Aug 13, 2024

A Rude Visit

When Irene stormed through Cedar Park, she knocked down and broke a number of the old willow trees. The sight of these magnificent trees along the creek banks, is the view-shed cherished by us proponents of the historical park system. As a boy in 1955, I remember the same damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Diane. Many of the remaining willows are now about 75 years old. Although they held the creek banks together for three generations, they have lost favor to riparian buffers.


It's nice to sit by the bank under a willow tree and watch the ducks swim by. Hopefully, somewhere along the banks of the Little Lehigh and Cedar Creek, there is still some open space for a few new weeping willows.
please click on photos to enlarge
photos by molovinsky

reprinted from September of 2011

ADDENDUM AUGUST 13, 2024:The bench shown above has been removed many years ago. Today the creek bank is so overgrown, it would provide no view anyway. While I might have a reputation for forthrightness not sought by the Parknership, I will continue my campaign for inclusion on their board. While I don't need the item on my resumé, there is a need for a traditional park system advocate. The Parknership is financed by Harry Trexler's vision almost a hundred years ago. That vision hired Meehan Associates (Landscape Architects) in 1928 to design our park system. More should remain of that vision of the parks than just a statue at the top of Trexler Park.

Aug 12, 2024

Works Progress Administration Meeting

Tonight is the meeting on Allentown's iconic WPA structures. When I first began this project three years ago, the steps leading from Union Street to Spring Garden were overgrown with weeds and saplings. My persistent, annoying blogging on the subject caught the attention of then opinion page editor Glenn Kranzley and columnist Paul Carpenter. The publicity they generated resulted in the city cleaning up those steps. My next target was what I called the boat landing. As a boy I had often played at that site. Long buried, it was now the step to nowhere.
Readers of this blog, on two separate weekends, succeeded in digging out the steps and the portion of the landing at the bottom on the steps. Blogger Chris Casey provided the lion's share of manpower in this accomplishment. The remainder of the landing was lost to large trees which grew over a period of forty years. There has been some speculation that my independent demeanor and blunt writing has alienated people, both at City Hall and The Morning Call. Although probably true, the merits of the projects stand on their own.
I managed to get the miniature bridge and spring pond cleared by appealing directly to Mike Gilbert, who is in charge of the watershed for the Park Department. I have been in communication with Park Director Greg Weitzel about tonight's meeting. Yesterday, I received a phone call from a women in her late 80's, whose father worked on the Lawrence Street steps. I believe a worthwhile future project would be to chronicle about those who did the labor; However, it's first necessary to insure that the fruits of that labor are preserved. Please join me this evening, so that I may prevail upon City Hall that a large number of our citizens hold these structures invaluable.

The meeting is at 7:00PM this evening in the lower level of the Allentown Library

above reprinted from September of 2011 

ADDENDUM AUGUST 12, 2024:Among others attracted to that meeting at the Library was Karen El-Chaar, then from Friends Of The Allentown Parks. She in turn secured a grant from the Trexler Trust to restore the steps at Fountain Park. I spent many years advocating for the WPA structures.  While the new Parknership would benefit from my experience and knowledge, my inquiries remain unanswered.

Aug 9, 2024

Allentown's Future


Mayor Daddona's plan to save Allentown was the canopy built in front of the stores on Hamilton Street. Mayor Heydt's plan was tearing down the canopy in front of the stores. Mayor Pawlowski's plan is to tear down the stores and build an entertainment complex. Pawlowski's plan will eventually take three square blocks off the tax rolls. Already the first $100 million block has grown into a second block and another $100 million. Because of a rainy week, Steel Stack's Jeff Parks is walking around with a tin cup asking for donations. The Sands Corporation will be able to finance its new entertainment complex with a money machine called a casino. When it rains on Pawlowski's white elephant, which it must from all the local competition alone, the short fall will come from our pockets. I'm not sure where Pawlowski will be then, but we're going to be up the creek, without a paddle, paying for huge, underused tax free buildings. There should have been a law, or a vote, or a City Council.

above reprinted from September of 2011

ADDENDUM AUGUST 9, 2024:Who knew that 13 years later Musikfest would again be having another rainy week. Allentown's arena turned out to be an underused pretext for a real estate scheme called the NIZ, which has profited essentially one man. Pawlowski ended up in federal prison, and this blog is still taking the bad actors to task.

Aug 8, 2024

Not Easy Blogging In Allentown


Yesterday, somebody called me an attention seeking blowhard. Someone else, commented on a very old post,.Molovinsky's twist of the facts. On facebook, Mayor In Limbo put a picture of the Lehigh Parkway wall being repointed. Truth is his neglect caused part of the wall to collapse, and my advocacy resulted in repairs being made at Fountain Park and Union Terrace. I've been called a naysayer by the best of them. I suppose their hubris makes those I scrutinize so outraged at my observations. Their outbursts toward me are personal, venomous and much more offensive than anything I write about their business or voting. I normally don't directly address those insults, and usually allow them the last word.  Probably being self-depreciating is an asset for me, in this endeavor that I call molovinsky on allentown. Perhaps, in the All American City of my youth, I would be a naysayer. However, in this era of self serving politicians, opportunists, and a newspaper which doesn't know if it wants to be journalistic or an advertising agency, I believe that I serve a public good, even if it's not universally appreciated.

reprinted from April of 2016 

ADDENDUM AUGUST 8, 2024:Although another eight years have passed, can't say that the powers that be think anymore of me, actually less. A few of years ago the Morning Call did a story on Wehr's Dam and didn't mention me. Without my campaign to save the dam, it would have been quickly demolished in 2014, before any public input. Likewise, my current exclusion from the Parknership, at least in its first round so far of sought input, is a statement on Tuerk's low regard for me. Regardless of such slights, this blog celebrated its 17th birthday this past May.

Aug 7, 2024

Growth Industry In Allentown


Yesterday I went to the Social Security Office, across from the prison, to discuss my retirement options. I was given number 199. In addition to retirement, Social Security also dispenses money for disability. I would say from the gray hair, there were about three of us contemplating retirement, all the others were for disability. A few middle age men were carrying their fake canes. The canes aren't fake, it's the disabilities. I saw one such gentleman walk in from the parking lot, clearly the cane bore no weight, and was merely a prop. Most of the people waiting were quite young, in their twenties. Disability has now been expanded to include mental conditions such as depression, anxiety, additive personality and anger management. I will say many of them did look angry to me. It was hard finding a parking space. Business also looked good at the prison. If Johnny Manana's had gotten these crowds....

reprinted from Nov. 18, 2008

Aug 6, 2024

Allentown, The Grant Sinkhole


Although the state of Pennsylvania has spent $500 million of your state taxes paying down the mortgage on J.B. Reilly's privately owned Hamilton Street empire, we learn that the fed is giving us $20million because we're a distressed area?!?  If it's a grant from Washington, or a grant from Harrisburg, both ways it's our money.

This grant will target the unemployed, who are actually the unmotivated.  Although we have new terms added to the lexicon all the time, unmotivated isn't among them. There was a press conference with our elected officials accepting the grant, and telling us what wonderful things will be done with it, and how it will change the dynamics of our community. In Pinocchio's time they would all be leaving that press conference with a long nose.

Hasshan Batts and his unfulfilled Promise was front and center at the trough.The Morning Call sought out his comments..." It’s crucial that we continue to collaborate and ensure that those most impacted have a voice and benefit directly from these funds.” I suppose working for Promise Neighborhoods is considered gainful employment by Mayor Tuerk, who reportedly already promised them a cut.