September 25, 2024

David Dodge wants parking space

David Dodge needs more parking for overflow inventory and a nearby property owner wants to help, but will Chadds Ford Township allow it? It’s up to the Zoning Hearing Board to decide.

The car dealership already has several off-site parking areas for overflow inventory vehicles — one of them in Olde Ridge Village and another farther down Route 202 in Concord Township— but more spaces are needed, according to Leah Kordeck, the controller for David Dodge.

Kordeck testified during a zoning hearing Tuesday night that the dealership has roughly 900 cars with only 385 parking spaces for inventory at its Route 202 location.

Carlino Commercial Development, the owner of the William Bunch Auction House property, is willing to lease space to David Dodge to help. However, Carlino would need a variance to make that happen.

According to Chirag Thakkar, Carlino’s engineer, there are 114 paved and lined parking spaces at the Bunch site and 30 would be available for the auction house, leaving 84 spaces available in addition to more than 14,000 square feet of graveled spaces behind the building.

Thakkar and Carlino’s President Peter Miller both testified that there would be no modifications to the site, that there would be no vehicle maintenance performed at the location, nor would any sales take place there. In addition, cars would be moved in and out individually when they needed to be brought to or from the dealership.

Thakkar called the proposal “the most benign use” of the property.

Miller also said that they would agree to have no more than 84 cars on that site.

The hearing closed after about an hour with no decision made. ZHB Chairman Bob Reardon said a decision would be announced within 45 days. The next zoning hearing is scheduled for Oct. 22.

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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Classic cars and classical music

The classics art Brantwyn raises money for the Kennett Symphony.

The Kennett Symphony Orchestra is gearing up for a new season of classical music, but things will get started with classic cars. And that’s a week before Music Director Michael Hall raises his baton for the opening performance.

The Classics at Brantwyn is a garden party event benefiting the orchestra and it’s been going on for more than a dozen years. Dozens of classic cars — Rolls Royces, Cadillacs, Chryslers, and Jaguars — will be on display and paraded for supporters of the classics to admire.

According to Tim Blair, the current board president of the Kennett Symphony, the event started 16 years ago because of two former symphony board members, Sandy Thompson and Paul Merluzzi.

“It was the brainchild of Sandy Thompson…She thought of this as a fundraiser because she realized that a lot of people like classic automobiles,” Blair said.

And that, he said, leads to another former board member and president, Paul Merluzzi.

“He loved classic cars and was a member of the Jaguar Club,” Blair said. “He was the one who always arranged this and emceed, but he passed away this year. So, this year’s Classics at Brantwyn is in honor of Sandy Thompson [who died a few years ago] and Paul Merluzzi.”

While the Classics at Brantwyn might be a classic event, its importance lies in the fact that it is a major fundraiser for the Kennett Symphony.

Blair said there are three primary sources of income for the symphony: ticket sales, grants and sponsors, and fund drives. Each of those areas brings in about one-third of the orchestra’s operating funds. The Brantwyn event, as a part of the fund drive effort, brings in about $25,000.

“It’s really important to us and, if I could, I’d have another just like it in the spring, but with a different theme. This really helps kick off our season.” And, as he said in a follow-up email, “Beautiful classic cars to benefit beautiful classic music of the Kennett Symphony.”

Blair added that concert attendance dropped considerably in the wake of the COVID-related lockdowns. People, he said, got out of the habit of going to concerts.

“People’s whole mental outlook of the world changed with the pandemic. They sat at home and did video games and they watched TV, and they got out of the joy of going to a live anything…We have spent the last three years rebuilding an audience that the pandemic basically removed.”

He said there would normally be an average of 500 people attending a Kennett Symphony concert, but post-pandemic they struggle to get 350 to 400 people. And he reiterated that ticket sales generate only about one-third of the symphony’s income.

“We’re working very hard to rebound from the pandemic,” Blair said.

Dave Ventura, also on the symphony board, who organizes the Classics at Brantwyn, said this year’s event on Oct. 6 is sold out so they’re not looking for anyone else to attend this year, but Blair wants people to get back to enjoying live classical music performed by the Kennett Symphony.

This year’s season gets underway at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 13 at the Uptown! Knauer Performing Arts Center in West Chester. That performance includes Jessie Montgomery’s Strum, Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto, and Beethoven’s Symphony No.8. General admission is $55. Tickets are available on Uptown’s website.

For a full list of Kennett Symphony’s concerts for this coming season, visit the orchestra’s website.

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 Sept. 25: Thefts, drug possession, DUI

Pennsylvania State Police

Media Barracks

Police said they arrested Jacqueline Valenti, 41, of Media, on theft charges. The police report said Valenti was an employee at the Acme on Byers drive in Concord Township and had been stealing from the store since January.

A 17-year-old boy from Glen Mills was arrested on drug possession charges following a traffic stop on Route 1 in Concord Township. The incident happened at 8:36 p.m. on Sept. 17 near Stoney Bank Road. Police said the stop came after the police observed vehicle code violations. Upon further investigation, the operator was found to be DUl and in possession of marijuana.

Police are investigating another theft at Lululemon in Concord Township. This incident happened on July 29. Police were called in for an active retail theft but the suspects fled with $200 worth of clothes when police arrived.

Avondale Barracks

State police said they arrested a 47-year-old woman from Newark on retail theft charges. The incident happened at the East Marlborough Township Walmart on Sept. 20 at 6:29 p.m. No other details were reported.

Police are investigating the theft of $600 worth of fragrances from ULTA Beauty in East Marlborough Township on Sept. 20. The police report said three white men took the products and then fled in a blue Nissan Murano with unknown registration.

Lisa Shelton, 56, of Oxford, was arrested for DUI after police tracked down a vehicle that left a deep gouge on a roadway in Kennett Township, a report said. According to that report, police followed the gouge as it swerved through Kennett Square on Union Street, eventually turning onto Old Kennett Pike. Police found the car in a parking lot with the driver inside.

Kennett Square Police Department

Borough police said Diego Alvarez-Villa, 22, of Kennett Square, was arrested and charged with DUI and related traffic offenses after he was located passed out in the driver’s seat of his running 2003 Chevrolet. The incident occurred on Sept. 14, at approximately 1:31 a.m., in the 700 block of S. Union Street. After officers woke Alvarez-Villa, he attempted to put the vehicle in gear and drive away, the report said. Officers were able to put the car in park and retrieved the keys from the ignition. Alvarez-Villa showed indicators suggesting intoxication, and field sobriety tests showed impairment. He was taken into custody for suspicion of DUI and submitted to a chemical test of his breath, resulting in a blood alcohol level of 0.172 percent, the report said. He was processed and later released at his residence pending issuance of a summons

About CFLive Staff

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

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