Pennsylvania sedge, carex pensylvanica

Pennsylvania sedge, carex pensylvanica
Pennsylvania sedge, carex pensylvanica

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Dispute snags Sinking Spring demolition progress

by Steve Reinbrecht

A dispute between a Sinking Spring property owner and the borough is holding up demolition that will clear the way to improve traffic flow through a major intersection.

Crews have knocked down the old borough hall and Lesher’s Servicenter to make room to straighten the intersection of Columbia, Cacoosing and Penn avenues.

The borough needs to demolish one more building -- a house it owns at 3920 Penn Ave.

The problem is that the adjoining house at 3922 Penn Ave. is more complicatedly connected to the target building than was expected. The house at 3920 was built first. When 3922 was built, the builder did not make a proper support wall, but notched 3920’s existing wall to hold up 3922, according to Borough Manager Mike Hart.

“It was not normal construction,” Hart said. Now 3920 can't be removed without threatening 3922's stability.


Scott A. and Vanessa Dreibelbis bought 3922 for $89,900 in July 2010, according to Berks County records. No one was home there Wednesday morning, and the Dreibelbises could not be reached.

The borough has offered to build a new, proper wall for the Dreibelbises, but they have declined, Hart said, instead asking the borough to buy the house.

The borough won’t buy 3922 because it’s not needed for the work and the borough can’t afford it, he said.


Demolition at the intersection started in September. The work is part of an ambitious plan to build a new road between Route 724 and Columbia Avenue, and build homes, offices, shops and restaurants.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Burglar steals safe, cognac from South Heidelberg house

by Steve Reinbrecht

Someone stole a safe and liquor from a house in South Heidelberg on Dec. 26, but the burglary does not seem related to other recent daytime break-ins in Southwestern Berks this month.

The burglar took the safe, which contained gift cards, and the bottle of cognac about 12:30 p.m. that Monday from the house in the 500 block of Hill Road.

The door might have been unlocked, Police Chief Barry Whitmoyer said. The theft is probably not connected to the four other day-time burglaries reported in Southwestern Berks in December, he said.




Thursday, December 22, 2016

Four homes burglarized in Southwestern Berks

by Steve Reinbrecht

Four day-time home burglaries have been reported in Southwestern Berks so far in December.

In the latest intrusion, someone broke into a house in the 200 block of Huntzinger Road in South Heidelberg on Friday, Dec. 16.

A resident discovered the crime upon returning about 2 p.m. The only thing noticed missing was an inexpensive watch, Police Chief Barry Whitmoyer said.

The other three burglaries were reported in Wernersville. No one was immediately available at the Western Berks Police station to give details.

On Dec., 1, a residential burglary was reported in the first block of Heidelberg Drive about 3:50 p.m.

The second was reported about 8:35 a.m. Dec. 6 at a residence in the 400 block of West Penn Avenue.


The third was reported 3:15 p.m. Dec. 15, in the first block of West Penn Avenue.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Argall wants to change law to help Sinking Spring defend against PPL power line

by Steve Reinbrecht

State Sen. David Argall is trying to drum up lawmaking support for two bills that would help Sinking Spring block a 69,000-volt power line from brutally disrupting its renaissance plans.

He posted a Senate “cosponsorship memo” Oct. 4 to solicit support for the two proposals.

Argall expects they will be adopted in time to help the borough, said Jon Hopcraft, Argall’s legislative aide.

“There’s been a ton of investment by the state, the county, the borough,” he said last week. “We don’t want to see it squandered away on account of a transmission line.”

The “proposed transmission line … has outraged the local community as well as hampered major economic development efforts,” Argall wrote in the memo. “My goal is to provide a balanced approach to the needs of the utility while taking into account the wants and needs of the municipality and its residents.”

Argall’s bills would make two changes to Title 66 (Public Utilities). One would add a section requiring that the municipalities approve the plans.

“No transmission line for electricity may be constructed within a municipality unless the governing body of the municipality approves construction of the transmission line according to the criteria established by the municipality.”

The second change would require that the Public Utility Commission conduct public hearing of a proposed transmission line. PPL held a public meeting in Wyomissing on Sept. 22 about its plans for Sinking Spring. Some who attended complained about how it was managed.

“The commission shall conduct a public hearing in the municipality in which a transmission line for electricity is proposed. The public hearing shall provide an opportunity for public comment on the proposal,” the bill says.

Wilson School District will help students deal with stress

by Steve Reinbrecht

Wilson School District plans to start a program to help students – from kindergarten through 12th grade – manage stress.

Teachers, administrators, guidance counselors and other school staff have increasing concerns about the problem, and that prompted the plan for a program. The idea didn’t come from parents, Superintendent Curt Baker said.

After a board meeting Monday, Baker declined to give specific examples of how stress is causing problems, though he did say some students have been acting out in unhealthy ways.

In general, stressed-out teens might suffer declining grades, crying jags, fighting, suicide attempts, or drug use, and Wilson has seen all of those manifestations, Baker said.

Students are more stressed about the future than their parents were at the same age. 

Fear of the future, wondering whether they will do as well as their parents, worrying they won’t be able to get into college or reach their life’s goals – all are stressors for this generation, Baker said.

Poverty increases stress, and Baker noted that one in four students are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches.

One outcome might be implementing student outreach that goes beyond traditional efforts. Baker said the schools already have great resources, such as a student assistance program (SAP) and excellent counselors.

A study by New York University showed that teenagers “experience high levels of chronic stress, to the extent it impedes their abilities to succeed academically, compromises their mental health functioning, and fosters risk behavior.”

“Over time, selective high schools have oriented themselves to address a context of increasingly competitive college admissions.

“School work, college applications, extracurricular activities, and parental expectations all contribute to teenagers’ stress.

“Youth, schools, and experts identified substance use as a common strategy for coping with stress.”

Wilson educators plan to look at six factors:
  • Expectations of students and parents
  • Grading, GPAs and grade competition
  • Low student resilience
  • Poverty and economic situations
  • Substance abuse
  • Under-involvement and disengagement 


Baker expects to begin by having experts speak to groups by the end of January.

Friday, December 16, 2016

Sinking Spring revitalization committee: This is going to work

by Steve Reinbrecht

The world needs to know that Sinking Spring is serious about its ambitious redevelopment plan, in the works since 2009, borough officials said Thursday.

Getting that message out – that the $80 million project will succeed and improve traffic, grow the town’s tax base and make life better for all Berks Countians – will help the project get over current hurdles, they said.

At their monthly meeting in Borough Hall on Thursday, members of the BOSS 2020 revitalization committee voted to send a report to Borough Council about the project’s goals and accomplishments.

The project has obvious momentum. It has attracted hundreds of thousands of dollars in county and state funds. The first phase resulted in the Spring Market Center on the site of the former Boscov’s store. In the next phase, crews demolished half a dozen buildings on Penn Avenue this fall to make room to straighten the intersection where Cacoosing and Columbia avenues meet Penn Avenue.

Another sign of the project’s traction is that PennDOT has asked consulting engineer Bob Ludgate Sr. to file intersection plans so the state can include them in its ongoing $13.6 million project to resurface Route 422 from Route 724 in Sinking Spring to Wernersville.



But there are obstacles to BOSS 2020.

For one thing, some council members are questioning the cost of the borough’s participation. The borough plans to raise taxes next year.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Spring Township cancels plans to move 2 libraries

by Steve Reinbrecht

Spring Township has cancelled plans to move its two library branches to a single building on Penn Avenue.

 The township had planned to share the building at 3000 Penn Ave. with the Yocum Institute for Arts Education, a Wyomissing arts and performance center.

The institute has dropped its plans to buy the building.

The township had planned to open a 10,000-square-foot library in the giant building

The plan fell through in the final stages, after township supervisors decided not to contribute more funding to the project, township manager Jay Vaughn said Thursday afternoon.

The township’s two branches – the Spring Township library, in Spring Ridge near Isaac’s restaurant, and the West Lawn/Wyomissing Hills branch – can expect the status quo for the foreseeable future, Vaughn said.

In September, John Nelka, director of the Sinking Spring Library, about a mile away, had concerns about the plan.

“I think it’s unfortunate they’re putting it so close,” Nelka said then. He declined to comment Thursday.

The township plans to sell the building.

In August, the Berks County Redevelopment Authority voted to help the Yocum Institute borrow $3.4 million for the move. That deal is off, authority executive director Kenneth Pick said Thursday.