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Police seek Pottsville man for failing to start sentence

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POTTSVILLE — Schuylkill County District Attorney Michael A. O’Pake and the Schuylkill County detectives are asking the public to help them locate a man who failed to begin serving his prison sentence earlier this month.

Detectives said Kenneth Jeffrey Williams, 42, failed to surrender at the Schuylkill County Prison on Aug. 1 to begin serving a four- to eight-year sentence with the state Department of Corrections.

The sentence was handed down against Williams on felony charges of possession of a firearm prohibited and firearms not to be carried without a license as well as a misdemeanor charge of possession of a controlled substance.

Williams, detectives said, is white, about 5 feet, 10 inches tall and weighs about 145 pounds. His last known address is 811 W. Race St. in Pottsville.

Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Williams or any other fugitive in Schuylkill County is asked to call the district attorney’s office at 570-628-1350 or Schuylkill County Tip Line at 570-624-3988.

Information can also be submitted by email to dadd@co.schuylkill.pa.us.

In addition, detectives said that anyone who may see or come in contact with Williams should call the Schuylkill County Communications Center or their local police department immediately.

All information received will remain confidential.

A list of Schuylkill County bench warrants is available on the Schuylkill County website, www.co.schuylkill.pa.us, detectives said.

Contact the writer: fandruscavage@republicanherald.com; 570-628-6013


For the record, Aug. 18, 2019

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Deeds

Porter Township and Tower City — Heritage Mills Personal Care Center LLC to Heritage Mills Personal Care Center Property Co. LC; property on Wiconisco Avenue; $1,730,000.

Saint Clair — Carrington Mortgage Services LLC to Perking Financial LLC; 717 Wade Road; $9,000.

Wayne Township — William W.J. and Lily H. Ennis to Dana Damato; 108 and 109 Hogan Drive, Lake Wynonah; $180,000.

West Mahanoy Township — Lawrence R. and Rosalie Gelches to John R. Reilly; property on Lien Avenue; $7,000.

West Penn Township — Pennymac Loan Services LLC to Secretary of Veterans Affairs; 350 Blue Mountain Drive; $1.

Rain doesn't dampen spirit at Island Park Fest in Schuylkill Haven

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SCHUYLKILL HAVEN — Sometimes, it all depends on the weather.

Scattered thunderstorms were in the forecast, and a few passing dark clouds threatened to spoil the fun before it even started, but fortunately, the sun came out around 2 p.m. and shone brightly most of the day Saturday during the 13th annual Island Park Festival in Schuylkill Haven.

“It looks like it’s going to be a nice day. No rain,” said Gary Hess, a Schuylkill County commissioner and one of the event’s committee members who planned the event that raises funds to develop the park.

As Hess made his rounds among the stands, talking to the many volunteers who were manning them and taking care of some last minute preparations in anticipation of the busy day ahead, he took a few minutes to express gratitude for good fortune and good weather.

“Beautiful day,” he said. “That’s what we were hoping for.”

Over the years, stormy weather has dampened the festivities.

“Last year, the lower level lot was flooded and we had to shuttle everybody in because we had no parking, so we didn’t have the crowds,” Hess said.

Another year, storms cut short the night’s live musical entertainment, he said.

“A lot of people come for the local music, the bands,” Hess said. “They draw the crowds.”

Hess said about 1,000 to 1,500 people attend the annual event, which features live entertainment, carnival games and activities for kids, horse-drawn carriage rides and a wide variety of food and drink.

Live bands entertained the crowds throughout the day, beginning with the Jesse Wade Band at 2 p.m., followed by The New Individuals and Rusty Foulke.

Families could also enjoy a ride in the horse-drawn wagon from Running Springs Farm; watch the antics of Wagstaff And Company, a comedy and ventriloquist act; be amazed by performances of Clive Allen of Clive Allen Magic & Illusions; or even take their best shot at the dunk tank.

“I was in the dunk tank last year; that was really fun,” said Diane Roeder, an Island Park committee member and Schuylkill Haven borough councilwoman, who was sweating away in the heat this year, serving up a delectable variety of food behind the concession stand. “That would be nice to be in the dunk tank right about now.”

The stand wasn’t too busy yet early in the day as the crowds just started to trickle in, but Roeder said she expected it to be packed by dinner time.

“Around 6, it gets pretty busy around here,” she said. “But I love it, being part of everything that’s going on here. Today, it’s gorgeous weather. We’re going to have a good day.”

“The weather is king,” added Ryan Cullather, another longtime festival volunteer, as he manned the stove at the concession stand. Cullather said he remembers committee members contending with muddy fields, high winds and steady rain in previous years.

Todd Amos, owner of T&M Novelties, Pottsville, was busy setting up prizes at his carnival game stands, which featured a fish bowl toss and the balloon darts where winners could take home flashing princess wands, light-up bunny ears, light sabers and an array of large inflatable toys including brightly-hued crayons, guitars and dolphins.

“I love seeing the kids smile and see them having a good time; that’s what it’s all about for me,” said Amos, who said he travels annually to festivals, parades, picnics and fairs in more than 32 counties across Pennsylvania each summer, from May through October, with his Pottsville-based amusements business.

Andrea Ostrousky, of Pottsville, said she comes to the festival every year and likes the wide variety of activities it offers for families with children. She brought her 2-year-old niece, Peyton Walters, also of Pottsville, with her this year to experience the fun.

“It’s always a great time,” Ostrousky said. “She’s so happy. She got her face painted for the first time this year.”

Peyton, proudly sporting a tiny ice cream cone painted on her cheek, colored an activity sheet at a stand sponsored by Best Buds All Natural Gardening Co., where kids could plant pea seeds in ice cream cones, sample some fresh tomatoes and beans freshly picked from the community garden in Schuylkill Haven and learn more about healthy eating.

“Today, we’re teaching kids about healthy eating and healthy living,” said Hannah Burke, a Blue Mountain High School sophomore who runs the community garden in Bubeck Park in Schuylkill Haven and started the Best Buds gardening business. “Kids need to be more connected to the earth.”

The Island Park Committee hopes to raise about $5,000 at this year’s festival, which will help build an amphitheater at the recreation area, a 21-acre site located along the Schuylkill River, which over the years has grown from an empty field into a thriving community hub that includes several sports fields and other permanent structures built for community events.

“This place has come a long way over the years,” Hess said.

In 2006, flooding destroyed the small park at the site, a picturesque piece of land nestled between the Schuylkill River and Reading, Blue Mountain & Northern Railroad. Before the flood, the area accommodated a few softball and soccer fields.

The community had considered improvements to the park over the years. But the flood damage forced them to start from scratch, Hess said.

“That was the year, that was Ground Zero,” he said.

Money raised from the Island Park Festival and other events planned by the Island Park Committee throughout the year enable the community to expand on what they have done so far and dream for the future.

Future projects in the works include a walking bridge that will connect the park to the downtown, and an amphitheater for hosting outdoor concerts and cultural events.

Criminal court, Aug. 18, 2019

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POTTSVILLE — A Minersville man will spend more time in state prison and on probation after a Schuylkill County judge sentenced him Wednesday.

Steven W. Harmer, 23, must serve one to two years in a state correctional institution, plus an additional two years on probation, Judge Jacqueline L. Russell ruled.

Russell imposed the sentence after revoking Harmer’s probation, which the defendant admitted violating by committing another crime. She also ordered Harmer to perform 20 hours community service and not to have contact with the victim.

Prosecutors had asked for the one-to-two-year sentence, but Russell insisted that extra probation be added.

Harmer originally pleaded guilty on Nov. 15, 2017, to burglary, conspiracy and corruption of minors. Prosecutors withdrew charges of criminal trespass, theft and receiving stolen property.

At that time, Russell sentenced Harmer to serve six to 12 months in prison, plus 12 months probation, pay costs and $50 to the Criminal Justice Enhancement Account, perform 20 hours community service and submit a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities.

Minersville police had charged Harmer with burglarizing a business and conspiring with a minor to do so, at 1:30 a.m. Sept. 27, 2016, in the borough.

Also on Wednesday, Judge Charles M. Miller ordered that $77 seized from a Pottsville man be forfeited to the district attorney’s office.

Miller ruled that prosecutors had shown a close connection between the money and criminal activity committed by Matthew S. Dietz.

“It was essentially wrapped around the drug itself,” First Assistant District Attorney Michael J. Stine said of the cash. “It would be subject to forfeiture.”

“The court agrees with that argument,” Miller said.

Dietz did not appear for the hearing, the second time he had not done so in the case.

Pottsville police Cpl. Charles Webber testified that on April 24, 2016, he had participated in the search of Dietz and his vehicle. In the vehicle, Webber said, he found the money wrapped around a piece of crystal meth.

“He was convicted of possession ... of the methamphetamine,” Webber said.

In other recent county court action, Judge John E. Domalakes placed two defendants, Ashley Sist, 33, of Tresckow, and Daniel Wagner, 42, of Freemansburg, on probation for 12 months after each pleaded guilty, Sist to harassment and Wagner to possession of drug paraphernalia and driving under suspension.

Domalakes also sentenced Sist to pay costs, a $50 CJEA payment and a $50 bench warrant fee. McAdoo police had charged Sist with committing harassment on Nov. 19, 2018, in the borough.

Domalakes also sentenced Wagner to pay costs, a $200 fine and $100 to the Substance Abuse Education Fund. Schuylkill Haven police had charged Wagner with committing his crimes on Nov. 21, 2016, in the borough.

Also in the county court, Michael Keefer, 57, of Schuylkill Haven, pleaded guilty to driving under the influence and driving under suspension. Prosecutors withdrew charges of aggravated assault and public drunkenness.

President Judge William E. Baldwin sentenced Keefer to serve nine days to six months in prison with immediate parole, pay costs, $1,200 in fines, a $300 SAEF payment and $502 restitution to Lehigh Valley Health Network, and perform 10 hours community service.

Pine Grove police had alleged Keefer was DUI with a suspended license on Nov. 12, 2017, in the borough.

Contact the writer: pbortner@republicanherald.com; 570-628-6014

Around the region, Aug. 18, 2019

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Barnesville

The Rush-Ryan-Delano Senior Citizens group meets the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month at the Ryan Township Fire Company, Route 54. Membership is open to anyone 55 or older. Membership dues for 2019 are being accepted. Upcoming events include Oct. 23, dinner and show at Penn’s Peak in Jim Thorpe; Dec. 4, trip to Mount Airy Casino in the Poconos.

Deer Lake

The Deer Lake & West Brunswick Fire Company, 1 Ash Road, will sponsor bingo games Tuesday at the firehouse. Doors will open at 5 p.m. and games will begin at 6 p.m. The company has the games on the first and third Tuesdays of the month. For more information, call 570-366-0900.

Mahanoy City

The St. Teresa of Calcutta Golden Age group is accepting new members, people 55 and older. The group meets twice monthly in the church hall for fellowship, lunch and bingo, leaders said in a press release. Dues are $5. For more information, call 570-773-1753.

Mahanoy City

A sportsmen’s all-handgun bingo will be held Aug. 25 at West End Fire and Rescue Company, 700 W. Mahanoy Ave. Doors will open at 12:30 p.m. and bingo will start at 2 p.m. The cost is $40; identification will be required. The fee includes a meal and refreshments. The company’s Facebook page has more information about the event. People may buy tickets at eventbrite.com. For more information, call 570-778-6118.

Pine Grove

The Pine Grove Masonic Lodge, 23 Oak Grove Road, will have a Kauffman chicken barbecue with pickups from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 2. Tickets are $8 each and the deadline to buy them is Aug. 25. For tickets or more information, call Terry Zimmerman at 570-345-3351 or Donald Schneck at 570-345-3498.

Pottsville

Diakon Living and Learning, 118 S. Centre St., has activities, classes, workshops and creative/healthful initiatives on its agenda throughout Schuylkill County. For more information regarding costs, types of sessions, dates/times and locations, call Susan Long at 570-624-3018 or email her at longs@diakon.org. More information also is available online at www.diakon.org/community-services/Living-Learning-After-50.

Saint Clair

A designer bag bingo to benefit the Navy Moms’ Relief Fund will be held at the Saint Clair Lions Club hall, 259 McCord Ave., Sept. 16. The cost is $25 in advance and $30 at the door. Doors will open at 11 a.m. and bingo will begin at 1 p.m. All are welcome. For tickets or more information, call 570-527-5787 or 570-449-0606.

Schuylkill Haven

Fifth-grade and new-student orientation and open house for Schuylkill Haven Area Middle School is scheduled beginning at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the middle school auditorium. Parents wishing to learn about middle school programs and curriculum and to meet their children’s teacher are encouraged to attend, according to a release from Matthew Buletza, middle school principal. For more information, call 570-385-6709.

Schuylkill Haven

St. John’s United Church of Christ, 121 E. Main St., will have the annual Chinese auction from 6 to 8 p.m. Sept. 27 and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 28. All are welcome. For more information, call 570-385-3080 or go online to www.stjohnsreformed.com.

Wiconisco

The Lumber River Quartet of Lumberton, North Carolina, will perform in concert at 7 p.m. Aug. 25 at Faith Evangelical Congregational Church, 543 Centre St. Admission is free; donations will be accepted. There will also be light refreshments; all are welcome. For more information, call 717-453-9012.

Lyra, a little constellation with many stories

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Constellations come in many sizes, shapes and flavors in our celestial dome. One of the smaller ones is Lyra the Lyre. In case you’re not into ancient musical instruments, a lyre is a small U shaped harp that was played and enjoyed mostly in ancient Greece, but has since fallen out of favor. It’s quite a story as to how the little harp found its way into the heavens and I’ll get to that in just a bit.

About all there is to the constellation Lyra is the bright star Vega which shines very high in the southeastern sky, with four dimmer stars forming a lopsided rectangle, or parallelogram, just to the lower left of Vega. That’s it, that’s all there is to Lyra. Unless you’re viewing from a site of horrendous light pollution, you should be able to spot that lopsided rectangle.

Vega is more than just the bright star Lyra. It’s the third brightest nighttime star we see in Pottsville throughout the course of the year. It’s 2 million miles wide, twice the diameter of the sun, and much hotter. It’s 17,000 degrees Fahrenheit at the surface compared to 10,000 degrees for our sun. It also kicks out 50 times more light than our sun.

That’s one of the reasons Vega is so bright in our sky. The other is that it’s relatively close to our solar system, a little more than 25 light-years away, which equates to 145 trillion miles. Yes, that’s considered close!

When you look at Vega, you’re seeing it as it was in 1994 when Bill Clinton was president. It takes that long for light to reach Earth! Vega is significant in other ways that I’ll share with you some other time.

If you have a small to moderate telescope, the most interesting celestial treasure to find within the diminutive constellation Lyra is what astronomers call M57, the Ring Nebula. At first glance through a telescope, it looks like a fuzzy faint star, but if you look closer and if your scope can gather enough light it will resemble a tiny smoke ring. Astronomers consider it a planetary nebula, but that moniker is a bit misleading. It really doesn’t have anything to do with a planet even though it reminds some folks of Saturn. In fact, that’s how it got that name, because when they were discovered in the 18th century, telescopes were a lot smaller and not nearly as sophisticated as they are today.

Planetary nebulae are actually stars that are going through their final phases of life before they become retired white dwarfs. Most of their lives, stars produce light and energy through a very complicated process called nuclear fusion. The gist of it is that hydrogen atoms deep in the core of stars fuse together to make heavier helium atoms, but in the process a tiny amount of the hydrogen is converted to a tremendous amount of light and other radiation. Eventually a star runs out of hydrogen in its core and helium atoms begin to fuse into carbon and oxygen.

The details get a little hairy, but when a star can no longer fuse atoms in its core, it begins to collapse in on itself due to gravity. As it does, the star temporarily puffs or burps out shells of its remaining gases as the core shrinks into a white dwarf. Our own sun will go through this in roughly six billion years or so, and the remaining white dwarf won’t be much larger than our Earth.

That’s what’s happening right now in the case of the Ring Nebula. That’s our future about six billion years from now! The Ring Nebula is more than 2,300 light years away. The light that you see now from this ailing star has taken since the year 300 B.C. just to meet your eyes!

There are many mythology stories about Lyra that vary according to ancient cultures. The Greeks saw it as a small harp that Mercury, the messenger of the gods, created out of an old tortoise shell. This is gross, but he strung cow guts across the shell that served as strings. Because the lyre was created out of a tortoise shell, Lyra is also sometimes pictured as a small turtle in the heavens.

Mercury’s creation eventually wound up in the hands of the great early Greek musician Orpheus, who learned how to play it so beautifully that even animals and trees would bow when he performed. Eventually, Orpheus was killed by a bunch of crazed female fans who were all trying to grab him after one of his concerts at a seaside village. They became angry after he rejected their invitations for romance. Before his own fans did him in, he threw his lyre into the sea in hopes of rescuing it later. Of course, he never got that chance. The chief gods of Mount Olympus had greatly admired Orpheus and had his dismembered body parts buried at the foot of Mount Olympus. They also dispatched a small eagle to fetch his lyre out of the sea and magically place it into the sky as the little harp we see in the summer heavens.

(Lynch, an amateur astronomer and professional broadcast meteorologist, can be reached at mikewlynch@comcast.net)

John ‘Stanky’ Stankovic to be inducted into international polka hall of fame

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Back in his polka band’s heyday, John “Stanky” Stankovic once had a globe-crossing marathon weekend by playing in England on Friday, at the Bloomsburg Fair on Saturday and in Switzerland on Sunday.

“How we did that? I don’t know. But we did it,” Stankovic, 83, said.

From playing at church bazaars in Northeast Pennsylvania to performing in front of 1 million people at a festival in Tiananmen Square in China, his band Stanky and the Coal Miners has been a world traveler.

That’s always been the plan.

When Stankovic was a boy, his coal miner father — who urged him to learn to play the accordion instead of focusing on baseball — told him if he learned 10 songs he could make a living for himself.

“I told him, ‘I’ll learn 11 and see the world.’ And I did,” Stankovic said.

Stankovic’s legendary 74-year career will soon be feted when he is inducted into the International Polka Association’s Hall of Fame. He’ll be inducted Aug. 31 during the organization’s 51st annual convention in Buffalo.

“I feel happy about that. It’s a wonderful thing after all these years and it’s a great honor,” Stankovic said.

Stankovic, who grew up in the Hanover section of Nanticoke, where he still lives, started taking accordion lessons in 1942 and formed his first band in 1945 when he was 9. They started by playing at weddings.

“When you played weddings, you played at houses. You didn’t go to ballrooms. Back in those days, weddings lasted for three days — Friday, Saturday and Sunday,” Stankovic said. “How you made money was when people were walking in the door, you held a basket out. At that time, everybody would give you a quarter, half dollar or dollar. Sometimes that would add up to $20 a guy. At that time, that was a hell of a lot of money.”

Early in his career, Stankovic’s band was a side gig, although they played as many as five nights a week.

His first job was as a “rag man,” essentially a junk collector who drove the streets looking for unwanted items he could sell. Later, he worked as a garbage man for Nanticoke’s Public Works Department. After that, he worked several other manual labor jobs until music became full time.

Stankovic’s band name was originally the Tip Toppers until he changed it to Stanky and the Coal Miners.

While the name paid tribute to the area’s coal mining roots, for him it was literal.

Stankovic’s early band mates were all coal miners and he picked them up directly from the mines to go on gigs.

“We used to pick them up and their faces were black, their clothes were black. We used to get to a job and they would wash their faces off in the restroom and then come out to play,” Stankovic recalled.

Stankovic’s biggest supporter for most of his career has been his wife of 57 years, Dottie, who is well known for being Luzerne County’s long-time elected register of wills. She often took the stage with the band to sing, ring bells and play the violin.

For decades, the couple hosted the “Pennsylvania Polka” show on WVIA public television, a show which televised people dancing to polka music.

Polka music allowed Stankovic and his wife to travel the world together. They’ve been to five continents where Stanky and the Coal Miners performed. Sometimes as many as 100 fans from Northeast Pennsylvania would join them.

Stankovic said his band performed on nearly 60 cruises, including 25 to Alaska. One cruise liner, he said, offered his band the opportunity to be the performers for a 100-day cruise around the world, but he had to decline.

“If we did take that, we would have lost our day jobs,” Stankovic said.

During the band’s peak, they were booked two years in advance.

As the older generation has passed away, the demand for polka music has diminished, Stankovic said.

But he still plays at festivals and nursing homes.

Stankovic continues to play annually at Knoebels Amusement Resort, Elysburg, and this year will mark his 45th consecutive year playing at the Bloomsburg Fair. Most recently, Stanky and the Coal Miners performed Aug. 9 at the Plymouth Alive Kielbasa Festival.

At 83, Stankovic still plays the accordion flawlessly and his voice is still sharp. He just uses a lighter accordion than the one he used for most of his career. And instead of standing during performances, he sits on a stool.

But retirement from polka isn’t even an option, he said.

“If people keep calling, I’m going to keep playing,” Stankovic said.

Contact the writer: bkalinowski@citizen­svoice.com; 570-821-2055

Your internet speeds might not be as fast as you think; report challenges internet providers advertised speeds

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Slow internet speeds in rural areas don’t just stop farmers from buying Netflix subscriptions, it could be robbing their communities of a chance at financial success.

New research strengthens the argument that federal regulators who measure internet speeds shouldn’t be taking service providers at their word.

The Center for Rural Pennsylvania funded research on internet speeds from ground-based, wired internet connections.

A team led by Sascha Meinrath, Penn State’s Palmer Chair of Telecommunications and co-creator of Measurement Lab, or M-Lab, completed the research, pulling on data M-Lab has collected for years.

Annual Federal Communications Commission broadband deployment data, which is supplied by internet companies, shows that nearly 95 percent of Pennsylvania residents have access to what the government defines as broadband internet service, or download speeds of 25 megabits per second, or Mbps.

The Penn State report, however, concludes user experience is much slower. In fact, it finds that fewer than 50 percent of consumers in each Pennsylvania county have speeds of 25 Mbps or greater.

The team’s conclusion rankled the internet industry.

“This report confuses availability and adoption,” said Brian Herrmann, spokesman for the Broadband Cable Association of Pennsylvania. “Virtually every municipality has broadband cable going by the residences with speeds up to a gig (gigabit per second, or 1,000 Mbps).”

Meinrath recoils at the industry association’s defense.

“I don’t see how we can be any more clear that we are 100 percent aware that advertised availability and M-Lab’s actual speed measures are two separate data sets,” he said.

Numbers don’t match

M-Lab’s data, culled from millions of speed tests in Pennsylvania, shows a yawning gap between what providers say they deliver in rural locales and the connection speeds customers actually get.

For example: in Meshoppen, Wyoming County, the FCC reported December 2014 deployed speeds of 3 Mbps.

For that same time period, M-Lab recorded median experienced speeds of 1.88 Mbps.

Two years later, in December 2016, the FCC’s deployed speeds were posted at 18 Mbps, the report says.

Consumer speed tests showed a median speed of 2.74 Mbps in December 2016.

Access vs. service

As far as the FCC is concerned, if a single home within a census tract has access to those speeds, that geographic area is considered to be served.

But that’s confusing, Meinrath says. People may have high speed access somewhere in their town, but that doesn’t mean it reaches their home or business modems.

“It’s the same story if you’re in New Mexico or Pennsylvania or Michigan,” said Francella Ochillo, executive director at Next Century Cities. The Washington, D.C.-based organization helps cities across the country get reliable, affordable internet access.

“This is a story that is replicated throughout the country ... (and) we’re at a tipping point where I feel like there’s finally a public acknowledgement as well a political will to change something in the way that we’re collecting data.”

When government agencies collect bad data, communities that need resources lose out and the money gets funneled toward those that need it less, she said.

“The complaints are nearly universal in rural communities,” state Sen. Lisa Baker, R-20, Lehman Township, Luzerne County, said in a statement. She’s been an advocate for more access in rural areas, especially when it comes to improving health care infrastructure.

She also points out that economic recovery in rural towns lags behind other places that have stronger infrastructure.

“The problem is particularly acute across northern tier counties, where the jobs numbers are showing only slight improvement since the recession, and technology limitations contribute to the slow recovery,” she said.

Why it matters

Fast internet is far more important than giving you can the “Orange is the New Black” season finale glitch-free.

It’s become a ubiquitous tool for education, health care and commerce. In developed nations, it touches every facet of human existence and will only become increasingly so.

Ochillo said the debate between availability and adoption probably isn’t so black and white.

“There are couple of layers to that adoption piece that are not only about access and it being available in your area,” she said, adding, “I do think that the main barrier remains affordability.”

She offered a few other examples:

• Complacency among customers, who have only ever had slow internet speeds, accept what they get.

•Others can’t afford the monthly bill or the equipment. Maybe they don’t know how to use a computer or hook up a broadband modem.

•Immigrants who come from countries where they don’t trust the government shun technology.

New federal funding

Last week, the FCC announced it would spend over $121 million to connect more than 36,500 homes in unserved rural homes and businesses across 16 states and support the new infrastructure for 10 years.

“In Pennsylvania, this round of funding takes another step toward closing the digital divide, providing access to digital opportunity to over 7,000 unserved rural homes and businesses,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said in a statement.

Such an investment could have helped school districts such as Northwest Area, where students’ Google Chromebooks wouldn’t matter much without the high-speed service the district installed a ten years ago.

Back then, Northwest Area joined other districts in Luzerne Intermediate Unit 18 and Northeastern Educational Intermediate Unit 19 in a project called the “Northeastern Pennsylvania Wide Area Network.”

The private network is bid out through the intermediate units and passed along to participating districts. Service is currently provided by Frontier Communications.

To take advantage of the WAN, the district built its own infrastructure. Three towers use line-of-sight wireless to connect two elementary schools to the district’s broadband internet, which comes through cable to the administration building and high school. Every few years, district officials upgrade the equipment on its towers, said technology director Adam Sorber. They just improved the tower equipment because the previous equipment couldn’t handle the gigabit-per-second speed of the district’s internet connection.

“If not for that WAN project about a decade ago and us erecting the towers and building our network ourselves, there still would be no solution in place that would be affordable for the district, or even available,” Sorber said.

Sorber hears complaints about residential internet service all the time from people in the area. For people who don’t like their internet connection, they can try satellite. But that costs more, and telephone calls made using wifi — which many people rely on because cell service is so poor — sometimes does not work as well through satellite.

“No matter what you way go, there’s a hurdle,” he said.

Contact the writers: joconnell@timesshamrock.com; 570-348-9131; bwellock@citizensvoice.com; 570-821-2051

At a glance: rural broadband

What is broadband?

It’s an internet connection with download speeds of 25 megabits per second, or Mbps, and upload speeds of 3 Mbps. Here are a few examples of what that gets you.

• Consumers can adequately browse the internet, stream videos from Netflix, play games online and connect multiple devices — all at the same time — at those speeds. You need at least 25 Mbps to stream Ultra HD 4K video, according to the FCC.

• It’s more than fast enough to facilitate credit card transactions for small businesses quickly and other commerce functions such as processing orders.

• For comparison’s sake, general web browsing and sending email requires about 1 Mbps. The 25-Mbps definition will likely change in the future, as more devices are added to “the internet of things,” requiring faster speeds for even routine tasks and activities.

Why is it important for rural communities?

Here’s what Norman J. Kennard, a member of the state Public Utility Commission, said about it: “ … rural broadband has substantial societal benefits, including: reducing medical costs, improving education for children and workers, leading to improved median household incomes and driving down unemployment, stimulating economic growth in communities, saving consumers money with better shopping opportunities, and providing increased farm revenue.”

Why don’t the FCC’s speed numbers match real user experience?

Internet service providers tell the FCC what speeds they offer in any given census tract, but that doesn’t mean customers are paying for those speeds or that extending cable lines to reach homes and businesses won’t cost more. Some lawmakers, researchers and tech companies say this way of measuring speeds is outdated, and it should be updated so the agencies that fund infrastructure improvement know where the problems are.

Why is broadband limited in rural areas?

Lower customer density means a higher cost per customer in rural areas for all sorts of infrastructure, including high-speed internet — so internet service providers make less money.

Has the country faced similar infrastructure challenges before?

In the 1930s, about 90% of people living in cities had access to electricity, but only about 10% of rural residents did. Private companies were not interested in bringing electricity to rural areas because they thought farmers wouldn’t be able to afford the service after it was installed, according to the Roosevelt Institute. The Rural Electrification Act of 1936, part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, helped bring electricity to rural America.

I can’t get on-land broadband cable to my house. What are my options?

Satellite TV companies provide high speed internet access, but people who use their satellite dishes for internet access have high-latency rates, or delays in the processing of information transfer, and brownouts under cloudy skies. In many cases, it also costs more than a wired connection. Contact your provider and ask what might be available.

What is the state government and the federal government doing about rural broadband access?

State and federal governments are investing funds to develop rural broadband internet.

In Pennsylvania, for example, Gov. Tom Wolf launched the Pennsylvania Broadband Investment Incentive Program, which made $35 million of incentive funding available to providers bidding on rural areas. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has made $600 million of grants and loans available for improving rural internet access. Last week, the FCC announced $121 million for broadband infrastructure improvements in 16 states including Pennsylvania.

 

 

 


Dean's list, Aug. 18, 2019

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Moravian

The following local residents made the dean’s list for the spring semester at Moravian College, Bethlehem:

Bradley Clemson, of Tamaqua; Ashlynn Forney, of Lykens; Adam Klatka, of Tamaqua; Alyssa Lambert, of Klingerstown; Kelsie Lynn, of Pottsville; Thaise McCauley, of Frackville; Riley McHugh, of Tamaqua; Ashley Strouphauer, of Auburn; Amy Trout, of Spring Glen.

Wyoming Seminary

Connor Kievman, of Minersville, achieved dean’s list high honors for the spring semester at Wyoming Seminary, Kingston.

King’s

The following local students qualified for the spring semester dean’s list at King’s College, Wilkes-Barre:

Amanda Pacenta, of Ashland; Brianne Pacenta, of Ashland; Lily Leymeister, of Auburn; Samantha Gnall, of Barnesville; Sydney Gnall, of Barnesville; Gena Williams, of Frackville; Bethany Ma-kuta, of McAdoo; Lyle Luckenbill, of Pottsville; Nicole Mcquillan, of Pottsville; Travis Steele, of Pottsville; William Tellez, of Pottsville; Alexis Washko, of Pottsville; Michael Ecker, of Quakake; Emily Kriston, of Tremont.

East Stroudsburg

The following local students were named to the spring semester dean’s list at East Stroudsburg University:

Mickayla Grow, of Lykens, communication sciences and disorders; Zara Albertini, of Pottsville, nursing; Amberly Blashock, of Mahanoy City, social work; Hannah Bruce, of Barnesville, communication sciences and disorders; Boston Cook, of Schuylkill Haven, sport management; Sadie Cresswell, of Pottsville, physical education teacher education; Nolan Fegley, of Barnesville, exercise science; Eric Fiorilla, of Tamaqua, criminal justice; Christina Fuehrer, of Zion Grove, accounting; Carly Gregas, of Ashland, communication sciences and disorders; Kyle Guers, of Shenandoah, computer science; Kelli Hughes, of Mahanoy City, nursing; Morgan Kadel, of Coaldale, medical technology; Julia Kutz, of Pottsville, communication sciences and disorders; Tiffany Lapotsky, of Ashland, exercise science; Grace Major, of Frackville, biology; Nico Makuta, of McAdoo, interdisciplinary studies; Melvin Mastishin, of Ashland, environmental studies; Jodie Mattern, of Schuylkill Haven, nursing; Shane Mcgrath, of Ashland, physical education teacher education; Lauren Petritsch, of Shenandoah, psychology; Anthony Vavra, of Coaldale, history; Magdelynn Wigoda, of Minersville, communication sciences and disorders; Kali Wilkinson, of Cressona, nursing; Steven Zimmerman, of Pine Grove, sport management.

Saint Francis

Brianna Dixon, of Frackville and Vanessa Valovage, of Lykens, achieved the President’s List for the spring semester at Saint Francis University, Loretto.

Rhode Island

Phuong Ngo, of Schuyl-kill Haven, was named to the University of Rhode Island spring semester dean’s list.

Scranton

The following local residents made the spring semester dean’s list at the University of Scranton:

Katie B. Zehner, of Orwigsburg, a freshman history major in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences; Alexa D. Romberger, of Valley View, a sophomore biochemistry major in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences; Alexis A. Wislotsky, of Ashland, a sophomore neuroscience major in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences; Emily R. Zehner, of Orwigsburg, a junior biology major in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences and Rebecca L. Petlansky, of Auburn, a sen-ior biology major in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences.

Hofstra

Eliza Moseman, of Hamburg, achieved a perfect 4.0 GPA during the spring semester, earning a spot on the Provost’s List at Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York.

Memunatu Dumashie, of Minersville; Derrick Hamilton, of Minersville, and Sarah Hanlon, of Hamburg, made the spring semester dean’s list at Hofstra.

Ithaca

Tessa Perchansky, an Ithaca College student from McAdoo, made the dean’s list for the spring semester.

Perchansky is majoring in health sciences at the college in Ithaca, New York.

Delaware

Kamryn Stablein, of Orwigsburg, made the spring semester dean’s list at the University of Delaware, Newark.

Alabama

Logan Derbes, of Pottsville, made the president’s list and Callie Dreher, of Schuylkill Haven, made the dean’s list for the spring semester at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.

Hartford

Courtney Krepps, of Schuylkill Haven, made the dean’s list for the spring se-mester at the University of Hartford, West Hartford, Connecticut.

Temple

Emily Heffner completed her first year at Temple School of Dentistry, Philadelphia, with a perfect 4.0 average.

Emily is a 2012 graduate of Blue Mountain High School, a 2016 graduate of the University of Virginia and a daughter of Susan and George Heffner, of Orwigsburg.

Loyola

Mark Boran, of Orwigsburg, made the spring semester dean’s list at Loyola University Maryland.

Pioneer Day celebrates anthracite region history

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ASHLAND — It was a fun time for visitors, vendors and organizations on Saturday as the 27th annual Pioneer Day celebrated the area’s anthracite coal mining heritage.

The event also celebrated the 57th anniversary of the founding of Pioneer Tunnel Coal Mine & Steam Train tourist attraction in Ashland. Visitors took the steam train ride around the Mahanoy Mountain, enjoyed the cool air of the underground tour of a formerly operating coal mine and bought souvenirs in the gift shop.

And, of course, there was the many food and craft vendors in Higher Up Park, which is where Pioneer Tunnel is located. Food is a big attraction at Pioneer Day, with people either enjoying their selections outside in the park on benches, swings and picnic tables, or going inside the park’s gazebo, where M&M Sandwich Shop, of Ashland, sold a large variety of food items.

A thunderstorm and downpour interrupted the event around 2 p.m., but the four hours preceding the storm brought hundreds of visitors as usual. People returned after the storm was over.

Business Manager Chastity Moran said most vendors and organizations continue to return year after year, and there is usually one new vendor each year.

“This year we added L&B Donuts from Turbotville. They have donuts and iced coffee,” Moran said. “We also have Willy’s Q Shack, who was here last year. They’re someone new for people who don’t come annually to Pioneer Day. We have two new craft vendors, bringing the count to 17. There are 13 food vendors. We have 10 community organizations. The new one is called Faery’s Felines, which is a cat rescue.”

One of the most popular food sites was the Wilburton Fire Company for their bleenies, along with rib-eye steak sandwiches. Mary Kay Concessions sold funnel cakes, including a special Coal Cracker Funnel Cake, and more. Groody Catering had its popular pizza, with or without its own hot sauce. Bethany Evangelical Congregational Church, Ashland, sold apple dumplings and peach sundaes, with the sundaes selling out about three hours after the event’s 10 a.m. start. Among others with stands were Ashland Boy Scouts Troop 745, North Parish Episcopal Church that includes St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church in Ashland, and Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Ashland.

Live music was provided by the band Light Weight, who performed for the first time this year.

“They are a band based out of Scranton. They do a lot of music festivals up there and I think they’re very well known up there,” Moran said.

Other entertainment was provided by The Breaker Boys, which includes Stu Richards and Tommy Symons Jr. Dressed in old-fashioned coal miners’ outfits, the duo performed inside the mine tunnel, pickin’ and grinnin’, playing mining songs from decades past, telling stories and jokes.

Moran and office assistant Kathy Lattis, who is the retired business manager, were asked about how many states are represented by visitors. Several years ago there were visitors from the 48 contiguous states. Lattis said there have been visitors from all 50. Moran said due to student exchange programs, many countries have been represented, including China. Moran said those students were very interested in coal mining, which is a large industry in China.

One of the regular food vendors is Ashland Lodge No. 294 Free and Accepted Masons, which sells the popular chicken barbecue dinners. The dinners normally sell out every year. Lodge member John Denchak and his wife, Cheryl Denchak, who is a member of the Ashland Chapter No. 154 of the Order of the Eastern Star, enjoyed a chicken dinner in the gazebo. Both are from Gordon.

“We always sell out of chicken,” John Denchak said. “We usually sell about 200 dinners and we sell out normally about 2:30.”

Denchak said the Masons have been holding the Pioneer Day dinners for at least 12 years. He said another group had been selling chicken and decided not to continue.

“The Amish used to sell chicken by the piece,” Denchak said. “When they decided not to come, Kathy Lattis called us and asked us to come. She knew we did one every September at the lodge. We decided to give it a try. We used to set up the cinder blocks, but now we have someone with a trailer and we do it in the trailer. It’s a lot easier.”

Lines of people to board The Henry Clay lokie were continuous through the day. The engine was constructed in the 1920s and was recently refurbished from top to bottom. A rolling monument to anthracite coal mining, the train takes people on a 3/4-mile ride around the mountain and presents information on strip mining.

Operated by Ashland Community Enterprises, Pioneer Tunnel is one of Pennsylvania’s top 10 tourist attractions, bringing in thousands of people each year to learn about the heritage of anthracite coal mining in Northeast Pennsylvania.

The first Pioneer Day was held to celebrate the tourist attraction’s 30th anniversary in 1992. It has grown from a very small group of crafters to enough vendors to fill much of Higher Up Park.

Contact the writer: jusalis@republicanherald.com; 570-628-6023

Mom complains about medical care for prisoner

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POTTSVILLE — The mother of a man held in Schuylkill County Prison complained Wednesday that her son had received inadequate medical treatment that contributed to his hospitalization.

“This should never have happened,” she said during the monthly meeting of the county prison board.

She said she knew nothing of her son’s illness until she received a call from Lehigh Valley Hospital-Muhlenberg in Bethlehem.

“He’s here. He’s in a medically induced coma,” was the message, the woman told the board.

That revelation surprised county President Judge William E. Baldwin, who also chairs the board.

“We were not aware of that circumstance,” he said. However, Baldwin said he could not discuss any specific details of the matter without improperly revealing private medical information.

The woman also said her son showed tremors and fever while at the prison, running a fever of 104.7 degrees, but did not receive proper treatment while there.

After the meeting, Warden Eugene Berdanier also said he could not discuss details of the case due to medical privacy laws.

“It was an ongoing medical issue,” was all he would say.

Commissioner Gary J. Hess, also a board member, said he was surprised at what he heard.

“Any prisoner there is in our care,” he said. “Their health is taken care of pretty well.”

Also at the meeting, the board voted to promote John Roshannon to a full-time corrections officer from a part-time one. He replaces Timothy Henning, who resigned effective July 23.

The board also announced that part-time corrections officer Austin Ritchie will be resigning his position, effective Monday.

Berdanier also said the prison population as of Wednesday is 254, 201 men and 53 women, down from a July peak of 276.

Contact the writer: pbortner@republicanherald.com; 570-628-6014

College notes, Aug. 18, 2019

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East Stroudsburg

Austin Womer, of Mar Lin, studied in Honduras over the summer through a program at East Stroudsburg University.

Womer was one of 66 students in eight faculty-led study abroad trips that took students to China, Costa Rica, Central Europe, Spain, Honduras, Mexico, U.S. Virgin Islands and Guatemala.

Alvernia

Lexus Jordan, of Hegins, was named a student ambassador at Alvernia University for the 2019-20 academic year.

Jordan is majoring in occupational therapy at Alvernia.

Abby Fiorilla, of New Ringgold, spent a week of the summer break volunteering in Reading, Berks County, through Alvernia’s Alternative Break program.

Fiorilla is studying for a master’s in occupational therapy at the university.

Wilkes

Molly Yuschock, of Ashland, a biology major, completed summer research at Wilkes University, Wilkes-Barre.

Lisa Kadlec, associate professor of biology, is working with students as they research cell signaling and how that critical part of cell function impacts the development of organisms. Kadlec’s research has focuses on the signaling of the epidermal growth factor receptor in the cells of drosophila, more commonly known as fruit flies.

They are isolating DNA from mutant flies for sequencing, and collecting and analyzing eggs from mutants that have already been sequenced. The fruit fly is used as a model system for understanding previously unknown genes and figuring out what role those genes have for development.

The results of her study will help to identify both the way the epidermal growth factor impacts normal development and also has implications when normal cell function is disrupted, causing diseases such as cancer.

Central Penn

Accounting major Parker Rose, of Pottsville, was honored with the Jack of All Trades award for his many activities and participation in school events and programming at Central Penn College, Summerdale.

On the Summerdale campus, Rose is the president of The Central Penn Players, treasurer of the Armed Forces Association and a member of the Colleges Against Cancer Club and the Knightly News Media Club.

Muhlenberg

Jacob Metcalfe, Class of 2021, of Hamburg, received The Miriam E. Koehler Award for Excellence in Mathematics at Muhlenberg College, Allentown. It is awarded to a first-year or sophomore mathematics student for excellence in mathematics.

Univ. of Sciences

Leah Evert, of Orwigsburg, was among the newest members from University of the Sciences inducted into the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy Alpha Tau Chapter of Rho Chi, the Academic Honor Society in Pharmacy. The Rho Chi Honor Society recognizes and encourages academic excellence.

Kutztown

Alyssa McDonald, of New Ringgold, and Madison Szczecina, of Orwigsburg, were among 21 students inducted into Kappa Delta Pi, the International Honor Society in Education, at Kutztown University.

Emmeline Knowlan, of New Ringgold, was among 38 students at Kutztown who were inducted into the Tau Sigma National Transfer Honor Society. Tau Sigma is a growing organization on campus for transfer students.

Madison Szczecina, of Orwigsburg, was one of 12 students inducted into the Mu Xi chapter of Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society at Kutztown.

Derek Keich, of Tamaqua, was one of 26 students inducted into Sigma Delta Pi National Hispanic Honor Society at Kutztown.

Brooke Marton, of Tamaqua, was one of 31 Kutztown students inducted into the Psi Chi International Honor Society in Psychology at its annual induction ceremony this spring.

Jordan Pettit, of Orwigsburg, was one of 11 Kutztown students to be inducted into the Alpha Epsilon chapter of Alpha Kappa Delta, the International Sociology Honor Society, at its annual induction ceremony.

Kutztown University inducted 18 students into its 2019 class of Alpha Phi Sigma the National Honor Society for Criminal Justice, at its annual induction ceremony. Kayla Brown,of New Ringgold, was among the inductees.

Letecia Garcia, of Pottsville, and Carly Rinda, of Tamaqua, were among 10 students inducted into the 2019 class of Alpha Epsilon Lambda, National Honor Society for Graduate and Professional Students, at Kutztown.

More than 180 Kutztown students were inducted into the National Society of Leadership and Success as part of the spring 2019 class. To be inducted, students must at-tend an orientation, a three-hour leadership training seminar, three success networking team meetings and three speaker broadcasts featuring leading figures delivering success-related messages to members.

Local students who were among the inductees include: Kyle Binder, of New Ringgold; Julia Conville, of Pottsville; Rachel Conville, of Pottsville; Natasha Cunningham, of Mahanoy City; Amanda Guldin, of Pottsville; Victoria Pascucci, of Auburn; Baylie Schneck, of Pine Grove.

Christina Kofchock, of Hamburg, was one of 40 students inducted into the Alpha Sigma Lambda Honor Society for adult learners at Kutztown.

Judy Lin, of Lansford, was one of 44 students inducted into the Chi Omega Upsilon chapter of the Chi Sigma Iota Honor Society for counseling at Kutztown. Chi Sigma Iota is an international honor society for counseling students, professional counselors and counselor educators.

Daniel Johns, of Orwigsburg, was one of 12 students inducted into the Sigma Pi Sigma Honor Society for physics at Kutztown.

Lebanon Valley

Stephanie Senglar, of Frackville, a graduate of North Schuylkill High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in English, studied abroad over the summer in Ormskirk, England.

For education majors only (early childhood and secondary education), students enrolled in the LVC faculty leaderIs EDU 450 course, Teaching the Young Adolescent, Aged 10-15, at Edge Hill University in Ormskirk and earn three writing process course credits. Students learned through in-class instruction, host school visits for teaching observations and excursions to museums and popular tourist attractions.

James Garraway, of Frackville, a graduate of North Schuylkill High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and molecular biology, conducted summer science research.

Garraway is assembling and analyzing the expansin gene superfamily in Chara braunii and Cuscuta australis. Expansins are plant proteins that mediate cell wall extension during growth and development. Chara is a green alga that represents the algal lineage that is most closely related to land plants. All land plants have expansins, but the antecedents of these genes in their algal relatives are not well characterized.

Cuscuta is a parasitic flowering plant that has undergone a physical simplification in response to its lifestyle. This typically leads to a reduction in expansin diversity.

Liberty Geist, of Hegins, a graduate of Tri-Valley High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in biology, participated in Research First, a program that provides opportunities for incoming LVC freshmen to spend four weeks working with college faculty/student research teams during the summer before their freshman year of college.

Brendan Yoder, of Hamburg, a graduate of Hamburg Area High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and molecular biology, researched three coordinated gold (I) complexes: synthesis; characterization and photophysical properties of mixed, water-soluble phosphino ligands. The complexes are of use in light-harvesting and light-emitting devices. Yoder is also participating in Research First.

James Garraway and Liberty Geist also presented research at a Disappearing Boundaries meeting. Other science students who presented at the meeting include: Samantha Smith, of Hamburg, a graduate of Hamburg Area High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in physics and mathematics; Brendan Yoder,of Hamburg, a graduate of Hamburg Area High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and molecular biology.

Melissa Sorensen, of Tower City, a graduate of Williams Valley High School pursuing a bachelor’s degree in English, served as assistant editor of Lebanon Valley’s literary magazine called “Green Blotter.” The work features poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction and art submitted by undergraduates everywhere.

Saint Clair woman seeks to aid Sjogren's sufferers

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A Saint Clair woman wants to help others suffering with Sjogren’s, an autoimmune disease.

Sjogren’s — pronounced “Show grins” — affects four million Americans, according to the Sjogren’s Syndrome Foundation website, www.sjogrens.org. There is no cure.

Doris Chizmar, who was diagnosed with the condition in 1980 following a lip biopsy, said she’d like to begin a Sjogren’s support group in Schuylkill County as early as the end of this month.

“This would be the first one in the county,” Chizmar said.

The goal would be to meet once a month at 2 p.m. on Wednesdays at Vito’s Coal Fired Pizza in Saint Clair. Meals would be paid for by each participant.

An exact start date will depend on people contacting Chizmar of their interest in the group. She said if anyone called her during Sjogren’s Awareness Month in April to please leave a message with their name and number again.

Chizmar had an appointment to see a doctor in Philadelphia Tuesday. Sjogren’s had attacked her parotid gland, causing pain, and making her face swell on the right side, she said. Chizmar said her condition also caused her to have a dry mouth and dry eyes, speech and sleep difficulties, throbbing joint pains and aching muscles.

“Sjogren’s can also cause dysfunction of organs such as the kidneys, gastrointestinal system, blood vessels, lungs, liver, pancreas and the central nervous system. Patients also have a higher risk of developing lymphoma,” the SSF website states.

Chizmar has operated a support group in the county before. In the 1980s, she ran one for women afflicted with endometriosis, which involves tissue that normally lines the inside instead growing outside the uterus.

For more information, call Chizmar at 570-429-0303.

Contact the writer: ; 570-628-6007

Hermitage in Pitman cultivates state-approved fiber hemp test plot

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PITMAN — A crop once raised on Pitman farmland in the early 19th century — fiber hemp — returned to the picturesque valley this year courtesy of seeds from France and the curiosity of Brothers Johannes and Christian Zinzendorf.

The brothers operate The Hermitage, a Harmonist spiritual center in Eldred Township, which became the first farm in the Tri-Valley area to grow a state-approved test plot of fiber hemp.

“We’ve been collecting hemp tools for more than 30 years, but never had hemp to process. We thought it was a great opportunity for us and it was time to try something new,” Johannes said.

They found estate documents from their property that showed there were both hemp and flax being produced there years ago. The Zinzendorfs have been producing flax for years.

Hemp was a course fiber that was used to make tough cloth and tow ropes which could pull vessels through canals, like those in Landingville along the Schuylkill River, Johannes said.

Female plants

After hearing a National Public Radio broadcast with Erica McBride Stark, executive director of the Pennsylvania Hemp Industry Council, at the State Farm Show in 2018, Johannes said it sparked their interest in trying to grow the crop. The brothers visited an existing fiber hemp grower in the Oley Valley last year.

Seed for the 50-by-100-foot plot came from France and was provided by the PHIC. The Zinzendorfs’ hemp plot is under PHIC auspices.

McBride Stark worked with the state Department of Agriculture to obtain the necessary permit, according to Johannes. She and her husband, noted hemp researcher Les Stark, helped the brothers plant the plot using traditional hand broadcasting of the seed in early June on ground the Zinzendorfs had fertilized. Other growers use a seed drill machine for planting in rows, instead of the planting by hand method.

The state regulates growth of hemp seed, Johannes explained. There are male and female hemp plants, but the brothers are only raising female plants.

As of Friday, many of the plants were approaching 10 to 12 feet tall and are soon ready to harvest. The quickly growing plants, growing closely together, choke out weeds. The closeness of the stalks also prevents the plants from sending outside branches and keeps the stalks growing straight and tall.

There are other varieties of industrial hemp for different commercial purposes, including those that produce seed for CBD oil.

Ret or rot

“This year is an experiment so we can learn the best growing conditions for fiber hemp and how to process it to make hemp cloth,” Christian said.

The brothers are learning how to grow fiber hemp this season and, equally important, how to ret, or rot, the plant stalks so the spinnable fibers attached to the outside of the pithy stalks can be separated and then spun and woven. The brothers will not be raising fiber hemp on a commercial basis or with modern equipment, but will use traditional, hand-operated tools as was done on early German farms in the area.

They’ll compare two retting methods: pond retting, in which the stalks are fully submerged, as they are currently doing with their flax crop, and ground retting, in which the stalks are laid on the ground for a longer period.

Christian demonstrated the hand harvesting method of cutting the stalks at a 45 degree angle with a hemp knife. Hemp, which is also known as a bast fiber, will bend if it’s cut at a straight angle, he said.

Submerging the hemp in the pond water helps to break down the fiber. There’s pectin within the plant, and the pond bacteria helps to eat away at the pectin, making the fiber more accessible for separating.

The process can take two weeks for the hemp stalks to stand in shocks, which look similar to tripods. The stalks are then submerged in water for about four days. Conversely, the ground drying method can take a few months, and the stalks, which are laying flat on the ground, must be turned over to avoid rotting.

A hemp comb is used to separate the fibers into usable strands that can be woven or made into rope.

“Area farmers should consider adding industrial hemp as one of their crops,” Johannes said.

Crop applications

State Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding in January announced the state had submitted its plan for industrial hemp to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and was going to reopen the 2019 program to include applications for commercial growing operations.

Industrial hemp and marijuana are different varieties of the same species of plant.

“Unlike marijuana, industrial hemp is grown mainly for fiber and seed, and must maintain a much lower concentration of the psychoactive chemical tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, below the 0.3 percent legal threshold,” a Department of Agriculture release states.

Educators at the Penn State Extension office in Pottsville reported in January there were a few county farmers interested in producing commercial hemp, but at that time there were no other county farmers raising it.

Researchers used an undisclosed location in Schuylkill County in the spring of 2017 to study the viability of industrial hemp production in the state.

Brite Lite Organics, of Baltimore, Maryland, was to oversee the management of the hemp crop production and AgriLogic PA LLC, Philadelphia, was slated to grow it.

The Pitman test plot can be viewed at the eastern end of the Hermitage property at 75 Grove Road. Farmers interested in the commercial production of fiber and seed hemp can find out more at the council’s website, www.pahic.org, or by calling McBride Stark at 610-468-2311. She can explain the state requirements to obtain a grower’s permit. The Hermitage can be reached at 570-492-4832.

Contact the writer: ; 570-628-6007

Upper Dauphin Area students head back to class

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Upper Dauphin Area students return to the classroom today for the start of the 2019-20 school year, about a week earlier than most other districts.

On Tuesday, Aug. 13, the school board approved several actions, readying the district for the academic year. Director Kirk Wenrich was absent and Director Mills Eure attended later in the meeting.

The board approved nine students to provisionally participate in the vocational-agriculture program at UDA High School, reimbursed at the state approved tuition rate. They included four students from Millersburg Area School District, three from Northern Dauphin Christian School and one each from Halifax Area and the 21st Century Cyber School.

Directors approved several personnel matters, involving teachers, aides and event staff. Among them, the board accepted the resignation of Vicki Smith, biology teacher, effective at the start of the 2019-20 school year, and hired Patricia Weaver as a high school biology teacher at a salary of $57,504.

The board accepted the resignation from Danielle Smyre, school psychologist, effective Oct. 7, 2019, or until the position is filled.

Jared Shade, assistant to the superintendent, offered presentations on a Penn College visit and on Hyde School.

In other business, the board approved:

• More than 140 program volunteers and 14 substitute teachers for the 2019-20 school year.

• Authorizing the superintendent to temporarily approve bus drivers to start the 2019-20 school year.

• A contract with Susquenita School District to provide special education services.

• A sponsor-to-sponsor agreement to sell or purchase meals between the district and Keystone Service Systems.

• An emergency medical services agreement between Community Life Team Inc. and the district.

The next school board meeting is at 7 p.m. Sept. 10 in Loyalton.

Contact the writer: ; 570-628-6007


Vacantproperty partially collapses

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GIRARDVILLE — A partial collapse of a structure occurred after 9 p.m. Sunday on West Mahanoy Avenue in the borough.

According to Ranger’s Hose Company firefighters who responded to the call, one wall on the vacant home at 341 W. Mahanoy Ave. fell toward the back of the property along Ogden Street, although not close enough to the street to cause any endangerment. The extent of the damage will be determined by the borough today.

According to the Schuylkill Parcel Locator, the property is owned by Otto J. Wolfgang and Walter C. Wolfgang.

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ASHLAND — A parishioner of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in the borough provided free haircuts Sunday afternoon to give back for the help and kindness she received during some tough times.

Licensed cosmetologist Rhonda Heidlebaugh, of Frackville, spent her afternoon in the church’s fellowship hall to give the haircuts to anyone who walked in. There were no reservations needed. Just walk in and get clipped by a professional and then leave with a great haircut and feeling good.

For those who missed Sunday haircuts, Heidlebaugh will be back from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at the church. For more information, contact the church office at 570-875-2581.

The turnout was light Sunday, but Heidlebaugh and the Rev. Dana Heckman-Beil, pastor, expect more people to come Friday and Saturday. The free haircuts are open to everyone. No reservations are being taken. Haircuts are first come, first served.

“Originally it was going to be back to school haircuts, but then we just decided free haircuts for everyone,” Beil said. “The haircuts are done in 20-minute increments. Basically you show up on any of those days, and wait for a free haircut. If someone wishes to give a donation, folks can give a donation to the church that will go directly to our youth ministry program.”

Heidlebaugh, who is the manager of Great Clips salon in Hershey, brought her own professional chair from her home, where she sometimes does haircuts for family members and friends.

“I work at the salon in Hershey, but I started at the Great Clips in Hometown,” Heidlebaugh said. “Anyone who gets a haircut will get a $2 coupon from the owner for Hometown or Hershey.”

An early customer was Ethan Briggs, of Ashland, who was getting a haircut for the upcoming school year at North Schuylkill High School. Briggs was very pleased with the cut.

Heidlebaugh explained why she wanted to offer the free service.

“I wanted to give back to a community that gave so much to me,” she said between haircuts. “I figured there are kids whose parents who can’t afford haircuts, so I want to help give haircuts for kids going back to school or even for their parents to make people feel better. I wanted to give them the opportunity.”

Heidlebaugh, who is an Ashland native, continued, “I had struggled with a lot of things in my life like drug and alcohol addiction and things like that. I grew up in Ashland and moved away for a little while. I moved to Colorado and came back to Ashland. I started coming back to church. When I came back to the community, I was scared that nobody would help me or accept me. When I came back to the church, they took me in their arms and helped me out in all kinds of ways. They helped me get back on my feet. Pastor Dana and the congregation here helped me. Now I’ve built myself back up with the help of them to become a salon manager.”

Heidlebaugh earned her cosmetology license in 2001.

“Before that I worked as assistant at a salon in Minersville for years,” she said. “Then I worked there for a few years and got my license.”

When asked what she enjoys about working in cosmetology, she said, “I like to help people and make them feel better about themselves. Sometimes you just don’t feel good about yourself and a haircut can completely change everything. It makes you feel better, it makes you feel cooler, it just makes everything. For kids going back to school, I feel it gives them more confidence. I love to do transition haircuts or give one to someone who hasn’t had a haircut in a long time, or they’ve been in the hospital. I give them a haircut and they feel so much better.”

The hair supplies she used came from a grant from Thrivent Financial, which is a not-for-profit financial services organization founded by Lutherans.

“When she returned, it took her about six months before she rejoined as a member,” Beil said. “She wanted people to know that she was going to be an active member and be part of who we are. She had the idea about doing this. August was chosen because it’s the time to get ready to go back to school.”

Contact the writer: jusalis@republicanherald.com; 570-628-6023

CBD products sold at store in Pottsville

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POTTSVILLE — CBD popcorn, gummie bears, chocolates, oil, dog bones and vaping supplies are among the items for sale at a new store in the city.

Chesco Hemp Co., located at 1600 W. Market St., opened July 15 and has a steady business, owners said.

“Most people are coming in here because curiosity finally got the better of them,” Max Copeland, a co-owner with Charlie Morgan, said Tuesday.

He said the Pottsville police have been in the store to field test the merchandise to make sure it complies with applicable law.

A test they passed.

“The hype is real. These products flat out work,” Copeland said.

The store takes precautions from anyone under 18 walking through the door by checking for identification.

“I don’t want to see teens vaping. I don’t want to see teens smoking,” Copeland said.

The company has three locations in Dowington, Chester County, Renninger’s Auction, North Manheim Township and Pottsville.

CBD, or cannabidiol, is found in the hemp plant. It contains very little THC, or tetrahydrocannabiol, which is responsible for the “high” one experiences from marijuana.

Aid for ailments

CBD can be used for a wide variety of ailments, including anxiety, insomnia and inflammation. Copeland said people also take it to reduce the severity of seizures. People should ask their medical doctor about any potential drug interactions.

The 2018 Farm Bill provided for the removal of hemp, which has very low amounts of THC — 0.3 percent — from the Schedule 1 Controlled Substances Act, which is a list of drugs regulated by the federal government. The United States Food and Drug Administration has approved one drug, Epidiolex, for specific disorders caused by seizures.

Carey Granger, store manager, said he asks potential customers what they want the CBD for before he suggests it.

“Hemp, no matter how you take it, helps you,” Granger said.

“It helps calm you down,” Morgan said.

The hemp that the company sells in some of its products comes from locations in Lancaster and Chester counties.

“Anybody can put anything in a bottle and say it is CBD oil. We have lab reports to back it up,” Copeland said of the reports sent to the state Department of Agriculture.

Granger said he’s seen firsthand the relief CBD can give people.

“I had a lady come in, her hands were cramped,” he said, noting the woman had not been able to move her hands in a year.

Within 30 minutes of taking a CBD product, she was able to move them, he said. Granger said the woman was so shocked she started crying.

Copeland said there is a stigma attached to using CBD.

“A lot of people are afraid. They look at it like it’s marijuana,” he said.

Copeland understands why people would be skeptical but asks them to do their own research before coming to conclusions.

He said the company plans to have a website to sell products

“We are going to launch our products on a national stage,” Copeland said. “Our website will be up within a month.”

Caution remains

In a news release last month, the FDA urged consumers to use caution when deciding to use CBD.

“The FDA approval process ensures that drugs on the market are safe and effective for their intended therapeutic uses. CBD is marketed in a variety of product types, such as oil drops, capsules, syrups, teas and topical lotions and creams,” the release notes. “Often such products are sold online and are therefore available throughout the country. Other than one prescription human drug product to treat rare, severe forms of epilepsy, (Epidiolex) the FDA has not approved any other CBD products, and there is very limited information for other marketed CBD products, which likely differ in composition from the FDA-approved product and have not been evaluated for potential adverse effects on the body.

“Unlike drugs approved by the FDA, the manufacturing process of these products has not been subject to FDA review as part of the drug approval process, and there has been no FDA evaluation of whether these products are effective for their intended use, what the proper dosage is, how they could interact with FDA-approved drugs, or whether they have dangerous side effects or other safety concerns. Unsubstantiated claims associated with CBD products may lead consumers to put off getting important medical care, such as proper diagnosis, treatment and supportive care. For that reason, it’s important that consumers talk to a health care professional about the best way to treat diseases or conditions with existing, approved treatment options.

“The FDA also cautions pet owners against the use of such products and recommends talking with a veterinarian about appropriate treatment options for pets. The agency also has not approved cannabis or cannabis-derived compounds like CBD for any use in animals and cannot ensure the safety or effectiveness of these products.”

Contact the writer: ; 570-628-6028

Nostalgia lingers at Long Trout in celebration of Woodstock’s 50th

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AUBURN — The precarious wooden staircase spills down the hill into the Art Nouveau, Hobbit-hole doors of the Long Trout Winery.

Behind the doors is a pleasure palace of Baby Boomer nostalgia, a place where the free-loving, psychedelic-rocking Age of Aquarius never ended — although it certainly has ended.

“One word: groovy,” said Tom Leibensperger, 66, about life in 1969, the year of Woodstock.

A self-taught winemaker, Leibensperger founded Long Trout with his wife, Kim, in 2001. Wearing sandals, his white hair in a ponytail, he’s a tie-dyed-in-the-wool hippie.

On Sunday, the 50th anniversary of Woodstock’s last day, Leibensperger has opened up his Xanadu, carved into the hillside and overlooking a blue-green lake, to a celebration.

“It’s cool, it’s peace,” Leibensperger said, “Peace and cool.”

To him, that’s why the hippie movement is worth keeping alive.

Looking around, Long Trout clearly lives up to Leibensperger’s mission statement; to be different from any other winery.

The standee in front of the doors was just the beginning. There are practically more “Wizard of Oz” collectibles than there were wines — bobbleheads, dolls, Jack-in-the-boxes and a disturbingly realistic life-size replica of the Wicked Witch of the West looked down on the sea of tie-dye shirts, headbands and fringe jackets swarmed the bar, eating fistfuls of pretzels on the trippy tabletop, which had a picket sign on it reading “Draft beer, not people.”

Above the Oz hodgepodge, medieval weapons hung on the walls. The cobwebbed claws of a skeletal dragon held a great silver sword. He also has every piece of erotic kitsch and classic-rock memorabilia that you can imagine, dredged up from rock festivals and antique markets across the country.

“I’ve collected my whole life,” Leibensperger said. “I’ve collected stuff since I was a kid.”

Born in Reading, he was a drummer and organist in a rock band called the Nation Dwellers. In a glass case inside the secondary fermentation chamber, along with gleaming metal vats and action figures of his favorite rock stars, was the Beatles wig that he got in 1964, the height of Beatlemania (“Wore it for two weeks straight. It smelled really bad.”)

The feeling of freedom made him gravitate toward the hippie movement, but his grandparents wouldn’t let him go to Woodstock. To Leibensperger, it’s “the hippie way” to be unconventional, and that includes the winemaking process, from putting elderflowers into chardonnay to filtering with his bare hands.

The Long Trout selection includes names like Dirty Dees, Flower Power and Burnin’ Bra. Speaking of which, a couple of rotting bras tied to a tree marks the first hole of the disc golf course on his property (a game founded by hippies, he said), which he is proud to announce is completely free.

“It ain’t about the money, it’s about the friends,” he said. “You can quote me on that!”

Among all of the naughty, punning bumper stickers that Leibensperger has collected over the years, there’s one he almost takes seriously: “Buckle up!” it reads. “It makes it harder for the aliens to suck you out of your car.”

“I believe they’re real,” Leibensperger said about aliens. “I believe they’re already here on they’re already here on Earth. I believe that everything you see here is real.”

What he means by “that” is a real trip indeed. Even in a place like this, where African sculptures, Santa Clauses and California Raisins, a place that is at once spiritual and sacrilegious, the crown jewel of Leibensperger’s collection is a masterpiece of outsider art. All across a wall is a series of extremely detailed pencil drawings that Leibensperger purchased along with another winery. Made by the previous owner’s son, Larry, they depict aliens, UFOs and secret codes. Larry believed that he cracked the code of the aliens’ speech and could translate it into English, and had a sort of Rosetta stone to prove it.

“I don’t know whether he thinks the aliens caused it, didn’t like it, or were just watching,” Leibensperger said, gesturing toward a drawing of UFOs circling over the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant during the 1979 accident. He continues moving through the tapestry of UFO design schematics and language charts.

“Now this chick has the alien symbol.”

Larry also believed that aliens built the pyramids to use as nuclear reactors, and he made diagrams to prove it.

“I’m assuming the guy was on the ship and they fed this to his brain,” Leibensperger said. “How could one guy come up with all this stuff? This guy has too much to just be a regular guy, you know what I’m saying? People come to see the alien wall, they love the alien wall.”

Outside the fermentation chamber, far removed from Larry’s close encounters, the latter-day hippies were mostly chill, except for one woman who shrieked and kicked up her legs as she tried to blow a wasp away from her table.

Inside the bar, people shimmied and shook to the guitar and harmonica stylings of Walter Petrachonis, 66, who played counterculture songs of the era.

Petrachonis performs under the stage name Fortunate Son.

“I’d like to say (it was) very liberating,” he said about the hippie era, when he was in high school. “If I went to Woodstock I wouldn’t have a home to come back to.”

He remembered it as a very uncertain era.

“No one knew their future,” Petrachonis said. “You watched the TV at night, looking for your draft number.”

“It stood for something, it made a statement.” He said about the music. “It was about something. Protest. Inequality. If you don’t remember it, you are destined to repeat it. And the Vietnam War is something that should never be repeated. But it will be, because our politicians are aching for another one.”

After shaking hands with a guy named Darryl, who claimed that his great-uncle was the sheriff on “The Rifleman,” Fortunate Son continued his set.

“Do any of you remember a band called Country Joe and the Fish?” He asked the crowd to cheers. “If you don’t, then get out.”

He led the crowd in a rendition of Country Joe’s “Vietnam Song,” which begins with a chant that cannot be printed — but the crowd was eager to participate in. Suddenly it was 1969 again, but a lot had changed. Wine was the drug of choice. The only person smoking marijuana was a painting of the Mona Lisa that hung in the bar. However, the spirit was still there.

“Thank you,” said a man driving away from the party, leaving the hippie life for another 50 years. “See you next trip.”

Symbolic stair climb kicks off 65th Schuylkill firefighters convention

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TAMAQUA — A Lebanon County firefighter said Sunday he can’t imagine what it must have been like for firefighters to climb the steps of World Trade Center during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

On Sunday, Scott Imm and several firefighters from Schuylkill County and beyond experienced the climb firsthand. They climbed and descended the 15 stories of the Tamaqua High Rise seven times. They ended with a five-story climb and rang a bell in honor of firefighter line-of-duty deaths nationally for 2018.

The climb in Schuylkill County’s tallest building was symbolic of the 110 floors of the World Trade Center. The debut event was part of the 65th annual Schuylkill County Volunteer Firefighters Convention, which the Tamaqua Fire Department is sponsoring this year.

“This is nothing compared to that. It is worth the sacrifice to remember them,” Imm, 48, said.

Imm is a Hazmat technician and firefighter with the Lebanon County Hazmat and Special Operations and a member of the South Lebanon Township Fire Department, Station 25.

Admitting it was a challenge, Imm said he can’t fathom what firefighters must have been thinking as they went to save others.

“It’s hard to put yourself in that situation,” he said.

Tamaqua Fire Chief Jim Connely said the inspiration for the climb came from the one from The National Fallen Firefighters Foundation does in honor of the 343 New York firefighters who died in the Sept. 11 attacks.

The $510 in proceeds from the registration were given to the Lehigh Valley Health Network Regional Burn Center, Allentown.

Colin Atkinson, 24, a Pottsville firefighter who completed the climb, has a remembrance of that day tattooed on his right arm: The 911 cross, which is made of steel, and the rubble from the collapse of the buildings.

“It happened. People lost their lives,” he said.

Jay Stidham, 34, a firefighter with American Hose in Tamaqua, said he came because it is a good cause. While he was tired, said the firefighters must have been “exhausted” as they were trying to save lives.

Connely said the last time the convention was held in the borough was 2009. He said firefighters feel pride for hosting it.

“We are proud to show off Tamaqua. We are proud to host the county,” he said.

The climb and a memorial service held at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tamaqua kicked off the convention week. A training event will be held at 7 p.m. today in the Tamaqua Area Middle School auditorium and a delegates meeting will take place at Thursday evening at New England Valley Fire Company in Walker Township.

The convention concludes Saturday with the annual parade that begins at 1 p.m. on West Broad Street and ends on the borough’s east end with refreshments in the area of the old CVS store and Maff Motors, according to the Tamaqua Fire Department’s website.

Contact the writer: ; 570-628-6028

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