in trouble.
UPDATING THE UPDATE: Our local LCA might well be a bidder (or the bidder) for the Allentown systems. The current project through Cedar Park interconnects the systems, and will expand their capacity to deliver treated water to western Lehigh County. If the Lehigh County Authority is in fact the buyer, the consequence of selling this prime Allentown asset would be tolerable. Allentonians could expect responsible stewardship and reasonable fees.
building the water works in 1928
Jan 27, 2022
The Morning Call's Marred Editorial Page
Jan 26, 2022
Jeopardizing Your House For Ocean Spray
reprinted from April of 2014
ADDENDUM DECEMBER 18, 2019: While the commercial rates paid by the bottling companies remain attractive to them, homeowners in Allentown and other local municipalities are now seeing their residential water rates double.
molovinsky on allentown is produced every weekday, year-round.
Jan 25, 2022
Allentown's New York Tragedy
Years ago, some in Allentown complained that imported people from New York and New Jersey were lowering the quality of life in Allentown. This past weekend the person who shot the NYC police officers came from Allentown.
In reality the quality of life is lower in both places.
New York's new mayor, Eric Adams, is pushing back against liberal demands to defund the police.
Let us hope that Allentown's new mayor follows Adam's lead in recognizing that livability in our city depends on a strong police presence.
Jan 24, 2022
Allentown's Problem
Bethlehem and Easton present visitors with history, architecture and ambience. Allentown lost all those attributes, as one developer leveled Hamilton Street for his office empire. In fairness to Allentown's situation, it must be noted that the pandemic has restricted the number of office workers who would otherwise be present.
The architecture of Bethlehem and Easton remains from their shopping district's past. Their restaurants and shops resulted from market demand. Allentown is a staged production, hoping to attract customers.
The easiest problem to remedy is the parking. As noted on this blog as it was happening, Allentown made a huge mistake allowing a couple of developers to build on the surface parking lots. People want close by convenient parking, not a parking deck three blocks away.
To be frank, Allentown Parking Authority, Planning, Zoning and other municipal oversights have catered to the developer, at the expense of everything else. Their rationale was that their successes are linked. Although there is some linkage, it's a big city with many shareholders.
Despite a $Billion dollars of privately owned, publicly financed development, Allentown is a dead zone. The Morning Call hyped the developer's press releases as news, and ignored the empty streets and failing restaurants.
I am hopeful that the new administration will address some of these issues, starting with the Parking Authority.
photo: Beginning demolition on Hamilton Street for the arena and its adjoining offices
