April 24, 2025

Road Report April 28 to May 2

PennDOT has announced the following weather-dependent road projects that could affect drivers in the greater Chadds Ford area from Road Report April 28 to May 2. Motorists are urged to allow extra time traveling through one of the construction zones. Work schedules are subject to change.

Routine tree maintenance will force the daytime closing of Hilltop View Road between Brandywine Creek Road and 2299 Hilltop View in Newlin Township on Monday, April 28.

Overhead utility work will force daytime lane shifts on the Conchester Highway between Featherbed Lane and Foulk Road from April 25 through July 25.

Utility work will also cause daytime lane shifts on Concord Road between Station Road and Overfield Lane, and between Smithbridge and Valleybrook roads. The work will also cause lane shifts on Smithbridge between Valleybrook and Bethel Road.

Kennett Square is reporting that the Birch Street Reconstruction Project is scheduled to start later this month, with a tentative date of April 28 and an end date of spring 2026. During this time, Birch Street will experience rolling road closures where one or both lanes of traffic may be closed for a few hundred feet at a time. In general, the road will be open to local traffic, and road closures will be minimized as much as possible. When both lanes of traffic need to be closed for construction activities, access will be available on both sides of Birch Street, from South Broad Street and South Walnut Street.

Overhead utility construction will cause daytime lane shifts on Route 52 between the Kennett/Oxford Bypass and Old Baltimore Pike and between Baltimore Pike and Cossart Road in Kennett Township now through Dec. 31.

Overhead utility work will also cause daytime lane shifts on Baltimore Pike between the Kennett/Oxford Bypass and Walnut Street in Kennett Township through the end of the year.

Utility installation will cause a full closure with detour of E. State Street between S. Broad and S. Walnut Street in Kennett Square through May 2.

Utility and drainage installation will cause daytime lane closures at the intersection of Routes 202 and 926 in Westtown and Thornbury (Chester County) townships through Nov. 13.

Utility installation will cause periodic daytime lane closures on Route 1 between Joshua’s Way and Fairville Road in Pennsbury Township through May 1.

Utility and drainage installation, along with paving, will cause a daytime lane closure at the intersection of Routes 202 and 926 through Nov. 13.

The Doe Run Road bridge on Route 82 over Doe Run remains closed through September.

Continuing through early November, motorists should expect daytime lane closures in both directions on Route 1 between the Kennett Oxford Bypass and Greenwood Road in Kennett and East Marlborough townships. The closures are to facilitate widening that 1.3-mile stretch of roadway to three lanes in both directions.

Construction continues to replace Twin Bridges, the South Creek Road bridge over the Brandywine between Chadds Ford and Pennsbury townships. Work is expected to continue through fall 2025. South Creek Road will be closed 1,200 feet south of Bullock Road and 1.1 miles north of Cossart Road. During the closure, motorists are directed to use U.S. 1, Route 52, Center Meeting Road, and Delaware State Route 100 (Montchanin Road). Bicyclists traveling Bike Route L will be directed to use Bullock Road, Ring Road, Ridge Road, and Delaware State roadway Smithbridge Road.

About CFLive Staff

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EIT considered in East Marlborough

Residents of East Marlborough Township may be facing an earned income tax. Supervisors are mulling over the idea, and Supervisors’ Chairman Ellen Sosangelis told the residents during the board’s April 23 workshop that the board will take several months before making the decision about implementing an EIT.

In a handout given to members of the audience, costs have risen for the township’s operations, including utilities, maintenance, fire and emergency services, and capital expenditures.

The purpose of the meeting was to learn what an EIT is, how it affects the township finances, and to hear residents’ opinions.

Jason Lawson from Keystone Collections, the tax-collecting group for Chester County, led off the session. He said earned income taxes are neither new nor rare.

“In Chester County, there are 73 municipalities, 70 of which already impose an earned income tax,” adding that EITs have existed in the state since 1965 and that 94 percent of the municipalities in Pennsylvania have an EIT.

In 1965, Act 511 was passed in the state. It allows municipalities to collect up to 1 percent of a person’s wages, salary, commissions, and all other active income.

“If you are employed, you pay the tax,” Lawson said.

However, an EIT doesn’t apply to pensions, social security, unemployment benefits, and some retirement plans.

The EIT is also separate from state and federal income taxes, though it, too, is withheld by the employer. It’s also separate from municipal and school property taxes, and from sewer and water bills, which are considered user fees, not taxes.

While the 1 percent max is constant, the calculation for collecting the tax is involved.

“As it relates to the nuts and bolts of collecting the tax,” Lawson said, “a Pennsylvania resident who resides or works in a community that has a local EIT, remits the tax at the higher of their resident rate — where you live — or work location rate.”

Things would be a little more involved in East Marlborough Township because some residents live within the Unionville-Chadds Ford School District, while others are in the Kennett Consolidated School District.

“People living in the Kennett Consolidated School District are already paying a 1 percent EIT that goes to Kennett…In the last audited year, that was roughly $889,000 from this portion of the school district. If the elected officials decide to assess a tax of 1 percent that will be halved, so Kennett will lose money…and approximately $445,000 will come this way,” Lawson said.

He also said calculations are based on whether a person is living in Pennsylvania but working in another state, such as Delaware or New Jersey.

Additionally, if an East Marlborough Township resident works in another municipality that has a 1 percent EIT, that tax goes to the workplace municipality. But, if East Marlborough enacts a 1 percent EIT, the money that had been going to that other town would go to East Marlborough, but the resident would be paying no more than he or she is already paying. However, if the resident works in the city of Philadelphia, Philadelphia will still collect the tax, but the resident would not be required to pay an EIT to the township.

Several residents suggested the township hold a referendum so residents could vote on whether to implement the new tax. Lawson said townships aren’t required to do that, but a referendum would be needed for an EIT if it were to be imposed by a school district. School districts are limited by the Act 1 Index. That calculation is complicated to the point that Lawson said, “It makes my head spin.”

The question arose about how much money an EIT would generate for the township.

According to the presentation, a 1 percent tax could bring in an estimated $3.74 million, while a 0.5 percent tax would bring in about $2.11 million.

Questions and comments from the public dealt with why the township is considering having an EIT and what would happen if it doesn’t.

Resident Rob Briley wanted to know how the funds would be allocated, considering the township wouldn’t see any new money until the second quarter of 2026, and would not see a full amount until 2027.

Lawson interjected, saying Briley is correct about the timing of funds being available.

Sosangelis then responded, saying, “Rob, this was our first step. We wanted to hear from the residents. We wanted to hear from Keystone Collections, and then we are going to be meeting over the next few months in our advisory committee to start to formulate a plan.”

Briley then suggested that 40 percent of the new revenue would go to fire and EMS coverage.

He later asked what the township might do if the matter went to a referendum and was voted down.

In response, Township Manager Neil Lovekin said, “Township taxes would increase for the fire fund.”

At one point, Supervisor Jake Elks said, “We’re looking to run this township in a financially responsible manner. This is one of those tools. This is not a done deal.”

Patty Borlid suggested using property taxes instead of an EIT, and another resident asked, “Will there be a consideration to increase the millage since it was increased a year ago?”

Lovekin said, “It’s safe to say that an increase will happen.”

Resident Jeff Hammond brought up DOGE and said the township should follow suit in looking at wasteful spending.

“Has anybody looked line-by-line at the budget?” he asked. “The tax increase is one way to address the problem; finding some budget cuts is another.”

Sosangelis said there’s no fat in the budget. “We do look at the budget. We don’t have a Taj Mahal township building, no audiovisual. All of our costs are going up.”

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.

EIT considered in East Marlborough Read More »

Around Town April 24

It’s said that sound bath meditation, using singing bowls and gongs, soothes and promotes deep relaxation and healing. On May 11, from 9-10 a.m., Mt. Cuba Center is offering a sound bath meditation session. The instructor is Liana Thompson, who completed the Vibration Sound Therapy Certified Practitioner training with the Vibrational Sound Association in 2019. Her passion is in helping others gently address stress and emotional trauma using the healing sounds of the Tibetan singing bowls. The cost of the session is $39. Get tickets here.

This Saturday, April 26, is Park Day at Brinton Run Preserve on Oakland Road in Chadds Ford Township. Park Day casts a spotlight on beloved American landscapes across the country. Brinton Run Preserve will host history and educational tours, as well as volunteer opportunities to help keep the public preserve clean, open, and accessible to all. There will be history and educational tours, as well as volunteer activities, including shrub and tree planting, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dress appropriately for the volunteer work.

Learn about the connection between herbal medicine and women’s health at Longwood Gardens on May 1.

At Longwood Gardens on Thursday, May 1, from 6-7:16 p.m., explore the herbal actions and medicinal properties of women’s wellness herbs and how, through an herbal, nutritional, and lifestyle approach and daily routine, women can maximize their energy levels and live vibrantly. The instructor for Herbal Medicine and Women’s Health is Melissa Gansz, founder of Herbal Roots Consulting Services. The cost is $39. Register here.

City Theater Company’s Improv Summer Camp for kids 11-14 is entering its final week of reduced pricing. The cost through April 30 is $250. It will be $300 after May 1. Camp runs from July 7 to 11, from 9:30 a.m. until noon. Register here.

Before 1947, Major League Baseball excluded black players. Learn the connection between Chester County and the old Negro Leagues through the Chester Clounty History Center.

Major League Baseball was segregated until 1947 when Jackie Robinson came into the league with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Before then, there were the Negro Leagues. On May 6, the Chester County History Center will hold a virtual event When the Negro Leagues Came to Chester County. He speaker will be Michael Peich whose baseball research focuses on the Negro Leagues and Chester County. He is currently President of the Ephemera Society of America and is an ardent baseball card and ephemera collector. In addition to being a devoted Phillies fan, he is Professor Emeritus (English) at West Chester University. This is a pay-as-you-wish event running from 7-8 p.m. Register here.

The Delaware Nature Society is holding a Native Plant Sale on Saturday, May 3, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Coverdale Farm Preserve in Greenville.

About CFLive Staff

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

Around Town April 24 Read More »

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