April 2016

Art Watch: A mosaic of creativity

24/7 Project by Rhoda Kahler

Clay artist Rhoda Kahler has two major art openings in April, as well as a museum show, all at a time when she was determined to “lay low and just do art.”

Her solo show at Church Street Gallery in West Chester, “Tactiles” opens  April  8 from 5 to 9 p.m. and goes through April 30. This is the first sculpture show at Church Street Gallery, and one of the few abstract shows that they present during a year.

At the Blue Streak Gallery in Wilmington, Kahler opens “Abstractions” April 1 through May 3, with artists Robyn Burkhardt and Wes Memeger.  Currently she is also exhibiting at “The Art of Teaching” show at The Delaware Art Museum through April 8, and at Longwood Art Gallery in Kennett Square.  Kahler’s art is very hot right now, and there is no cooling off in sight.

Rhoda kahler at work on Alphabet City
Rhoda Kahler at work on Alphabet City

Kahler grew up in central Pennsylvania with no exposure to art. School field trips were to local farms, not museums. No one had “being an artist” as a career path. From her earliest memory, she created things from whatever she could find around the house or from the local dime store.  She made Barbie clothes out of rags and crochet, and sold them to girls on the school bus. There was always a mixture of the creativity of art grounded in the pragmatism of selling the work she loved to create.

During our interview, Kahler showed me her bag of Barbie gear. I saw a Barbie tennis racket that she constructed out of threads layered in wax drippings, and wrapped in twine – a miniature Eva Hesse, at age 8. She recalls her childhood as “always constantly making things.. crocheting tiny clothing in a rocking chair” which gave her headaches, but she just couldn’t stop herself from creating.

From middle school through high school, she made dresses and costumes for her peers, and sold them.   At 16, she met the love of her life, and they married at 24.  At 18, she transferred from York College to West Chester University with an art major, and met her clay and artist mentor, Professor John Baker.  Baker introduced her to the world of clay hand-building, and she was hooked.

Always pragmatic, Kahler took a job after graduating from college in a corporate cubicle for a large retail clothing line where she designed clothes, painted catalogue promotions and was the” Girl Friday” to whatever they needed artistically. Her family was thrilled. She also waited tables, taught art, and stole time away in the basement, creating clay works of art that she would sell at annual “Christmas open studio” sales out of her small apartment.

At her very first art show, at the Chester County Art Association in the late ’90s, she entered a small, raw floral watercolor with “funky flowers,” and to her great surprise, it won first prize, a major moment for her.  This event provided Kahler with the extra confidence to quit her corporate job and focus on her artwork, though she continued to waitress  to make ends meet .

Her early concentration was tile mosaics, because that is what she had space for in her basement work area. She taught at Chester Springs, Chester County Art Association and at The Delaware Art Museum, constantly creating small works on her own.  During this period, she established a large network of artist friends, students and loyal customers.

Kahler has worked on enormous tile installation murals at many schools and institutions, including West Chester University’s Swope Building.

In The Folds by Rhoda Kahler
In The Folds by Rhoda Kahler

For the past four years she has spent most every Monday working on the Bridges Program with the residents at Inglis House, a residential home for people of all ages with spinal cord injuries from MS, cerebral palsy, or accidents. The Bridges program “bridges the gap” between people with disabilities and the art museum. Kahler works with the residents to create a large art piece, such as “In the Folds”, which was later shown in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

In 2010, artist Adrian Martinez asked her to join in a singular West Chester University art show entitled “Paint, Paper, Clay, Wax, Wood ” with artists Adrian Martinez, Jeff Schaller, and Jamie Paxson. This was one of the finest art shows that I have ever seen in this area.  Artist Adrian Martinez urged her to “be great,” to do her best work, and she pushed herself to new heights, creating mesmerizing clay orbs and large sculptural totems, and brilliant “Alphabet City” tile ensembles that were inspired by her visits to European hillside vistas.

In 2015, she embarked on “24/7” a collaborative artistic journey through seven cities with photographer Darcie Goldberg, where she made massive wall tiles pieced from collected fragments of her journey, carrying pounds of fresh clay and  working on site. Her images were bold, black and white, large and full of texture, confidence, and association.  Now, in 2016, she has further pushed her boundaries, leaving behind her alphabet impressions and fully embracing texture and semblance.

With matte finishes made from metals and sawdust fires, her work has evolved into luscious abstract vistas of texture and atmosphere. Every new challenge pushes her work towards a greater exploration of the tactile and the sublime, in three dimensional structures like “Naked Cowboy” or tiled assemblages that remind us of Turner watercolors.

Naked Cowboy by Rhoda Kahler
Naked Cowboy by Rhoda Kahler

With each new piece,  she feels the steady “pressure to be great,” mixed with the dizzying excitement of pursuing the new and unexplored. She spends hours making her clay pieces, thoughtfully rearranging, adding elements, rethinking and reworking a piece over many days and nights.

After such disciplined control over form, construction and composition, the piece is thrown to the winds of chance into her 2,232-degree Fahrenheit kiln.  Kahler says, “Every time I open the kiln, I am so excited. I have to see what has happened. Is it beautiful? Did it crack?”

Even as I interview her, she covers her hands, explaining that today she opened the kiln too soon and burned her fingers; she couldn’t wait to see what magic lay within.  She explained that while she could still repeat things that she knew, the artistic excitement came from experimenting with new glazes and clay elements, and then surrendering her work to the whims of the high-fire kiln.  “I like a little chaos and a little suspense,” she says with a smile.

Go to the Church Street opening of “Tactiles” April 8, or the Blue Streak show opening April 1, to meet artist Rhoda Kahler and see her latest great clay works.  She is disarmingly friendly, open and generous as a person; as an artist, she is fiercely creative and passionate.  Kahler is an artist to watch, and collect, because from where she is now in 2016, who knows where she will be in 2017 or 2018. Rhoda Kahler is one artist whose constant challenges to herself fires up new, bold creations in every passing year. Her life and work are a mosaic of creativity.

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Art Watch: A mosaic of creativity Read More »

PennDOT: Traffic fatalities down in 2015

Traffic fatalities in Pennsylvania hit the second-lowest total since record-keeping began in 1928.

The 1,200 fatalities in 2015 equaled only five more than 2014’s record low, said a PennDOT press release.

“We and our safety partners continue to work on infrastructure improvements, as well as promoting the use of education, enforcement and outreach in efforts to influence driver behavior and drive down crash and fatality numbers,” PennDOT Secretary Leslie S. Richards said in the release. “We strive to meet the national vision of Zero Fatalities, knowing that transportation impacts Pennsylvanians daily.”

PennDOT data from police reports shows that while the number of highway deaths dropped in many crash types, significant decreases in fatal crashes involving drivers older than 65, aggressive drivers, and crashes at intersections occurred, the release said.

Deaths in crashes involving drivers 65 years of age and older declined to 279 from 300 in 2014. Fatalities in crashes at intersections decreased from 271 in 2014 to 251 in 2015, while fatalities in crashes involving aggressive drivers decreased from 134 in 2014 to 119 in 2015.

Fatalities increased in some types of crashes, including those involving single-vehicles that ran off the road and those that hit fixed objects. There were 580 fatalities in crashes involving single vehicles that ran off the road, up from 534 in 2014. Also, deaths in crashes where drivers hit fixed objects, such as trees, increased to 459 from 425 in 2014, the release said.

PennDOT has invested approximately $50 million over the last five years for low-cost safety improvements at nearly 4,800 locations. Types of low-cost safety countermeasures include rumble strips, signage, pavement markings and roadway delineators. PennDOT also invests about $20 million annually in state and federal funds for safety education and enforcement efforts statewide.

To increase public access to crash and fatality information in Pennsylvania, PennDOT last year released the Pennsylvania Crash Information Tool, which allows access to these and other types of crash data. The tool – accessible at dotcrashinfo.pa.gov – allows users to search data pulled from law-enforcement crash reports involving passengers, drivers and different vehicle types.

To learn about PennDOT’s highway safety efforts, visit www.JustDrivePA.com.

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

PennDOT: Traffic fatalities down in 2015 Read More »

Concord aims to add sewers in two areas

Concord Township supervisors want to bring public sewers into two areas of the township.

One location is Andrien Road in the northeast section of the township, and the other area is along Route 202 from Smithbridge Road down to the beer distributor in the split near Goodwill and Targetmaster.

To do that, the township must update its sewer plan — the Act 537 plan — and get approval from the state Department of Environmental Protection.

The board approved updating the plan during its April 5 meeting, but there was some controversy with the move because some residents in the Penns Grant section thought their community would be included in the updated plan.

The township previously held two meetings on the matter, but there was some apparent confusion. Supervisors’ Chairman Dominic Pileggi said as much during the April supervisors’ meeting.

He and fellow Supervisor Libby Salvucci both said they were under the impression that most of the residents of the Penns Grant community were against having public sewers brought in. Yet several residents said just the opposite during the public comment section of the April meeting.

There are a total of 108 homes in Penns Grant, but only 37 were earmarked for getting public sewer service. Then the board considered adding another 22.

However, Pileggi said, “I thought there was more of an outcry from people who said they didn’t want the sewers.”

Salvucci concurred, saying there were 37 homeowners who thought they were being pressured to have the sewers even though it would cost too much.

What the board decided to do was amend the Act 537 Plan for Andrien Road and Route 202, then revisit the idea of adding sewers in Penns Grant.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Concord aims to add sewers in two areas Read More »

Police nab three with civilian help

The suspect vehicle after it crashed into a tree.

***UPDATE: See below ***

 

Pennsylvania State Police from Troop K, Media barracks — with the assistance of a Birmingham Township woman — arrested three people in Chadds Ford Township following a break-in in Concord Township.

The suspects — whose identities have not yet been released — were arrested in the vicinity of Creek Road, Station Way Road and Route 1 in Chadds Ford. Police were still gathering information at press time and have not yet issued a formal report to the media, but said the trio might have also been involved in break-ins in other townships.

Birmingham’s Dana Loundas was driving south on Creek Road about 8:30 this morning when traffic stopped in front of her. Police had blocked traffic from reaching Route 1. She said she was the last car in line when she saw a vehicle “barreling down Creek Road” behind her.

The car swerved several times before, according to another witness, a police SUV bumped the vehicle, which in turn hit a tree near Hank’s Place. Loundas said she heard the crash, saw the tree fall, and then saw three people emerge from the suspects’ car and run toward Brandywine Prime.

Cars in front of her began making U-turns, and Loundas followed suit. When she turned, however, she said a state trooper on foot motioned to her to open her passenger door.

The trooper pointed to a fleeing suspect who was heading north on Creek Road.

“He jumped in and said, ‘I have to get that guy.’ So I floored it…My heart was jumping out of my chest,” Loundas said.

She said they pursued in her car for about 200 yards when they saw the suspect climbing a fence at a property on the right side of the road. The trooper alighted from Loundas’ car, called for backup, and apprehended the suspect.

A second suspect was apprehended on Station Way Road and was Tased even after surrendering, according to a witness.

Dan Leader, of Leader Sunoco, said he and an employee saw the suspect calmly walk across Route 1 from the vicinity of the Chadds Ford Gallery, then walk behind the Post Office toward Station Way Road. As the suspect reached Station Way, Leader said he pointed him out to police, who apprehended him. However, the suspect, while fatigued, was not in a mood to cooperate and was Tased even after being handcuffed.

“He was still struggling and mouthing off,” Leader said. “He needed to be brought under control.”

There was no immediate word on how or where the third suspect was apprehended.

ChaddsFordLive will update this story as details become available.

UPDATE: State police are now saying there were only two suspects. One has been identified as a juvenile and the other as 22-year-old Joel Stokes. Both are from Fort  Lauderdale, Fla.

According to the official press release, police had been alerted to a series of thefts from vehicles in daycare parking lots. A suspicious vehicle was seen at Kinder Care Daycare on Brinton Lake Road in Concord Township about 8 a.m. on April 6. The occupants of the suspicious vehicle noticed troopers and began to flee. Troopers pursued, resulting in the arrests in Chadds Ford. The suspects are charged with fleeing and eluding, recklessly endangering, and theft.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Police nab three with civilian help Read More »

Longwood Gardens wins online contest

Longwood Gardens comes out on top in a competition aimed at crowning the best U.S. botanical garden.

Updated at 2:15 p.m. with quote from Paul B. Redman

For Longwood Gardens aficionados, the news that Longwood bested the competition in an online contest for Best Botanical Garden in the U.S. probably won’t come as a surprise.

However, the expansive, former homestead of Pierre S. du Pont did get periodically bumped from the top spot during several weeks of online voting, which was sponsored by USA Today.

“We are thrilled to receive this national recognition,” said Paul B. Redman, Longwood’s executive director. “We’d like to thank all our fans for voting for us, and for helping to make Longwood one of the great gardens of the world.”

Out of 20 contenders, Longwood ultimately took the edge from the U.S.  New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx. The Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis, Mo, the Lewes Ginter Botanical Garden in Richmond, Va.; and Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park in Grand Rapids, Mi., rounded out the top five.

A panel of experts, including Cindy Brockway of The Trustees of Reservations, a Massachusetts-based environmental advocacy group; Abby Hird of Botanic Gardens Conservation International; and Katy Moss Warner of the American Horticultural Society, picked the initial 20 nominees; the top 10 winners were determined by popular vote, according to a Longwood press release.

This is not the first time that Longwood Gardens has won a USA Today contest. In 2014, Longwood was named Best Public Garden in North America. For more about the contest and the complete list of Botanical Gardens winners, visit www.10best.com/awards/travel/best-botanical-garden.

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Longwood Gardens wins online contest Read More »

Lauded for contributions: electrical, charitable

Despite the origin of his company’s moniker, this Kennett area resident is no ordinary Tom, Dick or Harry.

W. Thomas Musser
W. Thomas Musser

W. Thomas Musser transformed the Tri-M Group LLC – eponymously named for the three Musser brothers, Tom Dick and Harry – into one of the leading electrical solutions providers in the eastern U.S.

Founded in 1964, the Kennett Square- based electrical contracting company has served the likes of DuPont, JP Morgan Chase, Comcast, and Halliburton, according to a press release from the Chester County Economic Development Council (CCEDC).

On Thursday, April 7, at the Phoenixville Foundry, Tom Musser will be inducted into the Chester County Business Hall of Fame at the 2016 CCEDC’s Business Achievement Award Dinner.

“In our role to cultivate smart growth in Chester County and the surrounding region, the CCEDC supports and works side-by-side with hundreds of entrepreneurs, corporate and community leaders,” Gary Smith, CCEDC president and CEO, said in the release. “Each year, we have the privilege to publicly honor an individual who has made significant strides and an indelible mark in our business community.”

Smith said the award recognizes Musser’s outstanding achievements within the business community. Previous inductees include Oscar Lasko of Lasko Products, Inc.; Jack Loew of J. Loew & Associates, Inc.; Tom Fillippo of Devault Foods; Greg Bentley of Bentley Systems; John Bogle of The Vanguard Group; and Robert Hankin of Hankin Group.

A lifelong Chester County resident, Musser acquired ownership of Tri-M early in its history and grew the company into a renowned, successful operation that now employs more than 400 people.

The leadership skills Musser honed during that process led to a variety of appointments, including with the Associated Builders and Contractors, where his posts included national chairman. He has also served as chairman of the board of the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), a 325,000-member association of small and independent business owners across the U.S., vice chair of the U.S. Naval Institute, and on the Department of Defense Advisory Board for Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve.

But many area residents know Musser best for his community outreach. A Unionville High graduate, Musser has repeatedly donated time, materials, and funds to a variety of projects and charities, including the Unionville Quarterback Club Fitness Room, the Patton Garden Project, Family Promise of Southern Chester County and the Kennett Senior Center. Twice, he has chaired capital campaigns for the Kennett Area YMCA, raising more than $8 million.

A U.S. Navy veteran and former president of the Kennett Square Rotary Club, Musser has served in a variety of regional board positions, including the Brandywine Valley YMCA, the Kennett Area YMCA, the Chester County Hospital Foundation, and the Southern Chester County Chamber of Commerce.

Musser’s is also known for his steadfast devotion to his family, which includes his wife of nearly 52 years, Bonnie Musser, a fixture of the Unionville Community Fair; his daughter, Traci Musser Bauguess; and his son, Thomas H. Musser. Both of the Mussers’ children work at Tri-M.

“I am both honored and humbled to be recognized by Chester County Economic Development Council,” Musser said in an email. “I am looking forward to celebrating this honor at the Phoenixville Foundry with my fellow business leaders in the area. The Chester County Economic Development Council really does such great work in the county that both improve and enhance the business community and the quality of life here. Again, it is a great honor.”

Past recognitions for Musser include the Chester County Community Foundation Corporate Social Investment Award, the Unionville High School Wall of Honor, the YMCA Distinguished Service Award of the Central Chester County YMCA, the Southern Chester County Chamber of Commerce Outstanding Citizen of the Year, and the Chester County Chamber of Business & Industry CEO of the Year.

 

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Lauded for contributions: electrical, charitable Read More »

Helen Marie Kershner of Chadds Ford

Helen Marie Kershner
Helen Marie Kershner

Helen Marie Kershner (nee Driscoll), of Chadds Ford, died April 3.

Born in Philadelphia, she was the daughter of the late Michael Joseph and Helen M. (nee Garrison) Driscoll.

Helen was employed by the Bulletin, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Chester County Daily Local News in the advertising department. She served for many years as a docent for the Brandywine River Museum and was along with her husband, Basil, a member of the Brandywine Museum Critters Group. Helen was an avid reader and enjoyed journaling and playing Bridge and pinochle. She was a former Girl Scout leader and served as Prefect of Sodality at Our Lady of Fatima Church in Secane.

Helen’s passion was being with and watching her children and grandchildren participate in activities and sports.

She was the beloved wife of the late Basil Richard Kershner; loving mother of Basil R. Kershner, Jr. (Denise), Michael J. Kershner (Sue), Ellen M. Petri (Scott), and Dr. Patricia Wendel (Larry); grandmom of Basil R. Kershner, III (Jamie), Melissa Steidler (Brett), Patrick Kershner (Stpehanie), Daniel Kershner (Katie), Kevin Kershner (Laura), Lindsay Kershner, Michael Kershner, Garrett Kershner, Ryan Kershner, Drew Petri, and Samara Wendel; also survived by 13 great-grandchildren; sister-in-law of Anne Kershner.

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Helen Marie Kershner of Chadds Ford Read More »

Police log April 6: Naked preaching, teen injured, $7K stolen

PSP Logo 2• An incident involving a naked man walking along Strasburg Road and shouting “Jesus is coming” is under investigation, said state police from the Embreeville barracks. A report said the indecent exposure occurred near Stargazer Road in West Bradford Township on Tuesday, March 8, at 4:51 p.m. The man was described as a white, non-Hispanic male with light hair and some facial hair. Anyone with information is asked to contact the barracks at 610-486-6280.

• A one-vehicle accident in Pocopson Township on March 23 left the driver and a 13-year-old passenger with suspected minor injuries. A police report said Kelly L. Tyson, 45, of Oxford, was driving south on Route 52 when she drifted into the right berm, left the roadway and went down an embankment and hit a tree. Longwood EMS took Tyson and the passenger to Jennersville Hospital for treatment.

• State police are investigating the reported theft of $7,000 from a bank account. A report said someone gained access to bank account information of a Concord Township resident.

• State police from the Media barracks are investigating a hit and run accident that happened March 30 on Brinton Lake Road. A report said the unknown motorist tried to make a right hand turn from the straight through lane and struck another car in the right lane. No injuries were reported. The report said the victim refused EMS treatment and was “visibly uninjured.”

• Timothy M. Pulte, 53, of Garnet Valley, was injured in a one-vehicle accident on March 28. A police report said Pulte, who was also cited, was traveling south on Temple Road in Concord Township at 9:59 p.m. when he crossed into the northbound lane and hit a pole. The report said he was found unconscious, was treated on the scene by EMS personnel, the taken to Crozer Hospital.

• Sometime between 5:45 p.m. on March 15 and 6:40 a.m. on March 16, someone stole various tools from a construction site on Fellowship Road in Concord Township.

• State police said Julian Xavier Goodson, 22, of Wilmington, was arrested for DUI after being stopped for traffic violations on March 25, according to a police report. Police said the stop was made at 12:51 a.m. on Route 202 at Naaman’s Creek Road.

• Charges of driving under the influence were filed against Taylor Lynne Romero, 20, reportedly of Chadds Ford, according to a police report. State police said Romero was involved in a one-vehicle accident on East Hillendale Road near Rosedale Road at 1:36 a.m. on March 26.  She failed a field sobriety test, according to the report, transported to Jennersville Hospital to have blood drawn, and then processed at the Avondale police barracks.

• State police from the Embreeville barracks conducted a traffic stop on Route 202 in East Whiteland Township on March 12 at 11:21 p.m. and arrested Joseph M. Dougherty, 21, of Chadds Fords, for suspected drunk-driving and issued an underage drinking citation to his passenger, Shane D. Meehan, 20, of West Chester.

• On Saturday, Feb. 20, at 10:58 p.m., Kennett Square Police said they arrested Jose Juarez-Landeros, 24, of Avondale, for DUI following an accident in the 200 block of West State Street.

• Kennett Square Police said Victor Lopez-Nunez, 31, of Kennett Square, was taken into custody on Friday, Feb. 26, at 6:09 p.m. in the 700 block of Lafayette Street, on an outstanding warrant from Florida. Lopez-Nunez was arraigned and taken to Chester County Prison after failing to post $25,000 cash bail, police said.

• On Sunday, Feb. 28 at 12:20 p.m., Kennett Square Police arrested Jose Castaneda, aka Jenaro Villalobos, 20, of Avondale in the 700 block of Lafayette Street. Police said Castaneda had marijuana in his possession and provided false identification to police.

• Caleb Rodriguez, 25, of Ephrata, was arrested for DUI on Saturday, March 5 at 2:05 a.m. Kennett Square Police said the arrest followed a traffic stop in the 400 block of West Cypress Street.

• A traffic stop on Ways Lane on Thursday, March 10, at 9:04 p.m. led to the arrest of Gustavo Castaneda-Mendoza, 23, of Toughkenamon, for suspected drunk driving, said Kennett Square Police. Castaneda-Mendoza, who was found to have a bench warrant, was taken to Chester County Prison, police said.

• Kennett Square Police said they cited a 16-year-old male from Landenberg on Saturday, March 12, following a traffic stop at 8:31 p.m. in the 500 block of West South Street.

• Jesus Morales-Villicana, 25, of Wilmington was arrested for DUI on Sunday, March 13, at 10:32 p.m. Police said the arrest followed a traffic stop in the 100 block of South Mill Road.

• Sometime between 8:45 a.m. and 7:45 p.m. on Sunday, March 13, Kennett Square Police said a purse containing the victim’s driver license, Social Security card and $465 in cash was stolen from a business located in the 200 block of South Washington Street.  An investigation is continuing.

• The theft of a 1992 green Honda Civic is also under investigation, borough police said. The vehicle was stolen sometime between 12:30 and 12:45 a.m. on Monday, March 14. Police said two days later, New Castle County Police recovered the vehicle at Ridge Road and Walnut Lane in Wilmington; it had been stripped of its seats, stereo and speakers.

• On Friday, March 18, at 3:57 a.m., Kennett Square Police arrested John Iliff, 23, of Unionville, for suspected DUI following a traffic stop in the 200 block of East Cypress Street.

• A spate of complaints from residents who received bogus calls from people claiming to be IRS representatives who were allegedly collecting back taxes prompted a reminder from Kennett Square Police.  The IRS will not call residents to demand immediate payment, will not call to say someone owes taxes without first sending a bill in the mail, will not require payment in a certain way, will not ask for your credit or debit card numbers over the phone, will not threaten residents with arrest, police said.

• On Tuesday March 22, at 9:58 p.m., New Garden Township Police responded to a reported domestic assault in the 900 block of Newark Road. Upon arrival, officers observed signs of domestic violence, and took Dany Juarez-Gomez, 29, of Toughkenamon, into custody. He faces charges that include aggravated assault, terroristic threats, and related offenses. Police said Juarez-Gomez was arraigned and taken to Chester County Prison after failing to post $25,000 bail.

• On Thursday, March 24, at 2:30 p.m., New Garden Township Police responded to the 1300 block of Newark Road for a drug-dealing complaint.  Upon arrival, officers learned that witnesses had observed Christopher Farrell, 25, of Newark, engaging in what appeared to be illegal drug activity. Police said Farrell had three bags of heroin and a syringe hidden in the sleeve of his shirt, and he was taken into custody and released pending an appearance in district court.

• On Saturday March 26, at 2:28 a.m., New Garden Township Police observed a vehicle driving erratically in the 800 block of Newark Road and conducted a traffic stop. Filadelfia Arreola-Aguilar, 30, of New Castle, Del., failed field sobriety tests and was arrested for suspected DUI, police said.

• New Garden Township Police initiated another traffic stop for erratic driving on Sunday March 27, at 11:30 p.m. Alberto Castaneda-Velazco, 24, of West Grove, failed field sobriety tests and was taken into custody for DUI, police said. His front-seat passenger, Ismael Bernal-Tapia, 24, of Toughkenamon, was observed attempting to conceal something on the floor of the vehicle, which was field-tested and identified as cocaine. Bernal-Tapia was also taken into custody on drug possession charges, police said.

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Police log April 6: Naked preaching, teen injured, $7K stolen Read More »

Borough to take aim at overweight trucks

An intergovernmental police cooperation agreement generated the evening’s liveliest discourse during a Kennett Square Borough Council meeting on Monday, April 4, with a diverse, lengthy agenda.

The agreement, which ultimately passed 5-2, outlines an arrangement intended to permit police in both the borough and Kennett Township to provide law enforcement services in Anson B. Nixon Park, Herb Pennock Park, the bridge on State Street, and any Kennett Township roadway with a legal weight restriction.

Mayor Matt Fetick explained that the borough approached the township in an effort to reduce the perennial impact of overweight trucks. He explained that the borough did not have the authority to enforce weight restrictions on the bridge because it is located about 500 feet outside its borders. It also didn’t have the $30,000 needed to purchase the scales and other necessary equipment.

Kennett Township, which does not have officers certified to conduct the inspections, agreed to fund half of the equipment and authorize the borough’s certified officers to enforce the weight limits. Any fines would be split between the two, said Borough Manager Joseph Scalise.

In the process of drafting the agreement, which has already been approved by the township, Fetick said it made sense to include cooperative language for the parks. Although Herb Pennock Park is located entirely in Kennett Township, the borough owns it. But the borough owns only a small portion of Anson B. Nixon Park, most of which lies within the township boundaries, Scalise said.

Councilman Wayne Braffman, who, along with Councilman Jamie Mallon, voted against the agreement, pointed out that the language specified that the borough provide law enforcement services in the township but did not specify that the township reciprocate, an omission that Fetick called an oversight that would be corrected.

Braffman and Mallon advocated waiting for the corrections before approving the pact, but several council members suggested that the agreement would be easy to amend and passing it would enable the police to begin fixing the truck problem sooner.

Resident John Thomas said he feared that because the borough has more officers, the agreement might become one-sided. “Kennett Township doesn’t have enough officers,” he said. “We’re going to patrol the parks at our expense.”

Fetick strongly disagreed. “It’s a cooperative approach,” he said. He pointed out that the departments frequently back each other up, and he suggested that overall, the borough has more to gain than the township.

Other ordinance changes, which passed unanimously, included an amendment that would enable the borough to ban parking on several narrow roads during inclement weather so the Public Works Department could access them, and an amendment that revised some long-term parking restrictions for eight areas of the borough.

Following a recommendation from the Historic Architecture Review Board, council unanimously approved a certificate of appropriateness for 220 N. Union St., known as the Chalfont House. Borough Council President Danilo P. Maffei called the residence “probably the most significant piece of architecture the borough has.”

The building, which was designed by renowned architect Frank Furness in 1884 for William Chalfont, sustained damage from a fire in December 2014. HARB chair Andrew J. Froning said he “was dismayed that some of the detail will be lost” in the reconstruction.

However, noting the uniqueness of the structure – courtesy of “the wacky Furness style” – Froning said the HARB recognized that replicating the exact design would represent a hardship for the owners, Jayne Bair and David Francis. Moreover, the proposed renovations would “not be disruptive to the historic nature of the borough.”

In other business, Borough Council approved a handful of appointments. Residents John Thomas and Sally Warren will serve on the Brandywine Battlefield Task Force, and Liam Warren, a student at the University of Delaware who is studying energy and environmental policy, was approved to fill a vacancy on the Landfill Authority.

Council passed three special-event applications: Third Thursdays on May 19, June 16, July 21, Aug. 18 and Sept. 15; the Memorial Day Parade on May 30; and Brewfest on Oct. 1.

Mary Hutchins, executive director of Historic Kennett Square, said the Third Thursday event, which closes State Street and enables restaurants to create more al fresco dining, has been so popular that the September date was added.

In response to concerns raised by Borough Councilman Ethan Cramer about Brewfest’s potential for facilitating drunk-driving, Hutchins said, “It is a risk, but we do our best to curb that.” She said the event, which typically sells out, is the association’s major fundraiser. She said designated drivers as well as the use of limos and buses are strongly encouraged. In addition, she said volunteers watch as people are leaving to see if anyone appears impaired.

“I do think those kind of measures are important,” Cramer responded, explaining that anyone who’s lost a family member to drunk-driving would appreciate that vigilance.

Cramer also pointed out that a draft of a suggestion form was attached to the meeting agendas, one of several recommendations from council’s ad hoc communications committee. Feedback on the form would be welcomed, he said.

Braffman thanked his colleagues for their willingness to experiment with many of the committee’s recommendations. “I’m excited that the entire council has embraced the concept of greater cooperation and community involvement,” he said.

Finally, Maffei suggested that all members of council in favor of adjourning respond by saying, “Go, Wildcats!”

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Borough to take aim at overweight trucks Read More »

Organ donor reminder during Donate Life Month

April is National Donate Life Month, an observance that has also been decreed at the state level by Pennsylvania’s governor. As a result, residents are being reminded to register to be an organ donor.

“Potential donors can take action today to give a person awaiting a transplant hope by adding the organ donor designation to their license or identification card, rather than waiting for renewal time,” PennDOT Secretary Leslie S. Richards said in a department press release. “The short amount of time you invest online requesting the designation for your license or identification card holds the potential to save a life.”

More than 8,000 Pennsylvanians currently await organ transplants. Currently, nearly 46 percent of driver’s license and identification card holders are registered organ donors – that’s more than 4.6 million Pennsylvanians, the release said.

“More organ donors means more seriously ill individuals awaiting transplant can have the opportunity to live a full, productive life,” Secretary of Health Dr. Karen Murphy said in the release. “There is a transformative power in organ donation; just one donor may save up to eight lives and enhance the lives of more than 50 people.”

Customers can easily add the organ donor designation to an existing driver’s license or identification card by visiting www.dmv.pa.gov and selecting the “Donate Life Pennsylvania” icon in the middle of the home page. Once the designation is added, individuals will receive a designation card that they will have to carry with them to affirm organ donor status until they renew or replace their driver’s license or identification card. There is no charge for adding the designation.

Driver’s license and identification card holders, as well as registered vehicle owners, can also support organ donation programs by donating $1 to the Robert P. Casey Memorial Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness Trust Fund at the time of application or renewal. Proceeds from the fund are used to educate and promote awareness of the organ donor program through nonprofits like the Center for Organ Recovery and Education and the Gift of Life Donor Program. Pennsylvanians have generously donated nearly $13 million to the fund over the past 20 years.

As part of ongoing efforts to increase awareness of organ and tissue donation, video monitors featuring educational content are installed at 20 PennDOT photo license centers. More information on organ and tissue donation in Pennsylvania can be found at www.donatelife-pa.org.

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Organ donor reminder during Donate Life Month Read More »

Scroll to Top