Posted in November 2009

Historical Horsham site hit by state cuts

State budget cuts announced last week forced two state-owned and operated Montgomery County historic sites to close temporarily Nov. 20, but volunteers said Monday they will try to keep the sites open for the long term.

Hope Lodge in Fort Washington is temporarily closed to visitors. Graeme Park in Horsham will be open Sundays only, thanks to a standing deal between the state and the Friends of Graeme Park that allowed the site to operate Sundays without the site administrator, President of the Friends of Graeme Park, Beth MacCausland said in an interview Monday.

“By the time our new calendar starts in the spring of 2010, we hope to have an agreement in place with the state where we are fully operational,” she said.

In a memo sent to members of the Friends of Graeme Park, MacCausland said all programs at the site will continue.

That means volunteers will operate the site during school tours and community group meetings, she said.

Before the layoffs, Graeme Park and Hope Lodge shared a part-time site administrator from the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission who traveled between both sites.

Each location also had a custodian that helped maintain the grounds. However, the employee at Graeme Park quit and “dedicated” site volunteers had picked up where he left off, MacCausland said.

“At this point in time we looked for the opportunity to meet with the Friends groups of both those organizations to see what their interest would be in working with the commission to maintain some sort of hours of the site,” Kirk Wilson, spokesman for the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, said in an interview Nov.19.

MacCausland and president of the Friends of Hope Lodge, Jack Gumbrecht, said they did not receive official notice of the layoffs until Nov. 19. Both sites were temporarily closed 5 p.m. Nov. 20.

“While the events of last week were disappointing for us, they weren’t a complete surprise,” Gumbrecht said in an interview Monday.

The Friends of Hope Lodge knew from the problems passing the state budget they would have to do something to compensate for a reduction of funding, he said.

The state indicated earlier this year the Friends group should explore alternatives for operating Hope Lodge, so members began the Hope for the Future committee, which was geared toward finding additional resources to maintain and operate the site, he said.

“It includes over 40 acres and really should be considered a community resource,” he said.

As of Monday, Gumbrecht had not been able to speak extensively with representatives from Harrisburg and is unsure of the state’s expectations or how long it would take to negotiate a management agreement to keep the site running, he said.

In the immediate future, volunteers from Graeme Park and Hope Lodge intend to hold their previously scheduled holiday events. Graeme Park’s holiday craft show will take place Dec. 5 at the Horsham Township Library.

The Friends of Hope Lodge has made hosting Holidays at Hope Lodge its first priority, Gumbrecht said. The event is scheduled for Dec. 12 and 13.

Then, the Friends will look toward how they can keep the site open through the winter and further into the future.

“We’re really looking at long-term, sustainable fundraising and operating plans,” he said.

Both Graeme Park and Hope Lodge received most of their funding from the state, according to the volunteers.

Hope Lodge also receives some funding from an endowment called the Degn Trust, named for the site’s previous owner, Alice Degn, Gumbrecht said.

Graeme Park is waiting to receive a resolution volunteers sent to the state confirming that the Friends will be able to continue all onsite programming, like school tours and Cub Scout meetings, but they are confident, MacCausland said.

Both Friends groups are reaching out for help.

“If ever we needed more help to keep the site open or to preserve our heritage … now is a great time to give us a call and see how you can help,” MacCausland said.

“Everything just hinges on what we can do as a volunteer group, so everyone and anyone is more than welcome.”

Graeme Park is online at www.ushistory.org/graeme.

Any updates on the situation and how to get involved in Hope for the Future can be accessed at www.ushistory.org/hope, Gumbrecht said.

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Glenside’s Due Truth aims to restore hip hop to its golden days

Classmates called him “Truth” during his poetry slam days at Cheltenham High School. When he began to rap, emerging artist Due Truth added the “Due” to his nickname to reflect his passion to restore hip-hop to its golden days, a feat he says is due.

Due Truth, otherwise known as Marcus Anderson, said his music represents “intelligence in entertainment,” a realization of his aim to challenge listeners through his lyrics while laying down a dance-worthy beat.

“It’s what they’ve been hearing — they just haven’t heard it. It’s where the hip-hop should be. It takes you right back to your ’95s, your ’96s, your ’97s, you know, when everything was all good and the people who were best at their craft were the ones who made it,” he said.

“It wasn’t about what you wore, what your swag was and all that … it was about the feelings you could convey with your music.”

The Glenside resident’s premier album, “Evolution,” is set to hit stores Nov. 27, and he will make an appearance at Hibbert’s INC in Glenside on Friday, Dec. 4, at 6 p.m., to help promote his album.

The tracks on “Evolution,” with its single “Fresh to Death,” are reminiscent of some of the more progressive rappers, like Common, but at the same time, he said it has the same entertainment value of artists Jay-Z or Nas.

The album is his personal attempt to help hip-hop evolve to the next step because “if it didn’t evolve, then it would just die, and I don’t believe hip-hop is dead at all,” he said.

“My inspiration for the album is actually how hip-hop is right now. It’s far from what I remember it being in the late ’80s going into the ’90s-era hip-hop. It seems as though it’s greatly misdirected. And the focus has gotten out of having real skill or real rapping prowess,” he said.

“Evolution” is about being lost and misdirected; it’s also about looking at common experiences through the lens of lessons learned in the past, and its lyrics offer recourse instead of complaints, he said.

Musically, the album borrows from jazz, which is perhaps most evident in the flute track for “Go, ” a song about the desire to get away for a moment when life gets tough.

There’s a history behind this influence. When Due Truth began rapping, he used to freestyle during jam sessions with a jazz band.

He also values harmony and incorporates it into his music.

He wasn’t always so focused on hip-hop — it’s something he fell into.

Due Truth was born in Roxborough and moved to Montgomery County when he was 11 years old.

The 2006 Cheltenham High School graduate started out doing spoken word competitions in high school. He won a poetry contest during his senior year.

“Doing spoken word is definitely where it’s all rooted. I never really grew up wanting to be a rapper. I got really good at spoken word and I just found my way into it,” he said.

He hopes to use this album as a springboard to more opportunities. Once the album comes out, he’s hoping to do some shows, get a tour together and release a second album in the future.

Due Truth’s music is online at www.facebook.com/duetruth2009 and at www.reverbnation.com/duetruth.

Wyndmoor author takes on the juvenille justice system

To those who don’t see the juvenile justice system every day, it can seem pretty black and white: The bad children go to jail.

But it’s not that simple, said Sandra Simkins of Wyndmoor.

Her new book, “When Kids Get Arrested: What Every Adult Should Know,” attempts to shed light on the juvenile justice system, namely that it’s more serious than one might think.

“I’m trying to reach out to parents, coaches, church leaders, school officials and anybody who works with kids,” said Simkins, associate clinical professor at the Rutgers School of Law in Camden and co-director of the school’s Children’s Justice Clinic.

Simkins co-directs the Northeast Region Juvenile Defender Center, where she gives consults with and trains children’s advocates in surrounding states.

She is also a former assistant chief of the juvenile unit in the Defender Association of Philadelphia.

Frequently, she has received phone calls from parents who felt lost when their children were arrested, she said, and she wanted to make information available to them in her book.

“Over and over I’ve seen

parents become very confused by the juvenile court process and not know where to turn,” she said.

It is important that parents and children understand their rights and the system, because the manner in which a child’s case is handled largely influences the outcome, she said.

Simkins has seen two children charged with the same offense, but their cases had radically different outcomes.

Her major tips for parents are not to waive their child’s right to a lawyer and not to let children talk to the police without one.

“Parents frequently encourage children to waive the right to a lawyer, and by doing that it always makes it worse for the kid,” she said.

The U.S. Supreme Court has granted this right to children, who have to be 10 to be arrested in Pennsylvania, she added.

Parents also need to understand that what happens in the juvenile justice system can severely affect a child’s future, contrary to the assumption that juvenile court may be easy on children.

The system is more punitive today than it was 15 years ago, when a child could get arrested and then have his “slate wiped clean,” Simkins said.

“Now, if a kid gets arrested, there are long-range consequences that go into adulthood,” she added.

For example, a child’s record of indiscretion may disqualify him from joining the military or receiving college loans, she said. The “zero tolerance” policy adapted by many schools is also significant because it brings many more children into the juvenile justice system, and guidance counselors and school officials should be aware of what happens when a child is arrested, she said.

The “school to prison pipeline” is something she discusses in the book because she wants to educate parents to make smart legal choices for their children, she added.

According to Simkins, everything goes downhill when a child gets involved in the juvenile justice system.

Simkins first became interested in this subject while working at the public defender’s office in Philadelphia, particularly working with girls.

“Girls that ended up in the juvenile justice systems always had a really tragic background,” she said.

Ninety percent of girls she worked with suffered abuse in their lives and landed in the juvenile justice system because they got into a fight with someone at school or at home, Simkins said.

Everything got worse when they entered the system, she said.

“Seeing that the system was often unable to make it better and often made it worse made me want to do more and make this my career,” she said.

Those who often end up in the system are poor, don’t have parents or have special needs, she said.

”I like being a voice for those kids,” she said.

Millions of children get arrested every year, she added.

“One out of three children of color is going to spend some time on probation or parole or prison in their lifetimes. One out of three,” she said, adding that the United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world.

Simkins said her goal was to take what she learned in Philadelphia, a city with fantastic organizations like the Juvenile Law Center, and write a book with a national scope.

“The attorneys in the public defender’s office in Philadelphia are outstanding. Not everybody has that,” she said.

This is Simkins first book, and it was exciting for her that her daughters could watch her go through the process of having an idea, writing a chapter and then incorporating revisions, she said.

She has lived in Wyndmoor for eight years and has a “really supportive husband” and two daughters, 10 and 12, who attend Springfield Township schools.

Proposed budget holds the line on property taxes (11.18)

Springfield Township residents will see an increase of more than $80 in their sewer tax next year but no increase in township property taxes or refuse charges, according to a proposed 2010 township budget presented by the board of commissioners Nov. 11.

Under the proposed budget, a household with a property assessed at the township average of $175,400 will pay $591.10 in township real estate taxes next year. This is the same as in the three previous years, according to the commissioners’ summary.

Springfield homes will see an average increase of $87.24 on the sanitary sewer rental fee tax, a change largely due to an increase in the sewer charge Springfield pays to Philadelphia for sanitary sewer conveyance and treatment.

Last year, Philadelphia raised sewer taxes 37 percent to meet federal water regulations, but the increase was not fully reflected on the 2009 budget because the commissioners covered about 68 percent of it by dipping into its sanitary sewer reserve fund.

These sewer fees are expected to increase another 22 percent in 2010, and the cost will be passed on to the households that use the municipal sewer system, commissioners said.

Homes with their own septic systems will not be affected by the new sewage fees, board President Jeff Harbison said

The proposed 2010 budget is about $17.3 million, an increase of about 0.3 percent from in 2009.

In addition to sewer fees, changes in the 2010 budget reflect contractual increases in salary and employee benefits, utility expenses and the use of capital reserve funds for the purchase of equipment and special projects including storm-water management.

Residents will continue to pay for sanitary sewer service and refuse collection and disposal through separate fees.

Springfield residents can comment on the budget at public meetings Dec. 9 and 16 at 8 p.m. in the township building.

The board of commissioners is scheduled a vote on the budget Dec. 16.

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