August 22, 2024

Chadds Ford in brief

Chadds Ford Township Supervisors Wednesday approved Certificates of Appropriateness for a weathervane to go on top of Hank’s Place, which is still under construction, and for four new signs to replace old ones at the Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art.

The board also granted special use permits to the conservancy for its annual Bike the Brandywine event, scheduled for Sept. 21, and to the Chadds Ford Historical Society for the Great Pumpkin Carve, which will be Oct. 17, 18, and 19.

Township engineer Mike Schneider gave a brief presentation on PennDOT plans to upgrade the intersection at Routes 1 and 202. Concrete medians are to be replaced with ones that are landscaped. There is also to be some widening of the approaches to the intersection allowing for two left turn lanes from northbound 202 to southbound Route 1, and for improving straight-through and right turns from northbound 1 to southbound 202.

Schneider added that PennDOT is to hold a public meeting on the project and a date to be determined. The work on the project isn’t scheduled to begin until sometime in 2026.

There was a meandering discussion regarding the distribution of ARPA funds, money local governments received as part of the COVID recovery program. The bulk of the discussion centered around $50,000 for the Painter’s Crossing Condominium.

The condo HOA spent its own funds to replace a dam on the property as part of a stream pollution reduction project. According to condo Board member Madelaine Werner, “We have no reserves left.”

However, the township Sewer Authority is also asking for ARPA funds and more might go to road projects.

Supervisors’ Chairman Samantha Reiner motioned to authorize the township solicitor to draft a Memorandum of Understanding to give the money to the condo, and Supervisor Kathleen Goodier seconded the motion. Supervisor Timotha Trigg was reluctant to do so until she knew how much money would go to the road projects and made a motion to amend Reiner’s motion.

After the long conversation, both the motion and the amendment were withdrawn when township Manager Lacey Faber said the solicitor was already drafting a Memorandum of Understanding to give the condo the funds.

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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Principal: Everyone has ‘a genius’

Gabriel Savage is the new principal at Pocopson Elementary School. he believes everyone has a genius within them.

Gabriel Savage holds that everyone has genius and that it’s his job to help students find and develop the genius within. Savage is the new principal at Pocopson Elementary School.

Savage, 42, is married and has three children, ages 14, 10, and 9. He began teaching in 2005 and comes to Pocopson after six years as principal at Wallingford Elementary School.

Savage said he got into education because of his parents who stressed the idea of being of service to others. Both parents were ministers but his mother was also a nurse who, after raising her kids, became a personal care assistant in schools.

“There was a student in a wheelchair who had medical concerns. She followed that student from middle school, all the way through high school, pushed her out for graduation, then she retired. So, my parents have always been about service. Our family has been about service, and valuing people. I think education, for me, was the way I could really serve people,” he said.

Savage went on to say he believes that “Each person is intrinsically valuable. Each life matters and, on top of that, each person has a genius. There’s something inside every person that is uniquely them, that they have to offer the world.”

In the K through 12 experiences kids get basic knowledge and understanding but, what really is going on is that they find out how they learn best, he explained.

“You find out how to take what you learn to do what you’re passionate about, about what you are wired to do. It’s a time of discovery. We’re helping to give you the basics so you can discover your genius, what you’re great at,” Savage explained.

And that, he believes, starts at the elementary school level. That’s where the kids start asking themselves who they are, and who they are as students, who are their friends, and how they fit in, he said.

When students get the confidence that they know how to learn, that they might learn differently than others, “I think that’s huge,” Savage said.

When asked about his proudest professional moment, Savage paused and said he hopes his proudest moment is still ahead of him. But he is pleased with what he saw happening at Wallingford Elementary while he was principal there.

But, so far, he said, he was moved during the end-of-year assembly during his final weeks at Wallingford Elementary.

“The kids were singing the school song, and they were talking about integrity, talking about that we’re a family school. They were talking about how we were not only encouraging each other to behave but also what we gave to the SPCA. This is how we serve others. And also knowing that the kids were thriving academically, seeing the whole community smiling, laughing, and singing, and knowing that they’re important and that helping other people is important. That gave me goosebumps,” Savage said.

He added that the moving up ceremony for the fifth-graders, where the students hugged their teachers and then their parents who were taking photos of the kids.

“To me, that’s what a community looks like.”

And it’s that sense of individuality with community that Savage wants to bring to Pocopson.

“Not only does every person have a genius but the culture has a genius. At my last place, they had a family atmosphere where they were able to connect with the community, they were able to connect with the students. I came in, I helped to identify that and then I helped grow it. And then I used that to help educate students. My goal here is to find what is the genius of the Pocopson Elementary community and staff; what are the gifts and talents and abilities that they have that we can grow,” he said.

There are still educational fundamentals that must be followed and adhered to, but Savage said he’s looking for what is unique about Pocopson.

“What’s the ‘it’? What’s the genius? What’s the thing that’s special about this place that’s different than anywhere else, and how can we grow that and leverage that and use it to help? That’s my goal. And ultimately, I want to see the success of every student. And that comes from the success of every teacher. I’m the teacher of the teachers. They’re my class. I want them to grow, develop, and be great. I want to help them find their genius so they can unleash it so they can do that for their students.”

Who is Gabriel Savage?

“I think Gabriel Savage is a man of faith,” he answered. “He’s a man of family, and he’s a father. I think that for many of us, our work is an extension of our identity, of who we are. And I think an extension of who I am as a father is that a father helps create identity. Fathers help to set parameters about how we operate within that identity. They help develop the character. And sometimes we have to be a disciplinarian. But at the very core of who I am, I’m just a dad who has a skill set and a genius in the area of culture, of people, of education, and seeing people learn.”

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 Aug 22

Andrew Wyeth, The Culvert, 1963

While one Andrew Wyeth exhibit is about to come down at the Brandywine River Museum of Art, another is about to go up. The exhibit Every Leaf & Twig: Andrew Wyeth’s Botanical Imagination comes down on Sept. 15 and a new exhibit, Up East: Andrew Wyeth in Maine opens on Sept. 19. Up East brings to Chadds Ford for the first time a broad overview of the key sites of Wyeth’s Maine work, including two temperas and 32 watercolors, many of which have never been exhibited before. The exhibit runs through Feb. 16.

Lafayette at Brandywine by Percy Moran

On Saturday, Sept. 7, the Westtown Historical Commission will be presenting Lafayette at the Battle of Brandywine. A 19-year-old Lafayette experiences the first battle in his life and was wounded during the attack. This talk will run about an hour and will be presented by local historian, Bruce Mowday. The talk will take place at 10 a.m. at Stokes Hall, Westtown Township Building,1039 Wilmington Pike, West Chester.

Longwood Gardens Wine & Jazz Festival is Saturday, Sept. 14, from 2-9 p.m. Go here for tickets and more information on the performance lineup.

Hike Mt. Cuba at night on Sept. 13.

See Mt. Cuba Center in a new light – no light, that is. Embark on a guided Night Hike to experience the stars and sounds of our natural lands after dark. The hike is on Sept. 13, from 7:30-9 p.m. Listen as the night comes alive with the chatter of owls, frogs, crickets, and maybe even a fox or two. Go here for more information and tickets.

One hundred years before COVID there was the Flu Pandemic. In late 1918 and early 1919, the people of the world were linked by something even more powerful and wide-ranging than the First World War: the virus that caused the pandemic struck every nation, every island, and every remote corner of the world. On Sept. 10, from 7-8 p.m., a Chester County History Center program offers a professional researcher’s exposition of the experience of Chester County, with a focus on the community of West Chester, during the 1918-1922 influenza pandemic. Viewers can expect a brief introduction of the influenza virus and the sickness it causes, as well as the unique features of the H1N1 virus that caused the 1918 pandemic and its unprecedented killing power. This is a virtual event and is pay-as-you-wish. Reserve a spot here.

About CFLive Staff

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

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