In 2014 Alan Jennings invited Bernie O'Hare and me to join him on his radio show, Lehigh Valley Discourse. The station manager refused to archive the show, and Jennings quit in protest against the censorship. Move ahead four years, and Alan is back on public radio at WDIY. For his first new show he again invited both O'Hare and myself. However since that first appearance, O'Hare has developed hostility toward me, for pointing out some aspects of his blog operating manner.
Since O'Hare and I both accepted Jennings' invitation, I assumed that he was putting his hostility aside for the show. Less than halfway into the taping he pounced on a word which I had mispronounced. I then noticed that he has a legal pad full of my blog quotes, and notes pertaining to them. He accused me of hosting a hate blog based on a reader comment, which I didn't reply to. Although O'Hare knows that I prefer not to debate in the comment section, he delighted in taking his example out of context. Ironically, Jennings wanted to talk about Trump's hostility and incivility, but seemed somewhat oblivious to O'Hare's hostility unfolding right in front of him.
I appreciated Alan's invitation, and although Bernie's attacks and my replies might make for an interesting show, O'Hare's behavior was unnecessary. Hopefully this show will make it through the archive procedure, and Alan's new run on the show will be well received.
ADDENDUM: Occasionally, someone says something rich in irony, especially if they maliciously enjoy weaponizing words. Such was the case on last week's taping, when O'Hare accused me of misogyny. In early 2016 O'Hare wrote...Whether I agree or disagree with her on this or that, I must say Susan Wild has been a breath of very fresh air in Allentown. She was put into a nearly impossible situation, and has reacted with integrity and honor. People with my history tend to bring the profession down, but someone like Wild can rescue a democracy in peril. He continued praising her for almost two years. Toward the end of 2017 he wrote...She has handled herself with integrity and a sedulous nature that kept the ship of state from foundering. With O'Hare, friendship seems to trump truth. When Wild put out a mailer about his friend Morganelli that O'Hare didn't like, the truth changed. When I pointed out that he did a 180 on Susan Wild, and essentially called her a whore, he tried to deflect away the truth of my observation by claiming that my statement was misogynistic. By May of 2018 O'Hare was accusing Wild of bashing little people to benefit hospitals...All of the regular people she screwed over 30 years will be contacted.
O'Hare thinks that his readers are a weak minded jury that he can bully and manipulate at will. He delights in playing up to local judges and the district attorney. When one of his anonymous readers took him to task last primary, O'Hare replied...Sign your name so we know who to sue
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Jul 10, 2018
Jul 9, 2018
A Crime By The Wildlands Conservancy
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| photo by Tami Quigley |
The top photo shows the Robin Hood Bridge, before the Wildlands Conservancy demolished the little Robin Hood Dam, just downstream beyond the bridge. The dam was only about 10 inches high, and was built as a visual effect to accompany the bridge in 1941. It was the last WPA project in Allentown, and considered the final touch for Lehigh Parkway. Several years ago, the Wildlands told the Allentown Park Director and City Council that it wanted to demolish the dam. The only thing that stood between their bulldozer and the dam was yours truly. I managed to hold up the demolition for a couple weeks, during which time I tried to educate city council about the park, but to no avail. If demolishing the dam wasn't bad enough, The Wildlands Conservancy piled the broken dam ruble around the stone bridge piers, as seen in the bottom photo. I'm sad to report that the situation is now even worse. All that ruble collected silt, and now weeds and brush is growing around the stone bridge piers. I suppose the Wildlands Conservancy considers it an extension of its riparian buffer.
The Wildlands Conservancy should be made to remove, piece by piece, all the rubble that they piled around the bridge piers, despoiling the bridge's beauty. City Council should refrain from ever again permitting The Wildlands Conservancy to alter our park designs.
ADDENDUM JULY 9, 2018: It has been five years since the dam's destruction in 2013, and the bridge piers look more disgusting than ever. While Allentown has the third Pawlowski appointed park director taking orders from the Wildlands Conservancy, we do have a new mayor. Hopefully, Ray O'Connell will wrestle park system decisions back to the city.
Jul 6, 2018
Downhill On Lehigh Street

During the early 1970's, Allentown demolished the entire neighborhood between Union and Lawrence Streets. It was, in a large part, home to the black community. How ironic that we destroyed the cohesion of a neighborhood, but renamed Lawrence Street after Martin Luther King. The only remnant of the neighborhood is the St. James A.M.E. Church. Going up the hill today we now have a vacant bank call center on the east, and the Housing Authority Project on the west. A whole neighborhood existed in from both sides of Lehigh Street, including black owned shops. The houses were old and humble, but people owned them, many for generations. Some blacks at the time wondered if the project was Urban Renewal or Negro Removal?
reprinted from January 2017
The bank call center referred to above is now Building 21, Allentown School District's own alternative charter like high school.
ADDENDUM: I was recently asked if I had done any posts on Allentown's black community. I graduated Allen in the mid 1960's when blacks only comprised about 2% of the town. Only one black guy hung out with my group, and he attended Dieruff. My father's meat market was on Union Street just before the bridge over the Lehigh. Mr. Brantley purchased meat there for his cafe, one of several black owned businesses in the former neighborhood chronicled above. Although many of Allentown's black residents lived there, the neighborhood was still predominately white.
Jul 5, 2018
To Whom Do The Allentown Parks Belong
Recently the Allentown Park Director told me that she is being pressured to plant wider riparian buffers by the Conservancy/Greenlands, and to cut them down by me. But, who are we? I represent the park sentiments of thousands of Allentonians. I know this from social media such as facebook, where hundreds of people every week tell me to keep fighting for the parks. I know this from visiting the parks, where dozens of people tell me to keep fighting. But more importantly, who is the Wildlands Conservancy and Greenways of Lehigh Valley? They are regional groups with paid professional directors who seek and award grants. Although their counsel might be useful for a small township or municipality without its own park department, why should they dictate policy in Allentown? Allentown has its own iconic park system, and even its own grant benefactor, The Trexler Trust.
In Allentown the storm sewer system is piped directly into the creeks, bypassing the riparian buffers, making them useless as buffers anyway. All they accomplish is to block both access and view of the streams. The Allentown Park Department allowed the Greenway Project to plant a buffer on the Little Lehigh in Fountain Park, while at the same time allowing the swimming pool there to succumb to neglect and permanent closure. It is time for Mayor O'Connell and Allentown to reclaim direction of the Allentown Park System.
photocredit:molovinsky
Jul 4, 2018
A Victory For The Traditional Park System
Followers of this blog know that I have been waging a war against the weed wall blocking both the view and access to the streams. Perhaps my last post on June 14th finally struck the right chord, but at any rate the weed wall has been cut down from behind the rose garden. Although this is done occasionally to control invasive species in the weed barrier, I have confirmed on good authority that indeed this recent cutting represents a change in policy. I would like to express my gratitude to both park director Lindsay Taylor and Mayor Ray O'Connell for their time on this and other issues.
Although I am grateful, there is another issue needing attention.... Along the entire stretch of the Cedar Creek between Ott Street and Cedar Crest Blvd there is but one bench along the creek. We elderly not only need access to the water, but a place to sit, rest and enjoy the serenity General Trexler intended.
As residents flock to the parks today to celebrate the holiday, I will continue to advocate for those aspects of the traditional park system which for decades were featured on picture post cards, as shown above.
Jul 3, 2018
Allentown's Poor Pool Excuse
Four reporters from the Morning Call joined forces to report on Here's Why Summer After Summer, Some Pools Are Closed. Apparently the paper needs to assign more reporters, because they all seemed to accept the city's sorry excuse. The article explains that the shortage is caused by factors such as teenagers wanting more comfortable indoor jobs. The article mentions that the city has a limited budget and pays $8.75 an hour. Although I do not have an advanced degree in finance, I bet that if the city would pay $10 or even $12 an hour, there would be a surplus of applicants. Furthermore, again even without the advanced degree, I know that the extra pay would be taxpayer beneficial, compared to closed and underutilized pools.
I'm amazed at both the city and the paper for giving and printing such disingenuous answers, summer after summer. There is little reason to believe that the city ever intended to open Irving Pool, which is on the books for conversion to a spray park.
Shown above is the former Fountain Park Pool which closed after years of excuses, as being reported now about the other pools.
Jul 2, 2018
LV Politics and Pro Wrestling
Lehigh Valley politics and professional wrestling have a lot in common... they both involve fakery with a pre-determined outcome.
Every year our state senators and representatives get to be white knights with the school budget. The state mandates that the districts must determine their budgets before the state contribution is known. This formula allows our elected officials to be heroes just a few months before the election every year.
Every summer Allentown parks has shortage of life guards, and must curtail the swimming pool options. If it's not just an excuse, you would think that by now they would learn that they must outpay the local amusement park, and start their yearly search earlier. This season Irving Pool will not open at all. The city is phrasing this pool out, just as they did to Fountain Pool years ago. Shortage of lifeguards is an convenient excuse. With the Tilghman Street Bridge closed, the east side once again gets the short end of the stick. Alan Jennings and Community Action Committee of Lehigh Valley want to train their low income clients to be farmers, how about life guards?
Most Allentonians of memory share my disgust about the weed wall barriers blocking the streams in the parks. The Morning Call has been withholding letters on that topic to accommodate the agenda of the Wildlands Conservancy.
Those looking for a little truth about Allentown to sprinkle on their early morning gruel are pretty much limited to this blog.
Jul 1, 2018
Imantrek On Local Democratic Democracy
Imantrek isn't happy about the way certain people were treated at the recent Democratic Committee Selection Meeting. He isn't happy about how the event was covered by The Morning Call, and he isn't happy about how the party is now trying to distance itself from his coverage of the event. This blog will present Iman's presentations on this event, above is the first of three videos.
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