June 8, 2023

Supervisors urge attending fire meeting

Kennett Township supervisors urged their residents to attend next week’s meeting of the Kennett Fire and EMS Regional Commission, as well as future meetings.

“These commission meetings are the second Tuesday of every month at the Pennsbury Township building,” Supervisors’ Chairman Geoff Gamble said at Wednesday’s supervisors’ meeting. “You should attend because they’re making big, big bucks’ decisions that are affecting us.”

The meeting is at 5 p.m. on June 13.

Kennett TownshipGamble said the time for the public to voice their concerns or questions about fire and EMS costs would be now, and not later this year when municipal authorities like Kennett Township create their budgets for the following year with contribution amounts the Kennett Fire & EMS Regional Commission provide them.

In Pennsylvania, municipalities are required to have fire and EMS coverage available for their residents.

The Kennett Fire and EMS Regional Commission was formed in 2017 and includes Longwood, Kennett, and Po-Mar-Lin fire companies, and the townships of Kennett, East Marlborough, Pocopson, Pennsbury, and Newlin, and the borough of Kennett Square. It sets municipal contributions each year for operational and capital costs for the three fire companies and EMS service. Representatives from the fire companies and the municipalities sit on the commission.

Supervisors’ Vice Chairman Richard Leff said he attended the borough’s work session Monday where the borough’s financial challenges in providing fire and EMS coverage were discussed, adding, “There was a fair amount of discussion of the challenges facing the borough.”

The borough hired Fitch & Associates “to review the borough’s expenditures as it relates to its membership in the commission,” according to a May 22 press release from Kennett Borough. “This review includes an assessment of overall efficiency and will help determine what the appropriate cost to the borough should be based on call volume, the size of the municipality, response times, etc. The objective of the review is to promote fairness, help foster a sustainable strategic plan for the commission, and provide the best (and most efficient) service for borough residents based on a thorough evaluation of objective data.”

During last year’s municipal budget process, Kennett Township and four of the other municipalities in the commission had to incorporate a roughly 30 percent increase in their required contributions, while Kennett Borough had a one-time, 4 percent increase because of financial challenges.

“Eden [Ratliff, Kennett Township’s manager] is attending a meeting tonight about deliberations on how [the borough] is going to move forward,” Gamble said, referring to Kennett Borough’s June 7 regular council meeting. He added that for 2023, Kennett Township residents and those of East Marlborough, Newlin, Pocopson, and Pennsbury essentially helped to subsidize fire and emergency service coverage for the borough residents.

Leff said the borough had brought in Fitch & Associates “because they’re challenged financially with staying in the fire and EMS commission.”

Some of Fitch’s recommendations, according to the proposal they made to the borough on June 5, included appointing an administrator to the commission and requiring a unanimous vote by the commission on the budget, among other things. If those recommendations weren’t approved, a second recommendation was for the borough to “commit staffing and/or financial support to Kennett Fire Company.”

Fitch’s proposal can be found at kennettsq.org under the 2023 council meeting documents for June 5.

Leff said at Wednesday’s Kennett Township meeting that the hikes in municipal contribution requirements arose because of things like the lack of available volunteer firefighters in the area and the need for paid firefighter positions to help with staffing; rising costs for capital expenditures such as new trucks, ambulances, and equipment; and rising costs to operate the three fire companies and Longwood Fire Company’s EMS service.

“The first three years of the commission, there was zero percent increase” to the municipalities, according to Leff. “The last two years it was 30 percent. I haven’t seen the numbers yet for this coming year.”

The lack of volunteer firefighters and the need to offset that with a mix of volunteer and paid firefighters is an issue across the country. The National Volunteer Fire Council (www.nvfc.org) estimates that volunteer firefighters represent 65 percent of all the firefighters in the United States, despite the number of volunteers decreasing every year. The National Fire Protection Association estimates that 82 percent of fire departments across the nation are volunteer or staffed by a combination of volunteer and paid firefighters.

For the last two years, the Kennett Fire & EMS Commission has offered volunteer firefighters a stipend.

“As there have been fewer and fewer volunteer firefighters over the years – roughly 85 or 90 percent fewer volunteers than 40 years ago – just to get started as a firefighter volunteer you have to do 185 hours of training,” Leff said. “That’s just the basics. The commission has actually [tried] to help volunteer firefighters who put in the training and the hours with some stipends that are nominal and help with their expenses.”

And the cost of capital equipment for the three fire companies and EMS service will only be increasing as trucks and ambulances that are nearing the end of their productivity, need to be replaced.

“We’re talking enormous amounts of money here over the next 25 years for capital equipment,” Gamble said. “That’s something we need to pay very close attention to.”

Township Finance Director Amy Heinrich referenced a 2021 vehicle study that will be a topic of conversation with the commission at their June 13 meeting. Potentially large increases in capital improvement and operational costs are things that probably should be discussed, she said at Wednesday’s township supervisors’ meeting.

“There are big numbers out there, but I don’t really think the commissioners have absorbed that, gotten feedback from their residents, or challenged that,” Heinrich said. “That’s a conversation we’re trying to spur.”

About Monica Fragale

Monica Thompson Fragale is a freelance reporter who spent her life dreaming of being in the newspaper business. That dream came true after college when she started working at The Kennett Paper and, years later The Reporter newspaper in Lansdale and other dailies. She turned to non-profit work after her first daughter was born and spent the next 13 years in that field. But while you can take the girl out of journalism, you can’t take journalism out of the girl. Offers to freelance sparked the writing bug again started her fingers happily tapping away on the keyboard. Monica lives with her husband and two children in Kennett Square.

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DA talks luck, honor and crime

Chester County District Attorney Deb Ryan addresses members of the Southern Chester County Chamber of Commerce.

Chester County District Attorney Deb Ryan told members of the Southern Chester County Chamber of Commerce that she’s lucky having a rewarding career. But warned the members that she would also come across as a bit of a “Debbie Downer.”

Ryan was the keynote speaker for the chamber’s annual Inspirational Breakfast held at the Mendenhall Inn on Thursday, June 8.

“I’m extremely lucky to do what I do. I have the ability to work day in and day out with a sense of purpose. I get to help prevent crime, solve crime and prosecute crime,” she said. “And, more importantly, I get to work with my real-life heroes every single day, the men and women in law enforcement.”

And she added that she’s proud of the brave victims of crime who come forward to tell their harrowing stories.

Ryan, the first woman and first Democrat to serve as Chester County’s district attorney, told chamber members that she’s proud not only of the dedicated men and women who work with her in law enforcement but also of her family history, citing how her grandparents survived concentration camps in Europe during the Holocaust. Her grandmother was in three different camps and was the sole survivor of a family of 65 people. Her grandfather also survived and the two of them met in a hospital after they were liberated in 1945.

“They came to this country in 1951 and had nothing. “They had no money. They didn’t have any family and they didn’t even speak English.”

Her grandfather worked in a pickle factory and her grandmother was a seamstress. “And with the help of total strangers, they were able to rebuild their lives,” she said.

It’s that family history that had the biggest impact on her and why she dedicated her life to public service, she said.

“As a young person, I knew it was my responsibility to advocate for those who had been victimized…That’s why I became a prosecutor. I wanted to use my voice to advocate for justice.”

An honor guard from the Navy Sea Cadets brings in the colors before the start of the breakfast meeting.

But as proud and as lucky as she feels, Ryan changed her tone to become, what she referred to as “Debbie Downer,” in talking about the negative things she deals with on a regular basis. One of those things is child abuse.

“While I was in the Child Abuse Unit, I saw some of the most gut-wrenching and heartbreaking things that you could imagine. People are altered indelibly and irreparably as a result of child abuse,” Ryan said.

She explained that one in 10 kids are victims of child sexual abuse by the age of 18 and, in most cases, those children know the perpetrator. The perp may be a beloved family member or a well-respected member of the community.

“Growing up, I was instructed on ‘stranger danger’ as many of you were. But the truth is that over 90 percent of people who perpetrate this abuse are known to the children or the families. They are trusted. They are even beloved members of their family. That’s hard to stomach,” she said.

Ryan told a story of a 9-year-old girl who was a victim of abuse by her grandfather. But she was brave enough to come forward and confront her grandfather on the phone — with law enforcement listening to the conversation.

The grandfather admitted to everything and apologized to the girl during the conversation. He asked to meet with her to talk to her in person, but he was arrested instead. He eventually confessed to also molesting the girl’s sister and several others.

“Interestingly, we had just interviewed the older sister who adamantly denied that anything had ever happened. Had he not confessed, we would never have known,” the district attorney said.

After sending out a press release, more people came forward to say he had molested many others. But he could only be charged with abusing five kids because of the statute of limitations, she explained. But even in court, his wife shouted out that all the girls — even her granddaughters — were lying.

Another case she mentioned involved a “beloved” member of a community in Chester County, a correctional officer who volunteered at his church and youth organizations.

“People really respected and admired him. [But], he had been abusing dozens and dozens of children.”

Ryan went on to add that parents should talk with their 8-year-olds about sex, boundaries, and body parts so they understand good touch and bad touch, and who they can talk to when something like that happens.

But the problem persists.

“When I started in 2012 in the Child Abuse Unit, we had 212 child abuse allegations. Last year, we had 1,984. This is in Chester County. This is happening in your backyard,” she said, adding that part of the increase may be due to improved reporting and changes in mandatory reporting laws.

Those changes, she said, arose from high-profile cases such as those concerning Jerry Sandusky, Woody Allen, R. Kelly, and Catholic priests. Because of those cases, people started paying more attention to what was going on because of that exposure, and judges started issuing stricter sentences.

Problems are growing in other areas, too. She said online predator cases have increased by 50 percent during the last few years, and gun violence continues to be a problem even among young children.

Ryan was elected district attorney in 2019 and is now running for Common Pleas Court judge in Chester County.

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.

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Chadds Ford in brief

Chadds Ford Township Board of Supervisors voted to give almost $27,000 to Painters Crossing Condominiums for stream remediation. The money is from the fee in lieu funds received from The Henderson Group after Henderson got township approval to upgrade its Knight’s Bridge Wastewater Treatment Plant in 2018.

There’s been a change to the township’s fee schedule. Artists renting space at Painters Folly will now pay $150 per month for a three-month use of one of the rooms. That’s a $50 per month increase. The fee will be $200 per month for the third-floor Wyeth Studio. Supervisor Noelle Barbone said the change was to help the township cover the monthly operating fee of the house of roughly $2,100 per month.

The township will also start charging a $50 HARB application fee, something it has not done before. That fee is to cover administrative costs, Barbone said.

A piece of open space got a new name during the June 7 meeting. The open space was dedicated to the township when Toll Bros. developed the old Girl Scout Camp, Camp Sunset Hill. The 50-plus acre donation, referred to as Heyburn Open Space, is now Sunset Hill Preserve.

Chadds Ford Township now has a Tree Donation Policy. The policy, enacted Wednesday, allows residents to donate a tree to be planted in the township honoring the memory of a deceased loved one, Barbone said. The donor would apply to the township and the application would then need to be approved by the Board of Supervisors.

If approved, the township would buy the tree from a list of approved native trees using funds given by the donor. “After one year, should the tree be damaged or die, it’s the responsibility of the original donor to replace the tree,” Barbone said. “Maintenance of the tree will be the responsibility of the township.”

The next supervisors’ workshop is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 20. Also on the agenda for that night, is a hearing for a proposed zoning map change for Hyundai/Genesis car dealership. The Piazza Auto Group wants to set up shop in the two adjacent parcels on Route 202, north of Garnet Ford, but the two parcels are in different zoning districts. Car sales are allowed in one, but not the other.

Piazza Auto Group is also scheduled to be on the agenda for the June 14 Planning Commission meeting.

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.

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Around Town June 8

Students from the Christina Cultural Arts Center will be performing at Mt. Cuba Center on Friday, June 23.

Students from the Christina Cultural Arts Center will be performing at Mt. Cuba Center on Friday, June 23 from 6-7:30 p.m. Dance to the beat of your own drum while enjoying the gardens, food, drinks, and family-oriented activities. The event is included with garden admission. Adults are $15, children 6-17 $8, children 5 and younger and members are free. Get tickets here.

Brandywine Battlefield Park Summer Camp is returning for another summer of fun and history education and registrations are now open. There will be four weekly sessions through June and July. Campers entering grades 3-6 will learn about life in the 18th century and Washington’s Continental Army through hands-on activities and visits from historical characters. The camp will run Tuesday-Friday from 9 a.m. -2 p.m. each week. Parents are invited to join us on the Friday of each week at 12:45 p.m. for an opportunity to learn from the campers, see demonstrations, and taste some colonial cooking. The cost for a week is $250, $225 for members. Register here.

Let your dog try a mini obstacle course at the Brandywine Valley SPCA this weekend.

Kick the summer off right and bring your pooch to a mini-obstacle course guided by lure. The event is at the Brandywine Valley SPCA in West Chester. The cost is $20 per dog for two runs and action photos will be available for purchase by our “dog-ographers.” Registration donations directly support shelter pets waiting to find their forever homes. Limited spots June 9-11 at our West Chester Campus. Register now and let your dog show us their stuff.

Join former Eagles head coach Dick Vermeil at a fundraiser for a new free-standing Breast Health Center at Chester County Hospital.

Former Eagles head coach Dick Vermeil will be taking part in a summer solstice party and fundraiser hosted by the Women’s Auxiliary to Chester County Hospital. The event is planned for Wednesday, June 21 at Locust Lane Craft Brewery in Malvern, to benefit a new free-standing Breast Health Center at Chester County Hospital. The auxiliary has pledged $2 million toward a new center. There is no entrance fee but bring cash to make a donation.

The West Chester Chamber of Commerce is already looking ahead toward Christmas. Applications for participants and sponsors for the West Chester Christmas Parade are now being accepted for the hometown holiday parade to be held on Friday, Dec. 1. Visit www.GreaterWestChester.com to fill out the 2023 Parade Application Form. The maximum number of performers may be reached before the Aug. 1 application deadline, so performers and sponsors are encouraged to apply early. To help cover the costs of the parade, commercial entries that are directly related to a for-profit entity are available for $1,000. Non-profit performance entries are available to 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(6) organizations for $300.

The Chester County History Center will hold two tours in honor of Juneteenth on June 15, 16, 17, and 18.

Next week, from June 15-18, the Chester County History Center will hold two African American History tours in commemoration of Juneteenth. The Underground Railroad tour explores historic sites that serve as a backdrop for the stories of the people who helped escaped slaves flee to freedom. The Uptown West Chester tour explores the very center of town as the History Center shares stories of early 20th-century African American entrepreneurs like James Spence and follows in the footsteps of Bayard Rustin as he grew into an activist in his hometown. Register here for the Underground Railroad tour, and here for the Uptown tour.

About CFLive Staff

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

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