LOCAL, STATE AND NATIONAL MUSINGS

Mar 17, 2022

Duck Paté Once Again At Cedar Park


In yesterday's post, I wrote about the Poison Hemlock and other invasive species taking over the creek banks in the Allentown Park System. This is a result of the ill-advised riparian buffers, promoted by the Wildlands Conservancy.

Yesterday morning the park department started to clear cut the stream banks in Cedar Park, the only way to get rid of the invasives. Removing them by hand would require the labor of the whole department, for the whole summer.

The buffers serve no ecological purpose in Allentown, because the storm water is piped directly into the streams, under the buffers.  However, the Wildlands Conservancy never lets specific realities get in the way of their generalized science.

These faux buffers have numerous victims. Yesterday this year's batch of ducklings were turned into paté  and mulch, when the mower went over their nests. For the rest of the summer, the city will allow the faux buffer to grow,  blocking both view and access to the creek.  It's not a good plan for the ducks or the children.

Allentown should defer to General Trexler's landscape architect, and again allow its citizens to enjoy the parks, as designed.

above reprinted from May of 2020

ADDENDUM MARCH 15, 2021: Hopefully this post can save some ducklings this year. I humbly suggest that the park department change mowing policy for the hatching season. Certain sections of the creek and lake banks could be kept mowed, which would discourage nesting.  Other sections could remain growing, until which time the ducks have left the nests. 

ADDENDUM MARCH 17, 2022: Despite my best efforts, the ducklings were mowed once again last season. As spring surges the ducks are pairing up. Saving them requires more effort from  the park department. Those areas they deem as must be mowed, must first be thoroughly inspected for nests. The best policy would be to suspend mowing from mid-March to mid-June.

Mar 16, 2022

Allentown's Quality Of Life Border

A reader recently commented that he lives Allentown, and is sticking it out, as opposed to those who moved out to Parkland.  This is easy to say when you live in Allentown's west end, because the quality of life border isn't at Cedar Crest Blvd., but rather at about 12th Street. 

As the weather gets warmer, the streets get louder and more marred by litter.  Between Front and 7th Streets you're likely to encounter junior motorbike gangs, which ignore both stop lights and one way destinations.

With Tuerk and Roca there's a new sheriff in town, and it's a new town indeed.  We who remember when Dodge was quiet, remember a different Allentown. 

I suspect that in coming years this may seem like the good old days. Despite historically low mortgage rates, the current grossly inflated real estate frenzy will result in buyer's remorse and abandoned properties.

I can appreciate that my predictions will not be used for the city's public relations...For that kind of spin I recommend the Morning Call.

Mar 15, 2022

Business As Usual At The Morning Call

This blog promotes itself as a chronicle of local history and politics. Politically, besides for my park and WPA advocacy, my sole recommendation has been for more officers on the police force.  It's not that I don't have a wish list for other changes, but realistically in this one party town, only the police force is critical for the town's survival. 

It was gratifying to see in the Morning Call that both Chief Roca and Mayor Tuerk are pitching to beef up the force.  Interesting that councilman Josh Siegel, now interested in a state rep seat, supports the increase.  Not that long ago he was marching with the Defund crowd. 

The Morning Call's new city beat reporter, Lindsay Weber, included Hasshan Batts in her article, who would be the chief benefactor of the Defund movement.

The paper continues its tradition of its Go To people for quotes, who include Ce-Ce Gerlach, in addition to Batts.  As a long time inner-city landlord, I can tell you what is wrong with the Gerlach/Batts recommendation to fight poverty in order to fight crime. Allentown is very much a transient town. When the shooter just arrived from NYC or New Jersey three weeks ago, we need more police, not more social workers. The shooter had social workers in New York, and they didn't help him much anyway.

The irony of the paper reporting on Batts' formula is that none of its paid subscribers subscribe to Batts' nonsense. Send the police first, and protect the bystanders.

Mar 14, 2022

Lehigh Parkway Tops Allentown Remembering

Most of you know that in addition to this blog, I also administer a Facebook group, Allentown Chronicles.  Endlessly requesting membership, are people who just joined facebook three hours earlier, and want to sell members Allentown tee-shirts. If such shirts would actually be delivered if ordered, I do not know, I do not accept their membership.

On another local group I noticed the post above, which is actually a promotion.  A quick search revealed that the gentleman is only not from Allentown, he's not even from United States. Nevertheless, hundreds of people "liked" the post, and make suggestions as what should be added.  Many were surprised that certain landmarks were excluded. You must forgive the man, he never heard of Allentown before. He sells these posters to nostalgiacs everywhere.

Being the party pooper I enjoy being, I placed the following comment on the post...Everybody should be aware that this is a commercial company with no connection whatsoever to Allentown, which is harvesting your input to sell you a poster. They do the same everywhere.

You'll be relieved to know that my revelation didn't discourage the nostalgiacs from suggesting more of their favorite places.  The clever merchant puts a "like" after each one, giving the nostalgiacs beloved feedback. 

But allow me to use the scam for my own purpose. Please note that Lehigh Parkway has the dominant spot on the poster. I can only assume that the poster's solicitation for suggestions came up with Lehigh Parkway the most often.

Perhaps those in the current administration might consider that for most Allentonians, Robin Hood is the prime memory of Lehigh Parkway, and removing that rubble from the bridge's piers could only be a feather in their cap.

Mar 11, 2022

Walking With The (Then) New Park Director (In 2013)


I had respectfully requested, through the City Clerk, that City Council visit Robin Hood before any decision, to both see and hear the dam. Furthermore, I volunteered to take them, at their convenience, on a quick tour of the park's remaining WPA structures. Several days later, the clerk contacted me to confirm a time for me to show two council members the sites. I was delighted to hear that the (then) new park director, John Mikowychok, would be joining us. Yesterday was the appointment, and John and I were the first to arrive. As we stood on the bridge, John told me that only 90% of the dam was being removed, and the portion near the water monitoring station would remain. I was shocked, I didn't know that the decision to remove the dam had already been determined. He then informed me that the Wildlands Conservancy was coming, and after learning the details from them on Robin Hood, we would proceed to the dams near the fish hatchery, also scheduled to be removed. The Conservancy crew arrived, with plans and documents in hand. Also by then, Council members Cynthia Mota and Jeff Glazier arrived, but my delight was gone. John explained the agenda, that first Wildlands would brief them about Robin Hood, then they would move on to the Fish Hatchery. I reminded the council members that they were there at my invitation, to see the dam, and then tour the WPA sites. To their credit, Glazier and Mota told Mikowychok that before going to the fish hatchery dams, they would take the tour with me. I wanted them to see how many park features previous park directors had arbitrarily destroyed, and perhaps be more inclined to preserve the dam.

I showed park director Mikowychok the abandoned island and the boat landing, things that he never saw before, or even knew existed. I found his indifference to the demise of these wonderful constructions astounding. When I criticized the tall thin weed wall blocking the entire creek view, he replied that a row of single tall weeds was better than none. He actually told Mota that the creek was more enticing when you could only get a glimpse of it here and there. It made me think of an old arcade peep show machine. It's too bad that the city hired another lobbyist for the Wildlands Conservancy as Park Director, instead of a defender of our unique park system, however, it's no surprise.  Both the out of town park directors were hired by the same out of town city manager. All three of them, four including the mayor, have no knowledge or appreciation of the formerly nationally recognized park system, in the former All American City. Wildlands was spouting voodoo science. They actually said that there's no fecal count in the creek, despite my photographs of creek shores filled with toilet paper. In order for them to harvest the current grant they must demolish the dam by the end of September. From the grant they also harvest administrative fees. The dam dates from the early 1940's, and has delighted five generations with its sight and sound. The hard press is on City Council to approve this latest destruction with virtually no deliberation. I ask those who appreciate beauty and ambience to help me save our history.

UPDATE: The post above is reprinted from August 17, 2013.  John Mikowychok, the new park director referred to above,  has resigned.   Less than three months after being hired, Mikowychok recommended to City Council that the Wildlands Conservancy be allowed to destroy two picturesque historic dams on the Little Lehigh.  The Wildlands Conservancy deposited the demolished WPA Robin Hood Dam rubble around the Robin Hood Bridge,  ruining the visual effect of the iconic stone piers.  The demolished Trout Nursery Dam contributed to the recent record fish kill.  We have lost 75 years of history to a person who was here for 15 months.  I will have more to say about park directors with no knowledge of the park system  and the Wildlands Conservancy's self serving agenda in subsequent posts.  Let us hope that South Whitehall has more respect for Wehr's Dam and its history.

above reprinted from September of 2014* 

UPDATE MARCH 11, 2022: As it turned out South Whitehall had no more respect for Wehr's Dam, and it only still stands because of myself, a couple other defenders and the referendum. Because of back channel deception between the Wildlands Conservancy and their connections in Harrisburg, it will now cost their taxpayers over ten times more to repair the dam than necessary.  Although I documented the entire conspiracy to the Morning Call, rather than print the real story, they published a whitewash of the events this past summer.
Shown in the picture above from 2013, the Wildlands Conservancy is scattering the dam's rubble around the Robin Hood Bridge piers. Almost nine years after the destruction of the Robin Hood Dam, let's hope that we can prevail upon the city to remove that rubble from the bridge piers, and at least restore that structure to its intended design. 
We deserve to see that beauty again.

*the posts in 2013 and 2014 did not include the above photo

Mar 10, 2022

The Brineing of Allentown

I'm usually somewhat amused when I see the accolades for retiring city personnel.  As a landlord, activist and blogger,  I've seen many inequalities over the decades.  I've seen property owners abused for both revenge and amusement. Pawlowski used code enforcement as a weapon, and his goons are still mostly there in that department.  What brings on this rant was the brine applied to the city streets early Wednesday morning. With predicted temperatures above freezing,  was the application just an overtime fest for city workers and a brineing of the taxpayers, or erring on the side of caution?

When new Mayor Tuerk announced that he was keeping all department heads* in place, my eyebrows raised. If he had said that he was replacing all department heads, my eyebrows would have raised just the same.  An observer wouldn't be able to distinguish between my expressions, nor I between my reactions.

* There is at least one department head that I would retain, but mentioning him/her disrupts the poetry.**

    ** brineing spelled with e, another literary license

Mar 9, 2022

The Robin Hood Bridge


I grew up in Little Lehigh Manor, the red brick twins above Lehigh Parkway's south ridge. When I played in the park, the WPA structures were kept in pristine condition, they were the pride of Allentown. On Hamilton Street you could purchase picture postcards of the parks and its various structures. Among the available cards was the one shown above of the Robin Hood Bridge. This crowning glory of Lehigh Parkway was completed in 1941. Its curved stone end piers, and its two oval middle piers, were designed to complement and mirror the long stone entrance wall into the park.

Since 2013, the bridge has been despoiled with the rubble of the little dam built to complement the bridge. Broken concrete from the former little dam was piled around the beautiful stone piers, turning a beautiful sight into an eyesore. It certainly would never grace a picture postcard in its current sad state.

Removing that rubble should not be a big chore for a city which once graced picture postcards sent around the country.

Mar 8, 2022

The Lost Beauty Of Lehigh Parkway

                                                                         photography by Tami Quigley

This beautiful photograph was taken by Tami Quigley last fall. This classic view of the stone piers, rising out of the Little Lehigh, has been inspiring photographers and artists for over 70 years. I have picture postcards of the same view. The stone piers are now surrounded by the concrete rubble of the former dam. Although the rapids still provide some sound and view, the portion of beauty and magic has been reduced in half. The new park director may have set a record in park degradation. Although only here for a matter of weeks, before even having seen the whole park, he agreed and recommended that the Robin Hood Dam be demolished. Piling its rubble by the stone piers is salt in the wound of our lost beauty.

photograph by Tami Quigley

above reprinted from October of 2013

ADDENDUM MARCH 8, 2022: Yesterday, I started my Restore The Beauty campaign to have the city remove the rubble which was dumped around the stone piers of the Robin Hood Bridge.  This bridge was designed to complement the iconic stone work along the park entrance road, leading down to the bridge. When the dam was demolished in 2013, the Wildlands Conservancy saved both hauling and landfill fees by piling the debris around the piers. At that time, both the mayor and his new from out of town park director, weren't native Allentonians, and didn't appreciate the park's significance to the city. 

Principals in the administration kindly did get back to me about yesterday's post, and expressed concern.  However, a funny thing happened to me in the nine years since 2013... I've gotten older, and have much less patience with studies looking into the matter.

Mar 7, 2022

Restore The Beauty


I read with interest about a dam north of Allentown that was demolished. The group who removed said...
“The dam and reservoir were cherished by many people in the local community and an important part of.... history. We want to make sure its story is preserved.”
When I fought unsecessfually to save the Robin Hood Dam in Lehigh Parkway, the park director at the time proposed replacing the dam with signage. There is such a fading sign at the former dam site on the Monocacy Creek in downtown Bethlehem. While I declined his offer for a sign instead of the dam, this post is to announce my new WPA project... I will champion to have the city restore the Robin Hood Bridge piers to their previous scenic state, before being despoiled by the broken dam rubble. This rubble was placed there by the Wildlands Conservancy, when they demolished the dam. Demolishing the dam was a crime, but making the previously beautiful bridge piers ugly was a sin.

The rubble will have to be removed carefully, as not to damage the piers or their foundation. Future Allentonians deserve the beautiful vista the bridge once provided, not the ugliness left by the dam's destruction.

Mar 4, 2022

As Allentown Turns

Linden Street is reduced to one lane today, as a private contractor installs stencils on the street for the bike lane. I had forgotten about this idiotic plan. Let us hope that the projections for the arena's success are more realistic than their vision for the bike lane's use. Also observed on my patrol today was the unbelievably slow progress of the 15th Street Bridge project. More concrete and steel is completed in one day on the arena and City Center buildings, than has yet to be completed on the bridge. The entire southside of Allentown remains prisoner to misplaced priorities. Talking of misplaced priorities, yesterday the Administration applauded itself for starting the eastside fire house, a year and half late.

UPDATE: ABOUT THIS POSTCARD- Earlier this week I used a postcard of Lehigh Parkway in the Give A Damn, Save A Dam post.  Both cards have a similar coloration and were photographed by Harold Becraft in the early 1950's.  Becraft was a photographer from Suffern N.Y.,  who produced many of the images used in the postcards of Allentown's parks.  These cards were produced locally by E.H. Schall Co.  In addition to Becraft's name on the front, they're also marked Kodachrome.  Although Becraft did many park scenes for Schall, the image shown above is one of his few cityscapes.

reprinted from May of 2013

Mar 3, 2022

2nd And Hamilton


Up to the mid 1960's,  before Allentown started tinkering with urban redevelopment, lower Hamilton Street still teemed with businesses. The City had grown from the river west,  and lower Hamilton Street was a vibrant area.  Two train stations and several rail lines crossed the busy thoroughfare.  Front, Ridge and Second were major streets in the first half of the twentieth century.  My grandparents settled on the 600 block of 2nd Street in 1895, along with other Jewish immigrants from Russia and Lithuania.  As a boy, I worked at my father's meat market on Union Street.  I would have lunch at a diner, just out of view in the photo above.  The diner was across from the A&P,  set back from the people shown on the corner.  A&P featured bags of ground to order 8 O'Clock coffee, the Starbucks of its day.

please click on photo

photocredit:Ed Miller, 1953

reprinted from November 2011

Mar 2, 2022

Downhill On Lehigh Street


During the early 1970's, Allentown demolished the entire neighborhood between Union and Lawrence Streets. It was, in a large part, home to the black community. How ironic that we destroyed the cohesion of a neighborhood, but renamed Lawrence Street after Martin Luther King. The only remnant of the neighborhood is the St. James A.M.E. Church. Going up the hill today we now have a vacant bank call center on the east, and the Housing Authority Project on the west. A whole neighborhood existed in from both sides of Lehigh Street, including black owned shops. The houses were old and humble, but people owned them, many for generations. Some blacks at the time wondered if the project was Urban Renewal or Negro Removal?

above reprinted from May 2011 

UPDATE MARCH 2, 2022: The housing authority now plans on demolishing their project on the west side of the hill, and replacing them with new units. They contend that the existing units are too old, althought the average row house in Allentown is at least twice as old. The new units will cost over half a $million dollars each.

Mar 1, 2022

A Road Runs Through It


Once, there was a time when gasoline was twenty five cents a gallon, there was no internet, and a family 
would go for a drive on Sunday. 

There was no traffic congestion or road rage. The cars were large, and they all came from Detroit. 

You could drive through a park, even an amusement park.

There was no rush to get back to the television... It was very small, with only a few channels. Life now seems to revolve around small silicon chips, I preferred when it was large engines. 

photograph shows the road through Dorney Park 

reprinted from December of 2010

Feb 28, 2022

Allentown"s Phantom Rejuvenation


Yesterday's Morning Call had a story on the PennDot study, which recommended four different options to handle the onslaught of traffic to rejuvenated center city Allentown. It's truly amazing how little $1Billion buys now a days. Believe it or not, despite the endless use of adjectives by the paper, the town is as dead as ever. PennDot, realizing that the study wasn't necessary, is never the less proceeding as if it was. One recommendation was actually for a bike lane on 7th street. When is the last time you saw a bike on 7th Street? Their consultant, from King of Prussia, thinks that patrons are going to ride their bikes down 7th Street to a show at the arena; I couldn't make this stuff up, where would I get such an imagination? Meanwhile, Pennsylvania has been ranked as one of the worst run states in the country, maybe it's because we hire consultants who recommend building bike lanes on 7th Street, to accommodate invisible arena patrons. So far, the best arena night hasn't come close to duplicating the traffic on a Thursday night,  back in the days of Hess Brothers. What we have is a bunch of new buildings, of no architectural significance, and a medium size arena, which gets  half full, 40 nights a year.
 
above reprinted from November of 2015

UPDATE FEBRUARY 28, 2022:  Activity wise, even before the pandemic, nothing changed in the five years between 2015 and 2020.  While the NIZ has made a couple millionaires now billionaires at taxpayer expense, lets hope that the rejuvenation comes before the new buildings start looking shabby.

Feb 25, 2022

Pray For Allentown

When Allentown Police Chief Charles Roca put up a Pray For Ukraine meme yesterday, my immediate thought was Pray For Allentown. I had just learned that in addition to the shots fired in Cedar Beach Sunday evening, there was another homicide, at an east side bar early Thursday morning.

In addition to putting out this blog every weekday, I also administer a large facebook group, Allentown Chronicles. The group majors in history, and minors in local politics.  Many of its members are former Allentonians, whose memory dwells in better days for the Queen City. Many of them would prefer not even to read about the town's current state of crime.

In addition to those members fixated on the past, there is a group which I refer to as the cheerleaders. These are current residents who compare Allentown to Philadelphia, Chicago and Detroit, and think Allentown is just experiencing urban problems that are part of life in all big cities. Many of them are either transplants, or too young to remember the good old days. One of the cheerleaders mentioned that there were only 6 fatalities in 2020. He omitted the fact that there were 63 shootings. The low kill rate is only from poor aim, and good ER work at the local hospitals.

This post is not intended to minimize the suffering occurring in Ukraine. It is also not intended to demean the empathy shown by Chief Roca to that tragedy.

I altered Chief Roca's meme by putting Allentown over it.

Feb 24, 2022

Morning Call's Social Agenda

The Morning Call's coverage of the Cedar Beach Park shooting incident started and ended with quotes from Pastor/Activist Gregory Edwards, who wasn't there, on the relationship between poverty and violence. In between, there were quotes from Enid Santiago, who wasn't there. Although Edwards' grandchildren were in the park(not him), so were hundreds of other children.  Enid Santiago was a candidate for state representative, who didn't even win the primary election. 

Why is the Morning Call featuring these people in an article about a seminal incident in Allentown?  And certainly, a drive-by shooting in an Allentown park is a seminal incident or a low point. Although nobody was actually shot, that was only by a blessing. The shooter was across the creek and bridge from the basketball courts, shooting a handgun. Nearby was the Destination Playground, full of children.

The Morning Call has been obsessed with what they promote as the new leaders in Allentown.  As a paying subscriber to the paper, I can tell them that I had enough, too much already, about their view of new leaders in Allentown. All I want to know is who the shooter was arraigned before, and what bail was set? It couldn't be too high!

artwork shown above by Mark Beyer

Feb 23, 2022

Gun Shots At Cedar Beach Park

I was saddened to hear about shots being fired near the basketball courts in Cedar Beach Park. 

I'm afraid the city is at the point now that when a crowd is drawn to Cedar Beach and other parks, we need additional police coverage on site.  

The Morning Call reports Pastor/activist Gregory Edwards as saying... 

“So, when we talk about public safety, ... poverty is an act of violence. When folks are living in abject poverty, poverty is an act of violence, and so certain types of crimes happen in certain environments. I’m not abdicating personal responsibility, but certain types of crime happen in certain environments because of the lack of resources that could alter someone’s decision."

In all respect to Pastor Edwards, Allentown always had poor people and Allentown always had parks, but we never had shootings in the parks. Credit to Mayor Tuerk, who seems to understand that poverty is one issue and public safety is another. 

While the activists will always want more resources for their poverty programs,  the police need more manpower,  if our city and parks are to become safe again.

Feb 22, 2022

Ag Hall At The Fairgrounds


Growing up in Allentown, the fair was part of our lives. From being a boy going with my parents, to a teenager jumping over the fence and ogling at the girlie shows.

Both my father and I had stands at the fair. He had a food stand one year as a warmup to opening a fast food drive-in. A friend and myself made and sold printed tee-shirts during high school.

As the years passed, my interest in the midway waned, but I found Ag Hall more interesting. You know you're entering the sedate stage when the bottled vegetables at the Grange exhibit interest you.

The photo shown above was taken in Ag Hall at the 1993 dog show.

Feb 20, 2022

Harris Converts To Republicanism


Lisa Scheller and the local Republican party have gained a forceful ally, MsPhoebe Harris. Apparently, after being censured by the local Democrats for attending a function associated with the other side of the aisle, she attempted to participate in a Democratic committee meeting. Not only did she find herself unwelcome, but the police were actually summoned to eject her.  Harris maintains that she had never endorsed a Republican, and that other Democrats attended events hosted by elected Republican officials without consequence. Although my understanding of the sequence of events is somewhat murky, Harris felt discriminated against, and before the dust settled, she felt lynched. 

I first met Harris at a coffee klatch organized years ago by Robert Trotner.  A transplant from Maryland, Harris was introduced to Allentown politics when Pawlowski appointed her to the Human Relations Council. In addition to becoming the Allentown Democratic Committee president, she was elected to the Allentown School Board.  

Although being a former political opponent, I suspect that she will be appreciated by Republicans for both her focus and tenacity. Harris will have to defend her conversion to both Democrats and the local Black community, which are tightly associated. Next Saturday, at the Black History Month Commemorative Event,  I suspect that Harris will be the only Republican in the house. Perhaps there will be more before the evening is over.

ADDENDUM:I should clarify that the event she was censured for involved state senator Pat Browne. She only attended the Dr. Oz event AFTER her dust up at the Democratic Committee meeting. 

photo of Dr. Oz and MsPhoebe Harris

Feb 18, 2022

Bill Whitewashing At The Morning Call

In his recent column, we learn that Bill White is worried that what he calls the MAGA candidates are going to win come November.  He goes on to clarify that these are the Trump people.  Now, I'm not a Trump person myself, but I sure hope that there are some wholesale changes in Harrisburg. 

Bill claims that he was a long time critic against the Democratic corruption in Harrisburg, but that these MAGAs will really undermine our state's progress. Of course in this Valley of Incumbents Voted for Life, White never put a name to any of these Democrats. It's easy to complain about corruption in the state house when never naming a culprit. 

While White claims that he wanted to see improvement in Harrisburg, he's still worried about any of the status quo being changed out. Over the years White has labeled me misguided and dour for actually naming bad people and programs.  There is a reason that the FBI spent two years investigating Allentown, and practically every contract signed at city hall. It took that long because there were no clues from Bill White or anybody else at the Morning Call.

Feb 17, 2022

The West End Train Branch


The Lehigh Valley Railroad operated a train branch line which served Allentown's commercial west end. It ran along Sumner Avenue servicing the scrap metal yards, warehouses and numerous coal dealers located there. The line then crossed Tilghman Street on a diagonal at 17th, before looping back east by Liberty Street at the Fairgrounds. The line ended at a rail yard now housing the small shopping center at 12th and Liberty. Although many of former commercial buildings still exist, all now house more retail type businesses. The B'nai Brith Apartments occupy the site of the former Trexler Lumber Yard. These historical shorts are difficult to write, because most current residents have no frame of reference to our former commercial past. True historians, such as the local railroad buffs, cringe at the lack of detail and specific location of the tracks. Suffice to say that once upon a time, the mid-section of Allentown had much more commerce.

photo of train crossing Tilghman at 17th Street taken by Kermit E. Geary in 1974, from the Mark Rabenold Collection.

reprinted from December of 2012

Feb 16, 2022

Palin Fair Game

Sarah Palin has been fair game with the press since McCain nominated her in 2008. In the case against the New York Times, she lost before the trial, during the trial, and when the verdict was read. The judge dismissed half the case before the trial, and publicly declared that he would dismiss the charges of libel against the Times, regardless of the verdict. 

Even the Times, although a libel defendant in the case, besmirched her further during the trial. Their reporter wrote that Palin is back in the public eye in a way that is "wholly fitting" with her political persona. 

As a blogger I certainly appreciate freedom of the press.  However, the New York Times purports itself to have standards of objectivity much higher than the gonzo world of words in which I dwell. Although entitled to make a mistake, associating someone with shootings is not something which can be squared away with a correction. 

They certainly did damage her. The real problem is that they in their arrogance consider her fair game. Apparently, the judge also had that same elitist attitude.

Feb 15, 2022

A Voice And Style Is Silenced

Patrice Sidoione passed away suddenly earlier this week. When Allentown began the property acquisition program several years ago for the arena, the methods were not nice. Straw buyers were sent into the properties, making offers with threats of eminent domain to those who would not cooperate. Although these tactics were ignored by The Morning Call, this blog reported the process, threat by threat. Patrice, who owned a hair salon on 8th Street, keep me updated on this process and invited me, as did other merchants, to attend their meetings with city officials. Although the administration was hoping that the merchants would go quietly, they didn't know Patrice Sidoione. She championed for her rights, and encouraged the other merchants to stand up for theirs. Those who knew her are saddened by her untimely death. An obituary notice appears in today's paper.

photo of Patrice by Ramy Song

above reprinted from March 21, 2014

Feb 14, 2022

An Allentown Cheesesteak Story

Readers of The Morning Call have seen several photo spreads of Tony Luke's opening on Hamilton Street. Two spreads in a row showed Mayor Pawlowski and the owner hyping the new cheesesteak spot, along with at least two articles in recent weeks announcing that the business was coming. The same readers have also seen paid for coupon ads by Zandy's, which have been advertising in the paper for maybe 20 years. Zandy's, on the intersection of St. John and Lehigh Streets, is a third generation Allentown business. Yesterday, a reader commented on a different blog topic that the NIZ is crony capitalism, supported by crony journalism. Submitted comments about which cheesesteak you think is better will not appear, I don't care about that. What I do care about is a mayor and a newspaper, who now seems to think that Allentown starts and stops at the NIZ portion of Hamilton Street.

above reprinted from November 18, 2014

UPDATE FEBRUARY 14, 2022: Since I wrote the above post over seven years ago, not only has Tony Luke's come and gone, but also local cheesesteaker Vince's, in the same spot, has come and gone--- not to mention Pawlowski himself.  However, Zandy's is still on St. John Street, serving up its famous cheesesteaks, without the paper's promotion or any NIZ subsidized rent. Until last week the Morning Call has stayed faithful to NIZ, with no questions asked. However, lo and behold they revealed that their right to know inquiry about NIZ taxes was stymied by Pat Browne's latest NIZ amendment.  On the surface it might appear that the paper is finally doing what it should have been doing for the last decade. However, having a smudge of cynicism,  I see another possible motive. The Morning Call editors have embraced Mark Pinsley and his political ambitions. Bashing Browne now serves the paper well with that agenda.

Feb 11, 2022

Hasshan Batts Not A Bashful Man


Hasshan Batts was on my radar a few years ago, when a video emerged with him angry about a parking ticket. He was ranting about racial discrimination. I can assure him that the Parking Authority also victimizes white, yellow and brown people

He also made this blog page previously when Cynthia Mota repeatedly nominated him to be appointed Pawlowski's replacement mayor. Cynthia forgot to mention that she was at the time in his employ at Promise Neighborhoods. Although I broke the story here, the Morning Call gave no attribution when they reported the same story several days later, but that's another complaint, for another day.

I'm back on Hasshan's case today because of his current editorial in the Morning Call. It concerns Black History Month and he's certainly a qualified representative. My issue is his conclusion...to support Black leadership, local Black businesses and Black-led nonprofit organizations... I personally don't think that support should be automatic because a person or group is black, but because they're  competent individuals. But the glare is Black-led nonprofit. Just like Mota forgot to mention that she worked for Batts, Batts might mention that he leads a Black non-profit.

photo of Hasshan Batts and Alan Jennings

ADDENDUM: Police Chief Charles Roca had officers join Batts' candle vigil at the scene of the latest shooting. While Roca wants to show police empathy to community pain, he may be inadvertently Defunding his own department.

Feb 10, 2022

The Morning Call's Steep Price

On Saturday, the Morning Call featured a story about Enid Santiago's challenge to the primary election, mentioned that she is now a write-in candidate, and linked to the voter's guide they published the day before. The paper's pre-election coverage now included every candidacy, except mine.

Ironically, the article documented that there was no basis for Santiago's charges alleging ballot irregularities.  The newspaper cheerfully cooperated with her to gain maximum publicity for a write-in campaign, after losing a primary election. 

I have paid a steep price for scrutinizing local government, and calling out the newspaper for not doing the same.  However,  my activism, and subsequently this blog, wasn't motivated because all was well in the Lehigh Valley.  Between ineptitude and corruption, watchmen are always needed.  The Morning Call went from good old boy local ownership, to outside corporate indifference, with neither entity motivated to upset the local status quo. 

Years ago a critic such as myself was limited to an occasional letter to the editor, or a soapbox on the corner. Things have changed with the internet. Myself and other bloggers can present information previously kept from the public.  Somebody researching former Mayor Pawlowski will find questions about his integrity here on this blog, more than a decade before the Morning Call broached the topic.  On many other topics, such as the Parking Authority and the NIZ, which I have scrutinized,  the paper has yet to take its head out of the sand.  

In regard to the NIZ,  this blog documented that the city, through straw buyers, was using strong arm tactics to dislodge the former merchants of the arena block.  The Morning Call was not only compliant, but complicit in that scheme.  They were the only private entity included in the NIZ map, on the north side of Linden Street. 

Although my criticism of the paper has cost me any coverage in regard to my campaign for Harrisburg, it's a price I'd rather pay, than joining their endorsement of status quo mediocrity in our community.

above reprinted from November of 2020

Feb 9, 2022

The Morning Call Awakens To Allentown's Monster


After being subservient for over a decade, The Morning Call finally decided to investigate something about the NIZ. After the paper submitted a Right To Know request, Pat Browne changed the law to thwart their inquiry. I have often said that the NIZ was written in pencil, and has been changed numerous times, as J.B. Reilly and other benefactors sought ever-expanding opportunities. 

In my view, the Morning Call was almost complicit in the NIZ's early shenanigans. They had no issue with being included in the first map, although their building was across the street from the district's main zone. Reilly would end up owning the Morning Call building for use in the cigarette tax add on amendment. That map itself has become a historic relic, because amendments to the NIZ law now allow the NIZ to trade for property outside of the district. 

This blog was vindicated by the FBI when Pawlowski's deals were adjudicated. The NIZ may never be deemed illegal because our elected dolts signed off on it, but it may well become a case study in government ethics.

Shown above, I'm flanked by Pawlowski bagman Mike Fleck and NIZ Authority lawyer Seymour Traub as I'm complaining about how former property owners were bullied into selling. While back then the Morning Call's Bill White labeled me misguided for my criticism of the NIZ, the paper is now finally beginning to see the monster they helped promote. 

Feb 8, 2022

Lamont Doesn't Impress In Northampton


I don't suffer either political correctness or myths well. One of the myths that aggrevate me most is farmland preservation. Fly over Pennyslvania some time and you'll realize that the state is mostly farmland. The only thing in short supply is farmers, and the notion of training people to become farmers is even more absurd than preservation itself. We have no food shortages, and farmland preservation is a solution looking for a problem. 

When I read a recent op-ed praising preservation by Northampton's Lamont McClure, I was very unimpressed. McClure wants to "combat" warehouse proliferation. In our real, real estate world, the Jaindl Company develops their land with good road access, and rents thousands of acres to grow feed corn. *

Although McClure is fellow blogger Bernie O'Hare's current favorite pol, I never paid him much mind before. Yesterday, O'Hare reported that McClure also wants to reward county prison employees with a 25% raise for three months, if the workforce reaches a vaccination rate of 75%.

Fortunately, I'm not a taxpayer in Northampton County. Although I no longer routinely tolerate attending meetings, I would be compelled to help Lamont find his misplaced common sense.

photocredit:Lehigh Valley Ramblings

*ADDENDUM: The Farmland Preservation programs can mostly only afford to buy land that wouldn't be developed anyway.
 ADDENDUM: The Farmland Preservation programs could never afford the warehouse ready land near major interstates. Farmland Preservation is a feel-good nonsense program largely enriching the landed gentry.

Feb 7, 2022

National Republican Discourse

As a conservative independent, when not casting my vote for an independent, it more often than not goes to the Republican candidate.  While my disillusionment with Trump occurred early in his term,  any defense of him completely expired on January 6th, 2021.  

While I take heart in Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger and Mike Pence,  the RNC Salt Lake winter proclamation defending January 6th can only hurt the party in 2022 and 24. Hopefully, by their spring meeting, they will be more Republican, and less Trumpican. 

Trump didn't win the election in 2020, and likewise he wouldn't win in 2024. However,  there is a backlash to the progressive Democratic programs now occurring.  The Defund The Police mentality has turned the urban cores into a lawless jungle.  The endless stimulus payments have a negative effect on the economy. There are real opportunities for rational Republicans to prevail.  However, supporting Trump's delusions is not rational. 

I suppose Republican candidates feel that they can walk the tightrope to win primaries in the spring, and then move more toward the middle for November.  They are overestimating themselves, and underestimating the voters.

Feb 4, 2022

Over The Dam In 2014


For this early morning edition blog, 2014 is under the ice and over the dam. Between fighting to preserve Wehr's Dam, running for office and providing reality checks about downtown Allentown, its been a busy year.

I believe that the unvarnished truth is a commodity in short supply in the Lehigh Valley. From the main stream media, out of town readers would think that Allentown has turned completely around. We who actually plug the meters on Hamilton Street know that although the new buildings are in place, the promised commerce has yet to begin. So far even the arena events can be counted on one hand. Mayor Pawlowski had read so many proclamations about the New Allentown in the local paper, he thought that he could ride that bus to Harrisburg. Although the articles about success were premature, I do believe that real change is coming Allentown's way.  

molovinsky on allentown will be glad to celebrate that success when it arrives, but in the meantime, will tell it like it is.

above reprinted from December 31, 2014

UPDATE FEBRUARY 4, 2022: Although over seven years has passed since the above was written, things are pretty much the same in Allentown... Not many events at the arena, or people on Hamilton Street. While Covid-19 is a valid excuse for the last two years, we know now that the expectations of 2014 were not to be anyway. Allentown may become a successful urban office park. The up and coming politicans may mature into leaders. We may be able to establish civility in the urban core. Hopefully, we can avoid becoming one more large crime ridden city.

Feb 3, 2022

Tuerk Bloats Mayoral Staff


Last night when approving four new positions for Matthew Tuerk's administration, councilwoman Candida Affa reminded us that new presidents and governors always create new slots for their trusted people. Someone might remind Candida that so far Tuerk is only a mayor. She was Pawlowski's most loyal supporter, and now seems to be kissing Tuerk's ring.

Allentown's new Communications Manager, Genesis Ortega, said previously that the new positions reflect a “fresh start” and “new approach.” So far I see neither.  

Here at molovinsky on allentown, there are no new positions or approaches. We will scrutinize the new administration, as we have always done in the past.

photo: two mayors and a governor wannabe

Feb 2, 2022

Zac Cohen And Donald Trump Have A Lot In Common


Zac Cohen and Donald Trump both refuse to accept the results of their respective elections. A Hail Mary federal lawsuit has been filed seemingly on Cohen's behalf after exhausting all legal options in Pennsylvania.  Five bipartisan electors, who didn't remember to date their mail-in ballot, have filed the suit. Cohen clearly is more concerned with his career than justice in Lehigh Valley, which continues without its third new judge.

On a bipartisan note, allow me to say that we can do without any candidate who refuses to accept the results of their election. 

We can do without a president who considers sedition part of the electoral process. We can do without a judge who cannot accept a verdict.


UPDATE: Bernie O'Hare weighs in on the same topic.

UPDATE FEBRUARY 3, 2022:  Bernie O'Hare weighs in on the same topic once again.

Feb 1, 2022

Lanta Chronicles

ALLENTOWN CELEBRATES Allentown's latest Dancing in the Street, Octoberfeast, will have multi-cultural attractions. There will be genuine rickshaw rides, pulled by former Asian merchants who were forced out of business by the City Department of Gentrification. After this weeks party for the Brewpub, the rickshaws will operate on a regular basis between Hamilton Street and our new Lanta Transportation Center. Reprinted from Oct. 7, 2007 SILENCE OF THE LANTA Hannibal Lecter has been offered parole on the condition he restrict his diet to Hamilton Street bus riders. Once a month he will be permitted an Asian merchant; on thanksgiving he may have a preselected blogger. Mr. Lector will be micro-chipped and given a new Hamilton Street loft apartment. He will be monitored by the new surveillance cameras. Mayor Pawlowski and Armand Greco will provide more details at a press conference early next week at the new Lanta Terminal. Reprinted from Oct. 20, 2007 ONCE UPON A TIME This image heralds back to once upon a time, when traffic, buses and shoppers on Hamilton Street were desired, much less called congestion. Although Lanta's circulator bus has only attracted 12 riders a day, their new concessions, which do not start until Feb.11, only add stops on 7th and 8th streets to the northwest and south sides. No concessions will be made for the Hanover Ave. and east side passengers. Lanta has clearly put the justification of their new transfer station over the survival of our merchants. I ask you to join me, merchants and bus riders on Tuesday Dec. 11, at 12 noon at the Lanta Headquarters, 1060 Lehigh Street, to let them know their still doing too little, too late. The image is part of a watercolor by Karoline Schaub-Peeler Reprinted from Dec. 6, 2007 MONSTER AS LANDLORD Can anyone explain why the Allentown Parking Authority should be a landlord? It is apparently not to make money, because the rent is far below the cost to construct the square footage. It is not to serve a local neighborhood need or the need of the bus riders, few of them purchase private vineyard wine or natural fiber designer clothes. Here's the answer; because Linda Kauffman, former director of the Allentown Parking Authority, thought it was a good idea. She also wanted stores in the new deck at 4th and Hamilton, but City Council decided not to compete with local investors. So now we have a parking deck which is mostly empty, a Lanta Transfer Station which is putting the Hamilton Street merchants out of business, and a new subsidized yuppie who will fail anyway because she is in the wrong location for her product. Ms. Kauffman retired and moved to the Maryland beach. Reprinted from Dec. 11, 2007 The Parking Authority never did find a tenant, and now is relocating it's office there from 10th and Hamilton, which will become a Police substation- Feb. 20, 2010 As Hannibal would say, this is only a taste of posts concerning Lanta and the Hamilton Street merchants. The full menu may be found in the blog archives between Oct. 2007 and Feb. 2008

above reprinted from February of 2010 

UPDATE February 1, 2022: Needless to say both the private vineyard and the designer clothes knew better than to open shops under the parking deck. What all the above outrages have in common is that the only scrutiny came from this blog, while the Morning Call promoted the nonsense. Over a decade later, and this blogger continues to speak out.

Jan 31, 2022

Saturday Afternoon Matinee


Occasionally, some of the older boys in Lehigh Parkway would get saddled with taking me along to a Saturday matinee in downtown Allentown. We would get the bus from in front of the basement church on Jefferson Street. It would take that congregation many years to afford completing the church building there today. The trolley or bus would go across the 8th Street Bridge, which was built to accommodate the trolleys operated by Lehigh Valley Transit Company. Downtown then sported no less than five movie theaters at any one time. Particularly matinee friendly was the Midway, in the 600 Block of Hamilton. Three cartoons and an episode or two of Flash Gordon entertained our entourage, which ranged in age from five to eleven years old. We younger kids, although delighted by the likes of Bugs Bunny, were confused how the Clay People would emerge from the walls in the caves on Mars to capture Captain Gordon, but our chaperones couldn't wait till the next week to learn Flash's fate. Next on the itinerary was usually a banana split at Woolworth's. Hamilton Street had three 5 and 10's, with a million things for boys to marvel at. The price of the sundae was a game of chance, with the customer picking a balloon. Inside the balloon was your price, anywhere from a penny to the full price of fifty cents. The store had a full selection of Allentown souvenirs. Pictures of West Park on a plate, the Center Square Monument on a glass, pennants to hang on your wall, and picture postcards of all the attractions. Hamilton Street was mobbed, and even the side streets were crowded with busy stores. Taking younger kids along was a responsibility for the older brothers, the streets and stores were crowded, but predators were limited to the Clay People on the silver screen.

reprinted from previous years

Jan 28, 2022

Anonymous Comments Now Permitted

I have decided to once again allow anonymous comments on the blog. While a commenter can establish a pseudonym, whose identity is unknown to both me and other readers, there remain those more comfortable with the anonymous option. Comment moderation will continue; that is, comments must still be approved for publication. While the blog office opens very early on weekday mornings, it also closes early in the evening. Comments submitted after 6:00pm will not appear until the following morning.

Allentown (Water) Goes Private... Anonymous Comments Now Accepted

Tomorrow morning at 11:00am, Mayor Pawlowski will announce the sale of Allentown's water and sewage departments to a private operator. The sale is being conducted to satisfy the pension obligations incurred by the police and fire contracts. Two well placed sources have provided this blogger with two versions of the announcement. In the first version, the systems have been sold for $150 million. In the second version, the systems will be put out to bid. In this city, it's very possible that both versions are true; It will be formally put out to bid, but he has a predetermined buyer at the 150 price. The buyer would assume control of both the plants and distribution systems, and be responsible for every aspect of operation. A former city worker insures me that the quality of service from the water department will certainly suffer. Blogger Bernie O'Hare contributed to this post.
UPDATE: The Morning Call apparently felt compelled to issue a statement, and posted their announcement of the pending sale two hours after this post.  They quote an unnamed source saying "If this done right, this will solve the pension problems overnight, but we must install proper oversight and control."  Allentown has no experience with doing things right, or with oversight and controls.  We are in trouble.
UPDATING THE UPDATE:  Our local LCA might well be a bidder (or the bidder) for the Allentown systems.  The current project through Cedar Park interconnects the systems, and will expand their capacity to deliver treated water to western Lehigh County. If the Lehigh County Authority is in fact the buyer, the consequence of selling this prime Allentown asset would be tolerable. Allentonians could expect responsible stewardship and reasonable fees.

building the water works in 1928

above reprinted from July of 2012 

UPDATE JANUARY 28, 2022: When the FBI started to scrutinize the Pawlowski administration in 2013, the water and sewage sale was already a done deal. Allentown had a large capacity for both water and sewage because of Lucent's silicon wafer production, which was water intensive. The water/sewer systems were Allentown's golden goose, always profitable, with the promise to remain that way. A decade has passed. The Morning Call's golden boy Ed Pawlowski, always promoted and never scruntized by them, is in the pokey. Allentown is still in financial trouble, but no longer has its profitable water component.

Jan 27, 2022

The Morning Call's Marred Editorial Page

We who opine about local news agree that the Morning Call has about as censored an editorial page as there could be. Most obvious is the paper's use of its Go-To people. Whether for news or opinions, the same people appear in articles and op-eds, time and again. One of the longest standing Go-To regulars is Alan Jennings. Yesterday, his featured front and center editorial on freeing Ed Pawlowski might be a low point even for a newspaper that compromises itself on a regular basis. 

Jennings contrasted Pawlowski's incarceration with Donald Trump's freedom. It was of course a cheap parlor trick, trying to take advantage of our extremely polarized politics. For the Morning Call to permit such a tactic only degrades itself further. 

While Jennings' loyalty to his friend Pawlowski is admirable, his editorial itself was beyond being distorted. Jennings even questioned Pawlowski's guilt. While we give defendents the benefit of the doubt, Pawlowski was convicted on over 45 counts. Numerous people testified under oath about Pawlowski's schemes at the taxpayers' expense. 

Pawlowski's appeal rights will be determined by the court, not pleaded by a Morning Call Go-To favorite. Likewise, that court will decide the appropriateness of the sentence given.

The Morning Call should concern itself with examining their editorial page standards.

Jan 26, 2022

Jeopardizing Your House For Ocean Spray

Unknown to Lehigh County residents, one of the reasons Ocean Spray moved here was to avoid costly upgrades to their pre-sewer treatment plant. When you're in violation of New Jersey environmental standards, what do you do, you turn to Donny Cunningham. Here in Sap Valley, we invited Ocean Spray with incentives and called it progress. They, along with the other new bottling industries attracted by Cunningham and LCA, will now jeopardize your home. Rather than expand the sewer treatment plant, homeowners are being forced to block their plumbing safety net, their floor drains. Up to a decade ago, floor drains were mandated by code so that if a pipe broke, your home was protected against flooding. Although nothing has ever gone down my floor drain, I must now block it to comply with new regulations. The thinking is that a drop saved here, and a drop saved there from thousands and thousands of homes, can spare the LCA the expense of enlarging the sewer plant, or building an additional one, and still meet EPA standards. Hell, there's even enough capacity left to invite Ocean Spray. Now, if your hot water heater springs a leak, its too bad for you.

reprinted from April of 2014

ADDENDUM DECEMBER 18, 2019: While the commercial rates paid by the bottling companies remain attractive to them, homeowners in Allentown and other local municipalities are now seeing their residential water rates double.

molovinsky on allentown is produced every weekday, year-round. 

ADDENDUM JANUARY 26, 2022: We now learn from Peter Hall at the Morning Call that carcinogens found in the Delaware River have been traced back to the pre treatment LCA plant in Macungie. Furthermore, that plant is accepting tanktrucks of porta potty waste and chemical waste from New Jersey. What the MC article doesn't mention is that the flow to the Delaware, by way of the Lehigh, goes through the Little Lehigh, a source of Allentown's water. We have become New Jersey's slop bucket, their bedpan.

Jan 25, 2022

Allentown's New York Tragedy

Years ago, some in Allentown complained that imported people from New York and New Jersey were lowering the quality of life in Allentown.  This past weekend the person who shot the NYC police officers came from Allentown.

In reality the quality of life is lower in both places.

New York's new mayor, Eric Adams, is pushing back against liberal demands to defund the police.

Let us hope that Allentown's new mayor follows Adam's lead in recognizing that livability in our city depends on a strong police presence.

Jan 24, 2022

Allentown's Problem


On social media, someone wondered why Allentown wasn't a local destination,  like Bethlehem or Easton. Most of the answers centered on crime, or the perception of crime, and onerous parking.  I refrained from reminding the group that diverted state taxes were financing the privately owned urban office park that replaced the historic mercantile district.

Bethlehem and Easton present visitors with history, architecture and ambience.  Allentown lost all those attributes, as one developer leveled Hamilton Street for his office empire. In fairness to Allentown's situation, it must be noted that the pandemic has restricted the number of office workers who would otherwise be present.

The architecture of Bethlehem and Easton remains from their shopping district's past. Their restaurants and shops resulted from market demand.  Allentown is a staged production, hoping to attract customers. 

The easiest problem to remedy is the parking.  As noted on this blog as it was happening,  Allentown made a huge mistake allowing a couple of developers to build on the surface parking lots.  People want close by convenient parking, not a parking deck three blocks away. 

To be frank, Allentown Parking Authority, Planning, Zoning and other municipal oversights have catered to the developer, at the expense of everything else.  Their rationale was that their successes are linked. Although there is some linkage,  it's a big city with many shareholders. 

Despite a $Billion dollars of privately owned, publicly financed development, Allentown is a dead zone. The Morning Call hyped the developer's press releases as news, and ignored the empty streets and failing restaurants. 

I am hopeful that the new administration will address some of these issues, starting with the Parking Authority.

photo: Beginning demolition on Hamilton Street for the arena and its adjoining offices

Jan 21, 2022

WPA, A Work In Progress

On Labor Day in 2011, The Morning Call ran a story about my efforts in regard to the neglected WPA structures, and announced my upcoming meeting at the Allentown Library. Among those in attendance at that meeting was Karen El-Chaar, director of Friends Of The Allentown Parks. Later that year, I took El-Chaar on a tour of the WPA structures throughout the park system. In 2013, I conducted my first tour of the WPA in Lehigh Parkway, in conjunction with Friends Of The Parks. This year, El-Chaar successfully secured a grant from The Trexler Trust, which is currently being used to restore the steps at Fountain Park. The grant is being supervised by Lindsay Taylor, Allentown Park Director. The work is being done by Dietrich Stonemasonry, and managed by parks supervisor, Rick Holtzman.

Although much work remains to be done, it's my sense that all the decision makers mentioned above, are developing a greater appreciation of the unique gift that the WPA bestowed upon the Allentown park system.  I'm hoping that both that interest and work continues this coming spring and summer, especially in preserving the remaining portion of the wall in Lehigh Parkway.

reprinted from October of 2015

molovinsky on allentown is published weekdays Monday thru Friday.  Comments are accepted using your name or by establishing a pseudonym. Pseudonym identities remain unknown to both myself and other readers. Your readership is appreciated.

UPDATE DECEMBER 1, 2020: Karen El-Chaar is now director of parks. Because she has an appreciation of the WPA, it is my hope that the next mayor has the insight to retain her in that position. Work finally began on the double stairway in Lehigh Parkway.  While the vertical surfaces have been restored, the flat landings at the top and on the stair landings remain to be done.  

UPDATE JANUARY 21, 2022: Although restoring and preserving the WPA structures has been a mission of mine for well over a decade, as a blogger I paid a price.  My criticism of local government and the local press has not helped either with publicity or funds for the WPA projects.  Nevertheless, l will continue advocating for the iconic stone structures throughout our park system, and opining about our local government...There remains a need for both.

Jan 20, 2022

General Trexler's Bridge


The 8th Street Bridge is one of the marvels of Allentown.  It was built to facilitate the Liberty Trolley run, from 8th and Hamilton to Philadelphia.  I posted about it before, with its impressive statistics. At the time it was the largest concrete bridge in the world.  It involved two business interests of Harry Trexler,  both the transit company and the local cement industry.

Harrisburg and The Morning Call have been braying about the bridges scheduled for improvement and replacement in the area.  Although, I virtually stopped attending municipal meetings,  I still partake in field trips to the local construction sites.  I don't announce myself, and try to be quick and quiet on these unauthorized inspections.  I would prefer not to vanish like Jimmy Hoffa.  I want to inspect the bridge, not end up in the bridge.

On first glance the work on the bridge looks very impressive. The bridge walls have been replaced with new concrete walls, almost identical to the original, even including the lighting pillars. My question is that the roadbed has been raised about 18 inches, but is still supported by the same arches. Eighteen inches of additional concrete on the roadbed and sidewalk is an enormous additional weight load. Furthermore, I have learned that there was bonding issues between the older base and new concrete. Only the approaches, on both ends of the bridge, have been replaced.  This was done because they are the lowest part of the bridge, and the most feasible parts to replace.  However, they were replaced with pre-stressed concrete beams, and the new arches are only decorative panels.  The original approach bases were massive constructions, which probably would have stood another 1000 years.

Only now is the part of the project which I knew to be necessary beginning.  The massive bridge arches has been showing spalling damage over the last decades.  That is the process where old concrete lets loose from the steel re-bar used as the construction frame.

When the project is completed, I do not expect to be invited to the ribbon cutting. 

reprinted from July of 2016

ADDENDUM JANUARY 20, 2022: The second iconic concrete bridge, the Tilghman Street Bridge, is now undergoing a similar reconstruction process. That project is considerably behind schedule, penalizing both residents and businesses on Union Blvd. Although I have done some photo recon, I have not interviewed workers as I did on the 8th Street project. 

The reason for this reprint is my doubts about the huge Infrastructure Spending Bill that our local politicans are patting themselves on the back about. In slower times the taxpayer money is seldom put to the best use. With all this money there is no project to widen Rt. 22, sorely needed now for two decades. Instead, our portion will build a new road along the Lehigh, only duplicating Front Street a block parallel. Another ribbon cutting I won't be invited to.