June 5, 2024

UHS graduates 300

Caps in the air as more than 300 graduate from Unionville High School during a ceremony at the Carpenter Center.

More than 300 students graduated from Unionville High School on June 5 and their years at UHS were different than most. As high school Principal Amy Jenkins noted, students in the class of 2024 had to deal with the unusual and the sad.

Students began their freshman year learning remotely because of COVID and began their senior year dealing with the fear of an escaped murderer, Danelo Cavalcante, loose in the area. In between, they lost two classmates — Emma Hill and Seth Wagner — to premature deaths. Both received posthumous diplomas during the graduation ceremony held at the Bob Carpenter Complex at the University of Delaware.

A graduate receives her diploma from high school Principal Amy Jenkins.

In her address to the graduates, Jenkins told the class to remember their journey doesn’t stop now that they’ve graduated, but that they should hold on to their dreams and keep their caring and empathy.

“Never forget your passion. Never forget your support system, and remember those who helped you on this journey,” she said and added, “You have the power to make the world better.”

Superintendent of Schools John Sanville welcomed the Hill and Wagner families to the ceremony, and congratulated the graduates saying, “It was a well-earned accomplishment…Today is filled with pomp and circumstance, and time-honored traditions. It’s important to take a moment and let it all sink in. You, the Class of 2024, are the stars and we recognize the hard work, talent, perseverance, dedication, and grit that got you here.”

He said the graduates have all the skills and information they need for the next chapter of their lives.

“Go forward with pride and determination to be successful. Work hard, and more good will come your way. Remember where you came from but keep your eyes on the future. Congratulations, Class of 2024.

Sofia Cvijanovic, Lilly Zhang, and Morgan Chapman were this year’s student speakers.

Vocal music teacher Jason Throne leads the senior choir in singing the UHS Alma Mater.

Cvijanovic told her classmates to “embrace your own stories of struggle and success, to see the beauty in your own personal journeys, and to celebrate our collective accomplishments along with the promise to continuing to look ahead with hope and determination.”

She drew a parallel between the journey toward graduation and beyond with the dawning of a new day from sunrise to sunset. She spoke of the struggles of adolescents but in the end, “coming out stronger like beams of sunshine we overcame the unexpected.”

Zhang congratulated her classmates and said they would soon be leaving the Carpenter Complex as young adults beginning the next stages of their lives. She reminded them of an old saying by Confucius: “With three people walking, there’s always a teacher among them.”

“Take any three people, regardless of their backgrounds, their socio-economic status, their political or religious beliefs, or whether or not they like pineapple on their pizza, regardless of all that there’s always something new that we can learn from another person,” she said.

Zhang added that there’s still so much out there to see and so many people that you’ll meet. She told them to remember that saying by Confucius and know that they can learn from anyone anywhere. , and so much more of life to experience and to learn from. Remember the essence of that saying, that open attitude toward learning. “There’s always something you can learn.”

Chapman told her classmates that while some of them may never be seen again, “We will never return to this moment, and we will keep changing, but we are connected. We are all uniquely a part of each other’s lives, so I urge you to find something to admire in every person here. There’s beauty in everyone who can inspire you if you take a moment to allow it. From this moment on, walk forward with dreams of what you wish to create, and receive people with kindness and honesty and kindness. Hold yourself with confidence and humility. Treat each person as if they are art because that’s what we are.”

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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New zoning code in Chadds Ford

It was out with the old and in with the new for a Chadds Ford Township zoning ordinance. The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday held two hearings on the matter, one for the text change and the second, for the adoption of an official map reflecting the new ordinance. After about 40 minutes, supervisors approved the changes for both. Approval was unanimous.

Supervisors’ Chairman Samantha Reiner said it was a 10-year-long process that began with the township creating a task force to examine and streamline the zoning code in 2014. The result, she said, is a code that’s easier to follow.

“A lot of this has already been [in the code],” Reiner said. It’s been there for decades in the cover-to-cover zoning ordinance. It’s just been polished, revised to make it easier.”

One of the things the new code does, however, is to combine several zoning districts into one and create another district.

Previously, there were two separate districts, one for apartments — the RA District — and another — RM — for multi-family dwellings. The two are now combined into R-MA.

The new code also established a new Cultural Campus District. Several properties owned by the Brandywine Conservancy in the township had been under districts, now they are all in the CC District. As previously mentioned, the CC may in time include the Chadds Ford Historical Society’s properties on Creek Road, and possibly the Camp property — also known as the Davis tract — next to the Barn Shops.

In highlighting some of the other changes, township engineer Mike Schneider said “Common sections within specific zoning districts were moved to centralized sections. We had environmental controls and landscaping, and some of those common requirements were in each and every zoning district. We took those out and put them in a centralized location.”

Schneider also said uses were “reviewed and updated for clarity and removed if obsolete.” They were also reviewed to determine if they should be used by right, conditional use, or special exception.

Other new districts include an LI-1 (light industrial), which will include “marijuana grower/processor” as permitted with conditional use approval, Schneider said. Another new district MC (municipal conservation) District was added to protect publicly owned land in the township.

He also said the Historic Overlay District is expanded to include the Twin Bridges area.

Solicitor Mike Maddren added that the new code “will not affect anyone’s use of their house.” He did add, however, that developers will have to abide by some of the changes.

He said that the new MC District is designed to protect municipal property. “We want to preserve municipal property from future development.”

Maddren added that the new CC District affects the conservancy. “It’s to put things in line with the conservancy’s master plan.”

The solicitor also said the Historic Overlay District is designed to protect those properties that are historically significant. However, homeowners in the district will still be able to make changes as long as those changes can’t be seen from a public street. But, if those changes can be seen from a public street, they would have to go through. the Historic and Architectural Review Board.

“The important part of that is things you can see from a public street. If you want to do something in your backyard, if you want to build a deck and the deck isn’t something that expands over the footprint of the house if you can’t see it from a public street, that’s not affected,” Maddren said.

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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Police Log June 5: Burglary, car recovery

Pennsylvania State Police

Media Barracks

Police are investigating a burglary in Chadds Ford Township that happened on May 31. The police report said a home on Harvey Road was forcibly entered into sometime between 8 and 11 a.m. and the as-yet-unknown suspect ransacked the place and took collectible coins, change, and jewelry. Anyone with information is asked to call Tpr. Albert McMahon at 484-840-1000.

Erratic driving led to the arrest of a 32-year-old man for auto theft. State police said they observed a car being driven erratically and learned that the Wilmington Police Department had reported the vehicle — a 2005 GMC Sierra — as stolen. A search of the vehicle revealed other items from a retail theft, police said. Police identified the suspect as Markim Murphy. (No place of residence was mentioned.) The traffic stop was made at 12:35 a.m. on June 4.

State police said they arrested two men from Wilmington for shoplifting at Wegmans in Concord Township on May 14. Police identified the pair as John Stephenson, 41, and Michael Wallace, 42. The report said the men stole $420 worth of merchandise but were captured when they tried to flee.

Police are investigating the reported theft of $544 worth of eye drop medication at the Target store in Concord Township on May 20.

On May 15, state police from Troop K arrested a 34-year-old man from Omaha, Neb. on DUI and trespassing charges. Police did not identify the suspect. According to the report, police were called because of a suspicious vehicle trespassing on the grounds of Brandywine Baptist Church, and they found the man to be intoxicated and had an open container of alcohol in the vehicle.

Police said they arrested a 39-year-old woman from Upper Chichester on harassment charges following an argument with another 39-year-old woman at an apartment on Elam Drive in Concord Township. The incident happened on May 1. According to the report, the suspect and victim were having a conversation when the suspect suddenly didn’t like what the other said and began fighting. Police further said the two were under the influence of alcohol.

A three-car crash on Conchester Highway led to a 25-year-old woman from Garnet being cited for failing to stop at a red light. The accident happened at 11:12 a.m. on May 31 at the intersection of Conchester and Evergreen Drive. Police said Katherine J. Shoemaker was driving east on Conchester when she failed to stop at a steady red light and crashed into two other vehicles. Neither Shoemaker nor the driver of the second car were injured, but police said the third driver was bruised but not transported.

Avondale Barracks

Police are investigating a case of theft by wire fraud. A Pennsbury Township resident told police that, during the last 12 months, he sent 30 wire transfers totaling almost $942,000 to various online accounts at the direction of an Internet acquaintance.

State police from the Avondale barracks report they are investigating the theft of a box of donuts from the Wawa on Route 1 in East Marlborough Township. The incident happened shortly after midnight on May 31. The box of donuts is valued at $17.

Kennett Square Police Department

Police said Robert Cimino, 49, of Kennett Square, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault, possessing instruments of crime, unlawful restraint, and other related offenses following an incident in which he held a loaded firearm to a subject’s head and threatened the victim’s life. The incident occurred on May 26, at approximately 10:43 p.m., in the 200 block of S. Willow Street. His bail was set at $250,00, and a preliminary hearing is pending.

About CFLive Staff

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