Posted in January 2010

Hatboro Council nixes plan for Miller Meadow

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Hatboro Council on Monday halted action to install a walking trail and fitness stations at Miller Meadow due to concerns the project would waste resources and hurt the fundraising efforts of local nonprofit organizations.

By a 3-4 vote along party lines, the Democratic majority opposed a resolution that would have given council’s support to an already submitted preliminary application for a grant that could have been used to add the trail and fitness equipment to Miller Meadow, the property across from Borough Hall on South York Road.

Council’s action essentially voids the application to the PECO Growing Greener grant program, which council directed Assistant to the Borough Manager and Planner Daren Miller to submit at its Jan. 11 meeting in order to meet a deadline.

The Montgomery County Open Space program gave a grant to Hatboro to acquire the land in 1998 for the borough to use for passive recreation.

County officials recommended the project, Miller said.

The project proposal included a trail along the perimeter with 20 fitness stations and was estimated to cost about $20,000, half of which would have been paid by the borough.

Vice President Nancy Guenst said she voted against the proposal because of a number of concerns from the residents and because she asked for but did not receive specific information from the borough about how much the project would cost, such as material and length of the path.

She did not want the borough to have to pay more than expected, she said, adding that it cost the borough $30,000 to pave the circle outside of Borough Hall.

Councilman Bill Tompkins, who voted for the resolution, suggested council remove the fitness equipment and approve a proposal for a macadam trail.

Tompkins asked council why the borough should spend the money to look into different options before learning if the grant is awarded.

Hatboro had previously received a $5,000 grant from PECO and will use it to plant trees on the property, Guenst said.

Members of the Greater Hatboro Chamber of Commerce were concerned the development would affect the nonprofit organization’s ability to hold vital fundraising events, such as annual carnivals held at the field, chamber President Bill George, told council.

George said he had spoken to Miller, who said he didn’t think it would be a problem.

“If what we’re going to do at Miller Meadow is going to affect all of our incomes, then I vote no,” president of Elm Street, John Farnen, added.

Hatboro resident Ron Battis said he did not want the borough to make the same mistake with Miller Meadow as it did with Eaton Park on West Moreland Avenue, where a stone trail became “grooved out” in some places and washed away by rain in others.

People were constantly destroying the signs on the fitness equipment and the borough kept replacing them, Battis said, until a previous council decided to take out the equipment and pave the trail.

“So what I’m saying is, there’s no sense in repeating the same mistake twice,” he said.

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School district budget faces decreasing revenues

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The Springfield School District introduced a $46.2 million preliminary general fund budget for 2010-2011 in a presentation Tuesday.

The budget includes a 6.82 percent increase in the local property tax, far above the cap allowed under Act 1, although district Business Administrator Victor Orlando said it was only a preliminary figure and would likely come down after the district submits the budget to the state for approval.

There is “a lot of work [that] will go into the next five months” before June 30, the state’s deadline for budget adoption, Orlando said.

The preliminary general fund budget of $46,211,419 represents an increase of $1,313,753, or 2.9 percent, over 2009-2010, Orlando said.

With a tax increase of 6.82 percent, a property owner with a home assessed at the township average of $165,766, would pay $307 in additional property taxes next year, a number lower than a projection the finance committee made months ago, but “still substantial,” Orlando said.

Under Act 1, otherwise known as the Taxpayer Relief Act, the school district cannot increase property taxes more than 2.9 percent without a voter referendum or unless it is granted exceptions by the state.

Exceptions include debt service, retirement and special education and would allow officials to set the tax rate above this index without a referendum, Orlando said.

This year, Orlando said he will recommend the district utilize the exceptions, which it did not last year, when the state’s cap was at 4.1 percent.

This preliminary budget will decrease after the district submits it to the state and receives feedback, Orlando said.

The district is working with a projected decline in revenue from the local earned income tax, the real estate transfer tax and earnings from investments.

Administrators also discussed a retirement bubble that looks like it could hit public schools throughout the commonwealth in 2013 with a roughly 30 percent increase in expenditures to cover pension plans.

The school district, particularly the finance committee, has been putting aside funds in anticipation of what Orlando said could have a “tremendous” impact.

The public will be able to view the budget presentation on the school district’s Web site, www.sdst.org, by the end of this week.

The school board must adopt a preliminary budget by its Feb. 16 meeting.

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Students learn the realties of persecution

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When he was 17, Harold Stern worked in a fountain pen factory as he and his mother tried to leave their country for America. They wanted to escape the persecution of being Jewish in Nazi Germany.

Even though Stern had to pay to be able to work at the Jewish-owned factory, it provided him a place to go every morning, nearly two years since he had to leave school.

The morning of Jan. 7, Beverly Anderson, 17, and her classmates at the Mount Saint Joseph Academy woke up and went to school almost like any average Thursday, except that day their world history teacher planned a special lesson on the Holocaust.

After listening to Stern’s first-hand account of growing up as a Jewish boy in Nazi Germany, Anderson didn’t want to go to her next class. She wanted to hear more.

When Stern looked at his watch and realized time was almost up — just as he was on a ship from England to Australia — Anderson didn’t want to leave.

“Please keep going,” she said from her front row seat.

Last week was one of the few times Stern, of Willow Grove, had spoken in public about his experience.

“I enjoy talking to people who are interested and I’m very happy to discuss what happened in those days because it’s ancient history to people who are growing up now,” he said.

Stern was born in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1921 and was about 12 when the Nazi party came to power.

In the early to mid-1930s he attended school at a place called the Humanistic Gymnasium. Eventually many of his German classmates joined the Hitler Youth.

“The teachers, who were mostly German nationalists, didn’t want much to do with the Jews for their own protection,” he said.

At one point he stopped talking to his German friends because he didn’t want to get them into trouble.

“It got harder and harder to live a normal existence,” he said.

With five years of French and two of Latin under his belt, he left the Humanistic Gymnasium because it was impractical for him to be there.

His mom had lost her clients because they were worried about working with a Jewish woman, so Stern’s family needed income. They wanted to save money to pay the taxes required to leave the country and go to America.

In 1937 he began classes at a Jewish school, where instead of singing songs touting German nationalism, he was introduced to classical music.

He took classes for six months before getting a job, at age 15, at a Jewish friend’s father’s shoe factory. A Nazi official was planning on taking over the factory and fought Stern’s hiring.

“In spite of tremendous chicanery, I at least had a reason to get up in the morning,” he said.

He ate lunch with his co-workers early in his employment, but as the climate in the country worsened, Stern had to eat elsewhere to save his German co-workers from punishment.

This was one of the saddest parts of the story for Anderson and her friends to hear, they said.

As the atmosphere in Germany became progressively worse, with “people emigrating left and right,” Stern lost friends, confidants and relatives who moved away.

“It was a terrible atmosphere because you had no longer any semblance of a normal existence,” he said.

Stern left the factory after it was sold to a non-Jewish enterprise because there was no future for him there. He worked at the Jewish-owned fountain pen factory before finding a way to England right before the start of World War II.

At age 17 he had to separate from his mother, who he later learned died at 43 while living in poverty in Holland, where she had moved right before the war.

In England during the war, Stern was eventually interned and sent to Australia to a camp with 200 refugees. He joined the Australian army after the attack at Pearl Harbor.

Amy Gwynn, 18, marveled at Stern’s ability to live through such a difficult time, and said she couldn’t imagine doing it at her age.

“The fact that he had so much survival ethic — I would have fallen apart,” she said.

Kiersten Brinkos, 17, had a renewed appreciation for the present.

“To just be grateful … for the opportunities I’m given now,” she said.

In 1947 Stern arrived in New York, and represented several department store window display companies on the Eastern seaboard before retiring in 1989. e has been married for 53 years, has two sons and four grandchildren.

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