Gateway The President’s Message The Neighborhood Club’s Annual Meeting
Transcription
Gateway The President’s Message The Neighborhood Club’s Annual Meeting
T Fall 2008 HED ES A IS BL The Gateway Newsletter of The Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd The Oldest of the Main Line Civic Associations – 1906 P.O. Box 717, Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania 19004 • www.balacynwyd.org Casey O’Bannon, President — 610.668.0734 President’s Message by Casey O’Bannon This is my last message as President of The Neighborhood Club and I have to express my deepest gratitude for the exceptional Board of Directors with whom I’ve had the pleasure of working. I hope our membership recognizes, most importantly, that you have had the luxury of their service. I came into this job with just a couple of years experience on the Board. Furthermore, we had a lot of turnover on the Board in the previous years and much of the experience and institutional memory had moved on from this organization. I was a little concerned with how that would affect my tenure as President. Fortunately, we have been blessed with a vigorous, bright and motivated group of your neighbors. They have taken on responsibilities and challenges, not like novices, but like experienced professionals ready to handle the responsibilities. Each person here has taken on challenges. They work independently. They dedicate time for meetings and research. They diligently summarize important information from the assignments and distribute to the rest of the Board. They respectfully share information and opinions and incorporate them into Board positions. All of these people are busy in their personal and professional lives. They Phyllis Faber Kelley, Editor — 610.667.1017 The Neighborhood Club’s Annual Meeting 11 November 2008 7:00 p.m., refreshments • 7:30 p.m., start of business meeting UNION FIRE STATION Montgomery Ave. at Tregaron Rd. • Bala Cynwyd, PA (Please note change in location for this meeting) Please join us for refreshments prior to the meeting, followed by Elections of Directors and Officers. After our elections, we will conduct a full slate of business, including presentations and discussions about current neighborhood issues. All neighbors are welcome. Candidate Slate for The Neighborhood Club’s Annual Elections Following are the candidate slates for The Neighborhood Club elections. Candidates were interviewed over the summer by The Neighborhood Club’s Nominating Committee. Per our by-laws, all members (dues paid for 2008) of The Neighborhood Club are eligible to vote. 1. For Director, filling an unexpired term: Amara M. Briggs (for Ann Cotton, term expiring 31 December 2008) Phyllis Faber Kelley (for John Grugan, term expiring 31 December 2009) 2. For Director, beginning new terms, 1 January 2009 through 31 December 2010: Eric Foster, Roger Moog, Serge Nalbantian, Dan Russoniello, Katherine Schieffelin, Jerry Skillings, Michael Taichman-Robins. 3. For Officers to serve one year (terms expiring 31 December 2009): Anne Greenhalgh, President John Grugan, Vice President Deedee Litvin, Secretary Amara M. Briggs, Treasurer Robert H. Zimmerman, Solicitor (Per our by-laws, Casey O’Bannon succeeds Phyllis Faber Kelley in the Office of Immediate Past President) Any Neighborhood Club member wishing to nominate a Director or Officer other than those selected by our Nominating Committee should consult The Neighborhood Club’s by-laws at www.balacynwyd.org for details. (continued on page 2) 1 Commissioner’s Letter by George T. Manos Greetings, neighbors. IMPORTANT NOTE: On its new Website, www.lowermerion.org, the Township has implemented an online service by which residents can select from and subscribe to a number of e-mail notification options to keep themselves abreast of what is going on in the Township. To check out this very valuable information tool: on the top menu bar, select “I Want To . . .” and follow the dropdown to “Sign Up For.” On to the news . . . In Bala Cynwyd, there is the emergence of the Cynwyd Trail as possibly one of the most interesting and varied suburban trails in the region. Concurrently, at the head of the Trail, renovation of the Cynwyd Station continues. In July, the Township received the coveted U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) “Preserve America” Citation at the former Penncoyd Iron Works building at the foot of Righters Ferry Road in a building that was remarkably and beautifully restored by its present owner, Penn Real Estate Group, Ltd. Following the presentation, an entourage including HUD Regional Director John Bravacos toured the Cynwyd Station renovation. O’Neill Properties continues to press forward with its plans for an apartment complex at 131-151 Rock Hill Road, while at the same time applying for Tentative Sketch Plan approval for a project on the former Connelly Container site, right next door to the renovated Penn Realty office. Of particular importance to residents Township-wide is the Township’s budget process. The Township will hold public budget hearings on November 19th and December 3rd, with adoption of the 2009 Budget scheduled for December 17th. Public comment will be invited during the budget hearings of November and December. If you’re interested in seeing a remarkably open and transparent budget process, don’t miss these meetings. More importantly, don’t pass up the opportunity to express your concerns either about the budget itself, the process, or on any points raised by the various speakers who — I can promise you — will not hesitate to fully express theirs. 2009 will be a challenging year for the Township financially, as it almost universally will be for all families as the high cost of oil continues to be felt. Example: last year at this time the cost of blacktop was approximately $53/ton. At this writing, it is $59/ton, and Don Cannon, Director of Public Works (to his credit) has stopped even speculating on what it will be at purchase time. In June 2008, the Township updated its longterm financial projections for the current year: roughly $51.2M in expenses against projected revenue of $50.9M, including a modest 2% real estate tax increase. The deficit ($300,000) will be made up out of general fund reserves. 2009 expected expenses: roughly $54.2M; expected revenues: relatively flat at $50.7M. The resulting deficit ($3.5M) is more than an order of magnitude larger than 2008. Approximately 86% of the projected increase is in costs that are commitment-based, including scheduled workforce contract increases, employee healthcare benefits, debt service, solid waste disposal, insurance, bonding, and the impact of increased fuel costs on operating costs. Budget forecasts for the out years show expenses rising at an even higher rate with respect to revenues. You see the dilemma. We live in Lower Merion Township for the quality of its schools, its quality of life, and its relatively low taxes. The task before the Township is to address the factors that now seem to be affecting the balance between these qualities. As succinctly expressed by Commissioner Mark Taylor (Ward 1 — Gladwyne, Merion Park, Penn Valley and Wynnewood), “The challenge is to preserve the high level of services that residents expect at the lowest possible cost.” Let us hear your thoughts on the issue, and stay tuned as the debate unfolds. Thanks to the following neighbors and friends who contributed to this issue of The Gateway: Mary Anne Diamond Barry Levin President’s Message Fred Fischer Ilene McCaffrey Anne Greenhalgh Judy Strazzella (continued from page 1) have many other responsibilities exclusive of The NCBC and I am repeatedly surprised at their dedication to the community. I recall early in the year when I was at a LMT Board of Commissioners meeting. Another of our Board members was attending because there was an agenda item important to his assigned NCBC committee. The Commissioners tabled this item due to their heavy schedule, yet, when I left the meeting at 11 pm, I saw our Director still present, focused on the Township’s business. This could have been any of the members of this Board. It happens on a monthly basis. They are helping to shape the future of our community which is under constant change. They are dedicated, capable and wonderful people. To them I say: THANK YOU! You are wonderful people. My successor is Anne Greenhalgh. Anne has been on this Board for ten years and has organized our outstanding 4th of July celebration each year. She brings a wealth of experience, patience and intelligence to the position and I am confident in the future with Anne at the helm. 2 Trash Matters! 2. Yard waste (leaves, shrubbery and tree trimmings) is to be placed at the curb for pickup, again only after 7:00 p.m. the evening before collection day. One of the primary reasons neighbors cite for choosing to live in Lower Merion Township — and especially Bala Cynwyd — is Quality of Life. Those of us who have lived here for a while are always pleased to see improvements in the quality but sometimes we note a deterioration in that quality, and that always saddens us. Recently, The Neighborhood Club has received several appeals from neighbors to address an issue that affects the appearance of our neighborhood, and therefore, our quality of life: Trash Collection. (See Chapter 82 of the Township Code, available at www.lowermerion.org). If we all pay attention to this issue, surely we can make life just a little nicer for those who walk and drive past our properties. 3. We have two options for regular trash pickup, including household recyclables: A. Most desirable: Leave your trash on your property! This can be rear-yard, just so long as the trash collectors can get to it via driveway or sidewalk. B. If you must, for personal reasons, put your trash out by the street, try to keep it on your property. The tree lawn (planting strip between sidewalk and street) is in the public right-of-way and should be used for your trash cans only in the most unusual of circumstances. Here are the basics for getting your trash picked up so that you both adhere to the Code and preserve as much of the neighborhood beauty as possible: If you have been leaving your trash curbside but are now willing to have it picked up at another spot on your property, call the Township Public Works (Refuse) at 610.667.1952 or 610.667.1953 to request pickup at the new site. Ms. McDaniel or one of the other polite and friendly folks at the Township’s Refuse Site will be glad to process your request. 1. No trash of any sort should be placed at the curb prior to 7:00 p.m. the evening prior to collection day. All cans and other containers must be removed from curbside no later than the end of trash collection day. Most desirable: Trash picked up at rear of property Acceptable: Trash picked up at site visible from the street, but still on your property After-effect of curbside pickup Another Successful July Fourth Celebration in Bala Cynwyd Below are the names of individuals and businesses who helped to make our 2008 July Fourth celebration a success. We are grateful! Samuel Adenbaum Aldar Bala Cynwyd School for Young Children Bala Eye Care Bala House Montessori School Bosin Family Boy Scott Troop Broadlands Financial Group, LLC Clarke & Cohen Converse Winkler Architecture, LLC EY Productions Jane, Tom and Sam Fischer French International School Group Dynamics In Focus Hearing Technology Associates, LLC Herbert Yentis & Company Hoffstein Dentistry House of Mohr Hymies Merion Deli L.F. Driscoll Company Law Offices of Jeffrey M. Lindy L’Ecole Francaise Main Line YMCA Manko Gold Katcher and Fox McGillin Architecture, Inc Mini of the Main Line Phyllis Faber Kelley & Steve Rosasco 3 Prudential Fox and Roach Rays Custom Shirts RE/MAX — Evie Cohen RE/MAX — Sherry Clearwater Saint Matthias Church Steven Schlesinger, DMD Gerald Skillings Thorp Reed Armstrong The New Tavern Restaurant and Bar Valley Press Walls & Windows West Laurel Hill Cemetery Womens Club of Bala Cynwyd The Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd Beautification Committee Sidewalk Gardens Recognition 2008 Green Thumb Awards Awards will be made at our Annual Meeting, 11 Nov. 2008 Vandy Solomon, at 435 Levering Mill Road, has created a traditionally designed and planted garden that relates perfectly to the traditional center hall stone colonial it adorns. Peer over the cedar picket fence and you will be delighted to see 435 Levering Mill Rd. bees, birds, and even a few bunnies frolicking in and around mounding serpentine beds filled with the plants your grandmother loved. Azalea, magnolia, hydrangea, fothergilla, and buddleia provide serial shrubby and floral interest – while echinacea, daylily, honeysuckle, liatris and monarda show off the pink and yellow color scheme. Residences At 45 East Dartmouth Road, Dennis Donahue has created a Zen-like homage to Japanese gardening. This exquisitely maintained garden artfully demonstrates many classic Japanese garden features. Dry rivers of gravel and stone flow around carefully 45 E. Dartmouth Rd. placed (and locally quarried) rocks. A stone lantern nestles low to the ground to light the gravel river. Traditional Japanese “Hide and Reveal” design techniques lure the visitor into and around the garden to explore expertly-pruned conifers, azaleas and grasses. 7 Derwen Road showcases a skillful arrangement of horticulturally-exciting shadeloving plants that flourish under the high leafy canopy of sycamores. Robert and Sheryl Levy have combined evergreen mahonia, rhododendron, and Ilex crenata 7 Derwyn Rd. ‘Sky Pencil’ into a model of four-season balanced asymmetry. Underplantings of bergenia, hosta, hardy geranium, hakonechloa, carex, and impatiens provide exquisite foliar contrast and floral interest. Bunny Levin’s garden at 172 Gramercy Road showcases ebullient mounds of thriving perennials, shrubs and annuals, all neatly retained by walls of drylaid stone that relate beautifully to the stone Tudor home. This mature mixed border contains a large vari172 Gramercy Rd. ety of plants including monarda, phlox, lilies, sedum, astilbe, tall grasses, hosta, coreopsis, and Alchemillla mollis. Winter interest is assured with cherry laurel shrubs. 125 Tall Trees Drive presents the extreme garden challenge of a pie shaped slope in full sun bisected by a steeply-graded drive. Carole Blum has implemented the perfect solution — a veritable conifer arboretum grows contentedly before her home. Each tree and shrub has been expertly sited and perfectly pruned to maximize design impact and natural form. Chamacyperis, pine, cryptomeria and ilex provide a color continuum from glaucus to golden. Under-plantings of sedum, grasses, echinacea, lavender and sage thrive in the gravelly, dry 125 Tall Trees Dr. conditions and provide four seasons of color and texture interest. The graphic pop of tall burgundy cannas flanking the front entrance finishes the show with flair. Ellen Brafman’s delightfully lush and lavish garden beds curve gently in and around the lawn space at 181 Summit Lane. Four-season interest is masterfully displayed in both sunny and shady cultural conditions. Evergreen selections like blue spruce, yew, and euonymus ground the garden structure while sinuous curves of perennials embrace dual dogwood trees. Notable plants include monarda, asclepias, blood grass, lantana, dahlia, stachys, and hibiscus. 181 Summit Ln. (continued on page 5) 4 2008 Green Thumb Awards (continued from page 4) Rosa Aukburg has lovingly tended this “woody” nirvana at 433 Levering Mill Road for years, and it shows. Peaceful calm prevails within the leafy borders of this busy corner lot. Thoughtfully-sited borders include a wide diversity of plants that maximize foliar form, textural bark, floral interest, and winter fruits. Stand-out selections 433 Levering Mill Rd. include Acer griseum, Kousa dogwood, nandina, mahonia, oakleaf hydrangea, aucuba, and cherry laurel. Shade-loving plants including hosta, pulmonaria, hellebore, and coleus fringe the crisply-bordered beds. Patches of full sun are reserved for lantana, petunia, and zinnia. Herbert Yentis and Company has created a garden at The Colonial Village Shopping Center that promotes a sense of place and visual respite for all the patrons of 138–144 Montgomery Ave. The welcoming and shady stone portico is fronted by a long stretch of four-season color and texture. Shrubs, including the native Ilex glabra as well as mugo pine and chamaecyparis, provide the evergreen winter structure, while miscanthus grass creates The Colonial Village movement and texture. Perennial Shopping Center at yellow and maroon daylilies and 138–144 Montgomery Ave. annual pink, blue and white petunias, blue ageratum, yellow marigolds, and pink geraniums provide flashes of summer color. Business Category If there were seven wonders of Bala Cynwyd, surely the Japanese Garden at The Pagoda Building at 100 Presidential Boulevard would be one of them. This nearly-unknown garden masterpiece was initially conceived and created in 1965 by US Naval commander Seltzer Fleck and his wife after an extended tour of duty in Japan. The garden was built to accompany an “oriental styled” office building they built in Bala Cynwyd and called the Pagoda Building. The original garden included both a cascading stream and a koi pond. Unfortunately, both the building and the garden fell into disrepair until the property The Pagoda Building at was purchased in 1994 by 100 Presidential Blvd. Kennbert Investments. Kennbert hired Jack Miller, an expert in Japanese Garden Design, to renovate and manage the garden. Jack Miller’s improvements included draining the koi pond and replacing it with a dry pond and waterfall, adding rock, paths and bridges, as well as plant material. The now-mature garden is an outstanding example of a Japanese garden and may be one of the finest in the Mid-Atlantic region. Tom Coyle is the proud property manager and current gardener. Contact him directly to schedule a tour of the garden and experience firsthand the many beautiful and symbolic Japanese elements on display, including the Low Entrance Humble Gate, “blood grass” to honor fallen Samurai, a crooked bridge to prevent evil from following, the dry river and waterfall, and stone lanterns to light the way. You will be transfixed and transported, and when you emerge, surprised to find yourself still in Bala Cynwyd. The sea of asphalt that surrounds the LA Fitness Building in Bala Cynwyd Shopping Center is refreshingly interrupted with shady islands of trees, shrubs, grasses and annuals. Thanks to Federal Realty Investment Trust for assuring that trees like Honey Locust, Ginkgo biloba and Betula nigra are there to provide summer shade and winter bark interest, while masses of knock-out roses, spirea and petunias provide pink puddles of summer color. Evergreen shrubs of Ilex crenata, Ilex glabra and Taxus sp. Bala Cynwyd Shopping Center guarantee winter interest in tough site conditions. Long views of parked cars are masked by tall grasses swaying calmly in the breeze. July 4th Thanks An oversight on the part of the Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd meant that those attending the 2008 4th of July Celebration were not able to enjoy the annual rendition of God Bless America and the 2008 4th of July Celebration Star Spangled Banner sung with style and grace by our long-time neighbor and friend, Patricia Kane-Vanni. The Club would like to extend an apology to Patricia and also express its appreciation to Susan Watts and Don Greenfield, musicians from Elaine Watts’ Summer Sounds Pop Band, who led the crowd with horn and keyboard in an impromptu performance of the Star Spangled Banner. See color photos of winning gardens at our website: www.balacynwyd.org 5 T LIS HED ES AB Presorted Std U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 50 Bala Cynwyd, PA Newsletter of The Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd P.O. Box 717, Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania 19004 www.balacynwyd.org Mark Your Calendar: Saturday, 1 November 2008 Cynwyd Trail Clean-Up 9:00 a.m. Tuesday, 11 November 2008 NCBC Annual Meeting 7:00 p.m., Union Fire Station on Montgomery Avenue NOTE CHANGE in time and place for this meeting only. Many thanks to our hard-working off-Board committee chairs: Mary Anne Diamond, Beautification Fred Fischer, Web Site Phillip Rodbell, TreeVitalize " The Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd Membership Form The Community Needs Your Support! We are grateful to those of you who have paid NCBC dues for 2008. Your civic association’s honor system translates into numerous benefits to all residents of Bala Cynwyd, regardless of annual dues status. However, we need your dues to help us strengthen the community in a way that is valuable to all. Our Board members and Committee Chairs contribute their time and energy. Won’t you please help us by submitting your 2008 dues now? To pay by credit card, please visit our website: www.BalaCynwd.org. Contact information for NCBC Officers and Directors is available at our website: www.balacynwyd.org Your dues help to • Alert you to neighborhood discussions of critical topics • Preserve the residential character of Bala Cynwyd • Support appropriate commercial development • Monitor zoning, traffic, and safety on our streets • Provide community-building events like the July 4th celebration Please send your 2008 dues to: The Neighborhood Club of Bala Cynwyd P.O. Box 717, Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004 M Household ($30) M Business ($50) M Contribution $_______ Name ______________________________________________________ Address ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ Email Address _______________________________________________ Leadership Opportunity From time to time we have one or more vacancies on The Neighborhood Club Board of Directors. If you are interested in being considered for such a position, please let us know. You can find our contact information at www.balacynwyd.org.