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Bridge Over Bushkill Creek Reopens in Forks

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The Main Street/Uhler Road Bridge over the Bushkill Creek is has reopened in Tatamy Borough and Forks Township after being closed for replacement for just over two years.

The old structurally deficient three-span steel I-beam bridge has been replaced with a three-span concrete box-beam bridge, PennDOT said in an announcement of the reopening.

Due to significant deterioration, the Main Street/Uhler Road Bridge over Bushkill Creek was closed in May 2011. Work began to replace the bridge in August 2011, and during construction the road remained closed with traffic being detoured on Sullivan Trail, Main Street, Route 191 and Walnut Street.

Easton's Bi-State Construction Co. Inc. was the general contractor on the $2,692,255 project and finished the project on schedule, PennDOT said.

The old bridge was constructed in 1941 and was 189 feet long, 23 feet wide. The
new bridge is 195 feet long and 42 feet wide.

Main Street/Uhler Road has an average daily traffic volume of 7,725 vehicles.

City of Easton Hopes to Upgrade Technology Soon

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By Christina Georgiou

New City of Easton IT Manager Frank Caruso outlines a
plan to upgrade the city's technology at the city council
committee meeting Tuesday evening.
The City of Easton is planning to upgrade its computer system and make other technology improvements in coming months in a drive for greater efficiency, it was revealed during a city council committee meeting Tuesday evening.

IT Manager Frank Caruso, who began working for the city about six weeks ago, outlined the beginnings of a plan to use technology to modernize a number of city systems, including the introduction of electronic card payment options to pay parking tickets and city utility and trash bills.

While the entire municipal system won't be completely integrated at first, integration is the goal, Caruso said, and eventually, members of the public will be able to pay bills and parking fines online.

The payment system at city hall will also be getting an upgrade in the near future too, he said.

"We may be looking at a kiosk system, where people can walk up and pay a parking ticket, (or) their utility bills," Caruso said, adding that the terminal would be similar to an ATM.

Currently, payments are recorded manually by city employees, and Easton doesn't accept credit and debit cards, he said.

Other tech upgrades are being planned too, including a new phone system and the "virtualization" of city computers, Caruso said.

A slide from Tuesday evening's presentation shows how
the city's phone system could be integrated to save
Easton money and pay for a new phone system.
Officials said that integrating the municipal phone system between 11 city properties would save Easton an estimated $10,000 per year, and that savings would more than pay for a new phone system over time.

The current city phone system was installed when the Alpha Building became the site of Easton city hall, about 17 years ago.

"It's on its last legs. We're hoping it's going to last," Caruso said.

The new IT manager also hopes to upgrade city computers in the near future, likely by installing a central server system and storing city data "in the cloud" where it could be accessed remotely both by desktop computers in city hall and by mobile devices employees could carry in the field when away from their desks, he said.

"You'll be able to take your iPads, your iPhones, on the road with you, and you'll be able to work like you're sitting at your desk," he said, noting this would be especially helpful for the city code inspectors and other employees who work in locations other than their desks a good portion of the time.

The system, along with the electronic payment upgrade, will also be especially useful for parking enforcement too, he said.

Parking enforcement officers would move to writing tickets electronically, where they would immediately be posted to the city's computer system, bypassing the need for a clerk to enter them manually, as is the case now.

Ticket recipients would be able to pay fines almost immediately online under the new system.

Centralizing the city's computer system would also allow for automatic software upgrades and save time and labor on maintenance, Caruso said.

An visual depiction of how a centralized computer system
for the city would work.
Instead of having to service each desktop individually, upgrades, security, and maintenance would be done at the central server, and changes would automatically be shared across the system, he said. City employees could log in from anywhere, and their profiles and preferences would follow their log in.

The IT manager also suggested the city might collaborate with Lafayette College on the project. Upgrades to the cables that carry data to the city must also take place before the plan could become a reality, he said, adding that Lafayette is in the middle of such an upgrade, and that would be another area the city might collaborate with the college.

"It's a long-term process," Caruso told city council members. "We're looking at what the feasibility is...Obviously, there's the matter of money."

City administrator Glenn Steckman said he wants to see the new parking payment system operational by November of this year, and the feasibility of other tech upgrades would likely be a topic of the 2014 budget discussions.

Mayor Sal Panto expressed support for the presented ideas, especially upgrades to the parking payment system, but stressed that any upgrades and changes must be "something we can pick up and take with us" to the city's new planned city hall too.

The mayor also suggested that having an electronic parking ticketing system would eliminate the need for one clerk in the police department. He added that the savings on that salary could likely be used to hire an additional public works employee.

Council members seemed cautiously favorable to the intial plans to update city systems.

Councilman Roger Ruggles said he wanted to see more information before a commitment to the plans.

"If we could get a rough implementation schedule--nothing we're going to hold your feet to the fire to--we'd at least have an intial picture (of the costs involved)," he told Caruso.

Caruso said a more detailed description of the plan will be forthcoming in weeks ahead.

"In six weeks, we've been in warp drive," he said.

Councilman Jeffrey Warren said he liked the direction of the plan. He added that the addition of wifi in city hall, which also includes separate access for guests at a minimal cost of $52 per month, is something he hopes will be further extended eventually to all locations in the city.

"With more young people moving here, it's something I think we should look at," Warren said.

Suspicious Letter to Church Brings Haz Mat Team to EPD

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A letter sent to an Easton church containing an unknown crystalline substance caused a section of the parking garage in the Downtown district to be shut down for more than two hours this afternoon.

Police say that at approximately 1:10 p.m., they were summoned to the lobby of the Easton Police Department station where a pastor had brought a letter and envelope that had been mailed to her local church in because it contained a suspicious crystal substance.

As a precaution, the items were placed in a plastic container and removed from the station, to the back of the building outside, police said.

The Easton Fire Department, along with Northampton County Emergency Management and the Lehigh County Hazardous Materials Unit, were then called to the scene. Additionally, the area behind the police station, within the parking garage, was closed to pedestrian and vehicular traffic.

At 3:31 p.m., the Lehigh County Hazardous Material Unit determined that the substance was non-hazardous.

Easton Police Lieutenant Samuel Lobb said later that the substance was probably sugar. He added the envelope indicated the letter had been mailed from the State Correctional Institute at Graterford.

Police are continuing to investigate and no arrests have been made in connection to the incident, they said.

Lobb said, given that whoever sent the letter is most likely already incarcerated and that the substance was benign, it's unlikely that charges will filed in the case.

Updated at 10:39 p.m. to add information regarding the source of the letter and that the crystalline substance was most likely sugar.

Easton Councilman Mike Fleck Resigns, Replacement to Be Appointed July 24

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By Christina Georgiou

Easton City Councilman Mike Fleck, at his
last meeting. The council accepted Fleck's
resignation Wednesday evening, effective as
of July 16, due to his relocating to Allentown.


Easton's city council officially accepted the resignation of member Michael Fleck Wednesday evening and said it will appoint his replacement at the governing body's next official meeting, on Wednesday, July 24.

Two applications were received by the city to become Fleck's appointed replacement before the July 3 deadline, said Mayor Sal Panto, one from West Ward Neighborhood Partnership board member Stephen White, and the other from Democratic city council candidate Jim Edinger.

The city will conduct interviews with both on Tuesday, July 23 at the city council committee meeting, members of city council agreed Wednesday evening.

Councilwoman El Warner said she will be unable to attend either meeting later this month due to a business trip.

Her absence means an appointee on July 24 will require four affirmation votes from the attending five city council members to make a choice official because the city Home Rule charter specifies a majority of remaining council members must vote for the replacement, city solicitor William Murphy confirmed.

White is also owner of Delaware River Books on South Second Street in the Downtown district.

Edinger is the chairman of Easton's zoning hearing board, a position he has held since 1993.  He is also president of the Carpenters Union Local 600.

Panto has said previously that while there is no city rule against it, city council has traditionally shunned appointing active candidates as appointees.

Whoever the council chooses will serve until the end of the year, when a council member elected to represent Easton's West Ward in Fleck's stead is sworn in.

Council members did not discuss applicants' merits Wednesday evening, choosing instead to concentrate on thanking Fleck for his two terms on city council. The City of Easton also presented Fleck with a gleaming pewter plate commemorating his time on Easton's governing body.

A shiny finish over a matte one was chosen "because we know you'll be looking at yourself in it," quipped Panto.

"We once ran against each other (for mayor), but now we've become best friends," Panto said more seriously.

Members of city council thanked Fleck and praised his public service efforts as well.

"We've had our disagreements over the years, but I think we've agreed more than we disagreed," said Jeff Warren.

"It seems like every time you run, you leave us," Councilman Ken Brown joked. "But seriously, it was a pleasure to serve with you on two occasions...I know our path will cross many, many times in the future."

"Once you're gone, it's going to be so quiet on this end of the table," said Councilwoman El Warner. "I'll miss you, but it's not an end, it's a beginning."

Fleck's resignation, originally planned for the end of the year, is due to his move to Allentown, where he said he plans to concentrate on his business as a campaign consultant.

"I thank everyone for their kind words, and I'm sorry to leave early, but I thought it would take longer to find a new home," he said.

Fleck also credited his family for their support and assistance with his political and business' success which led to the move.

"We had to make a decision of where we wanted to be, and we chose behind the scenes," he said. "I really thank the community for the opportunity to serve."

He added, "I may be crazy, but I'm proud of the fact that we raised the parking tickets (fine) because it will raise money to pay for things we otherwise wouldn't have been able to pay for."

Easton Officials Express Skepticism of Dam Removal Plan

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By Christina Georgiou

A three-year study by the Wildlands Conservancy on how to restore shad to the Lehigh River calls for the complete removal of two dams in Easton, but Easton officials seemed skeptical of the plan Wednesday evening, saying that while they'd like to see the shad return to the waterway, there is probably a better way to achieve that.

Vice president of the Wildlands Conservancy Abigail
Pattishall presents the ecology group's study findings
to Easton City Council Wednesday evening.

Abigail Pattishall, vice president of the conservation group, said the study looked at various options including partial dam removal and fish ramps but concluded the only effective solution would be the complete removal of both the Easton dam, located at the forks of the Delaware and Lehigh rivers, and the Chain dam which lies further upstream.

The Easton dam is owned by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR), while the Chain dam is owned by the City of Easton. Both were originally built in the early 1800s and were intended to feed the Delaware and Lehigh canals.

Removal of the two dams would cost between $11.5 and $15.2 million, excluding engineering costs, the Wildlands Conservancy estimated. The potential undertaking, which would likely span a decade, is currently unfunded, though about $150,000 has been pledged by Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission and from the Palmerton Superfund settlement.

Additional funding could be raised through grant opportunities, Pattishall said.

A slide from the Wildlands Conservancy study presentation
at the Easton City Council meeting Wednesday evening.
She added that while a number of infrastructure issues would need to be addressed and pumping stations would need to be constructed to keep the Delaware and Lehigh canals full as well, these obstacles could be overcome and the benefits of the dams' removal would be worth it.

"We're really talking about opening up a lot of new habitat," she said.

John Berry of the Shad Fisherman's Association also urged city council to support the removal of the two dams, saying that it would not only bring shad back to the Lehigh River, but would also bring several other desirable species of fish to the waterway.

And, removing the dam would open up new recreational opportunities on the Lehigh as well.

"The economy dam removal would bring is honestly the biggest benefit to the City of Easton," Berry told council members. "The City of Easton, located where it is, should see the lion's share of (increased revenue)...You have 20 million people...within a gas tank's distance of Easton...and they are potential (fishing) license buyers."

Councilman Roger Ruggles, who is also an engineering professor at Lafayette College, questioned the accuracy of the study, saying that claims that the dams' removal would mitigate flood situations is misleading.

Easton City Councilman
Roger Ruggles disagreed
with the Wildlands
Conservancy study findings
and said claims dam removal
would help reduce flooding
were inaccurate and
misleading.


"Your report states a reduction of 16.1 feet in a hundred-year event," he said. "That was an inaccurate statement...You're wrong. The level on South Third Street is driven by the Delaware, not the Lehigh. If you're wrong about that, what else are you wrong about?"

He added that possible contaminants from decades of riverside industry may lurk under the river silt and these would be released if the dams were removed. He said the cost of environmental cleanup if this were the case could add "untold millions" to project costs.

Mayor Sal Panto agreed with Ruggles' assessment of the cause of flooding in the city.

"You should remove flooding from your report," he told Pattishall.

Councilwoman El Warner worried that the dams' removal would cost the city in other ways, even if Easton didn't contribute directly to the project's funding.

"The city may only own one dam, but the city owns several valuable assets that would be affected by it," she said, noting that sewer and gas lines, as well as other infrastructure, span the lengths of the two dams.

City officials also worried about the costs associated with pumping water back into the Delaware and Lehigh canals, saying that while Easton might not have to pay directly for the dam removal, they'd almost certainly have to bear the pumping costs.

Councilman Jeff Warren questioned why the fish ladders at the two dams have been ineffective, noting that they cost about $3.9 million to install less than 20 years ago, and that at the time were described as being state of the art.

"The design of the fish ladders developed on the west coast for salmon, which go through fish ladders quite well," said Leroy Young from the Pennsylvania Fish and Game Commission. "Shad don't."

The Easton Planning Department also said the study was flawed in a number of ways, and that total dam removal would present a number of disadvantages to the city.

Chief City Planner Brian Gish, who is also an avid fisherman, said the department looked at the issue from "a more holistic standpoint, not just fish passage."

"Written solely from a fish-navigation standpoint, (this study) is misleading," he said.

The city can't support dam removal at this point, and other remedies to allow shad back into the Lehigh should be considered, including modifying the fish ladders, or the installation of fish elevators.

"We know things don't work as they are, but that doesn't mean other solutions wouldn't," he said. "The solutions may require out-of-the-box thinking, but last I checked, that isn't something Easton has trouble with."

Gish also said that while dam removal might create some new recreational opportunities along the river, it would also likely eliminate others, as well as devalue some existing waterway investments, like boat docks and ramps, through the drop in water levels.

"It's one thing to cast into the Lehigh when it's five feet away, It's another when it's 30," he said.

City Planning Director Becky Bradley said the drop in the Lehigh's water levels as a result of the dams' removal would have on utility and sewer lines would be substantial.

"The Lehigh River area is dense with Easton utility infrastructure facilities," she said. "(It) would not just be a matter of inconvenience."

The change in water levels would also directly affect the piers and supports of the six bridges that lie upstream, inconsistent with their engineering and intended use, "necessitating expensive repairs and assessments."

The hydroelectric potential, though currently untapped, of the dams shouldn't be discounted either, Bradley said.

"Given the flow rates on the Lehigh iver and the impoundment height at each dam respectively, these dams have the potential to generate roughy 8.7 megawatts of electricity," she said. "Relative to electricity generated by fossil fuels, this would provide a carbon offset of approximately 226,000 tons of carbon dioxide per year, the equivalent of taking 42,640 vehicles off the road."

Bradley also noted the historic value of the canals, as well as the dams, to local history. The canal corridor was the first to be nationally recognized, and the area has been estimated by the federal government to have added 7,892 jobs and $250 million to the regional economy, she said.

Panto also noted the dams' attraction in their own right, saying that many people are attracted to the riverfront to see the falls.

Despite the council's opposition to the dam removal plan, officials said they are committed to helping return shad to the Lehigh River through other methods.

"We just want to work together," Young said.

"There's no set time line. We're not asking you to decide (now)," Pattishall said. "My job is just to tell you what's best for ecological health. We would never move the project forward without city council's blessing."


Easton Downtown Gets Store Directory Signs

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Photo contributed by the
Easton Main Street Initiative
Four new pedestal signs have just been installed in Easton's Downtown that are intended to help city visitors better navigate around the district, the Easton Main Street Initiative (EMSI) announced today.

The signs, which are  similar to those seen in the Centre Square kiosk and Discover Downtown Easton Map & Guide, highlight participating restaurants and retail businesses, along with navigational tools and a map of the Downtown area.

Users are able to identify their location quickly with a “You Are Here” arrow.

The signs are a project completed by the EMSI marketing committee, who also produces the annual "Downtown Easton Map & Guide" and  Centre Square kiosk poster. The new slat-top signs are a further extension of the program and will be updated annually with new businesses, EMSI said in a media release.

A total of 84 businesses are participating this year, up from 66 in 2012, it was noted.

The new directory signs are located on South Third Street in front of the parking deck, on North Third Street at the parking lot on the west side of the street, in front of the Sigal Museum at 342 Northampton St., and in front of the Grand Eastonian Hotel at 140 Northampton St.

The new visitors' directories were fabricated by JHM Signs in Alpha, NJ and funded through grants from HUD’s Community Development Block Grant Program and a Chamber of Commerce’s Main Street Lehigh Valley Community Improvement Grant, though the final cost of the endeavor wasn't specified.

This is the second major initiative to help Easton visitors find their way around the Downtown district this year from EMSI. A smartphone app was released in April for both iPhone and Android users that highlights Downtown events and hotspots.

Weekend Guide, July 12 to 14

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Another jam-packed weekend of great stuff happening in Easton...

Friday, July 12


Art Reception: 6 to 8 p.m. Elizabeth Judge Wyant, "Photographs of Easton". Family YMCA, 1225 West Lafayette St. 610-258-6158 or 610-253-0536

Line Dancing: 7 to 10:30 p.m. Lessons at 7:15 p.m. $5 per person for members, $6 for non-members. Tatamy Fire Company, 164 Bushkill St., Tatamy. 610-759-2786 or www.purecountrydancers.com

TBA, DJ Mike West: Band at 7:30 p.m., DJ at 10:30 p.m.  Rivals Sports Bar & Nightclub, 5 Lehns Court. 610-923-7625 or www.rivalseaston.com

Adam Web: 8 p.m. The Riegelsville Inn, 12 Delaware Road, Riegelsville. 610-749-0100 or www.riegelsvilleinn.com

Ojespa Project: 9 p.m. Two Rivers Brewing Company, 542 Northampton St. 610-829-1131 or www.tworiversbrewing.com

Pour Mans Band: 9 p.m. Colonial Pizza & Spaghetti House, 136-138 Spring Garden St. 610-252-3033 or www.colonialpizzapub.com

DJ Mikey Z: 10 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Trevor Extor: 10 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Time Relapse: 10 p.m. Pearly Baker's Alehouse, 11 Centre Square. 610-253-9949 or www.pearlybakers.net

Saturday, July 13


Easton Farmers' Market: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The oldest continuous open-air in the United States. Centre Square. www.eastonfarmersmarket.com

"Winter Wonderland": A showcase of ACE-member art about all things cool, winter, ice, snowflakes, themes of holiday celebrations from around the world, with snowflake workshops from  2 to 3 p.m. Quadrant Book Mart & Coffee House, 20 North Third St. 610-252-1188

Summer White-wear Party: 6 to 10 p.m. With Nyk Van Wyk on electric violin and DJ Kunjan spinning one-of-a kind hits. Dance-a-palooza at 10 p.m. with DJ Matos. Mesa Modern Mexican, 42 South Third St. 610-339-2101 or www.mesamexican.com

Dancing To The Oldies Under The Stars: 7 p.m. with DJ Fran Aiello. Come enjoy a magical night and bring back the memories. Valenca, , 64-66 Centre Square. 610-923-5142 or www.valencaonthesquare.com

Opening Reception - "Three Dots": 7 to 10 p.m., with artist Tom D'Angelo, music by Three Old Guys in the Corner. ConneXions Gallery, 213 Northampton St. 610-250-7627 or www.connexionsgallery.net

Concert and Movie in the Park: The Easton Municipal Band performs the music of ABBA at 7:30 p.m., followed by a showing of the movie "Mamma Mia", starring the Lehigh Valley's own Amanda Seyfried. Weather permitting. Scott Park, Larry Holmes Drive, just south of the free bridge. Click here for more information and other upcoming dates of Easton Mayor's Office of Special Events summer happenings.

A Few Good Men, DJ Kevin Rogers: Band at 7:30 p.m., DJ at 10:30 p.m.  Rivals Sports Bar & Nightclub, 5 Lehns Court. 610-923-7625 or www.rivalseaston.com

Free Texas Hold'em: 7 & 9 p.m. La Pazza, 1251 Ferry St. 610-515-0888 or www.lapazza.com

Lelica, BD Lenz & Doug Hawk: 8 p.m. Maxim's 22, 322 Northampton St. 610-252-2622 or www.maxims22.com

Frank Giasullo: 8 p.m. The Riegelsville Inn, 12 Delaware Road, Riegelsville. 610-749-0100 or www.riegelsvilleinn.com

Robert Clark: 8 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Forks Township Movies in the Park:"Safe Haven", movie begins at dusk. Bring a lawn chair or blanket for a more comfortable viewing experience. Forks Township Community Park Amphitheatre, 500 Zucksburg Road, Forks Township. Click here for more details and other Forks summer community events.

Brian Dean Moore: 9 p.m. Colonial Pizza & Spaghetti House, 136-138 Spring Garden St. 610-252-3033 or www.colonialpizzapub.com

Burnt Orange Trio: 9 p.m. Two Rivers Brewing Company, 542 Northampton St. 610-829-1131 or www.tworiversbrewing.com

Karaoke with Nort: 9 p.m. Rip Van Winkle's Pub, 3700 Nicholas St., Palmer Township. 610-258-8873

Doug Herlinger's Re-Up: 9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. The Lafayette Bar, 11 North Fourth St. 610-252-0711 or www.lafayettebarjazz.com

Adam Marsland: 10 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Billy Bauer Band: 10 p.m. Pearly Baker's Alehouse, 11 Centre Square. 610-253-9949 or www.pearlybakers.net

Sunday, July 14


Blues Jam with BC Combo: 5:30 p.m. Bella Luna, 3417 Sullivan Trail, Forks Township. 610-253-7458

Open Mic: 7 to 9 p.m. Sitgreaves Coffee House, Trinity Episcopal Church, 234 Spring Garden St. 610-253-0792

Open Mic Hosted by Jim Stocker: 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Save the Date!


The 2nd Annual Easton Comedy show is next Friday, July 19 from 8 to 10 p.m. at the Riverside Park Amphitheatre. Hosted by Easton comedienne Liz Russo, and featuring national headlining comics Keith Purnell, Alex House, and Regina DeCicco, this show is suitable for those over 18. Click here for more information, and see you there!

Easton's most comprehensive guide to what's happening over the weekend, in the city and beyond, is published every Friday.

Are you planning an event? Did we miss something? Let us know! Email us.

Sponsoring the Weekend Guide is an excellent way to advertise your local business. Plus, you get a permanent link to your website, also a great way to drive more traffic to your door. It's affordable too. Email us for details.

West Ward Man Arrested, Charged After Morning Drug Raid

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An early morning raid resulted in the arrest of a West Ward man found with heroin and a stolen handgun, Easton Police say.

Bryan Velasquez, 21, was reportedly taken into custody at about 6 a.m. this morning while the Easton Police Department Vice/Narcotics and Special Response Units executed a narcotics search warrant at 103 North Oak St. Seized by authorites were approximately $2,200 worth of heroin, $1,000 in cash, and a stolen .380 caliber handgun, police said.

The warrant and arrest are the result of a several-months long investigation focusing on heroin sales in the West Ward neighborhood, said Lieutenant Matthew Gerould via a media release.

Velasquez is expected to be arraigned later today on charges of possession with intent to deliver heroin, receiving stolen property, violating an order not to possess a firearm, and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Police said no one was injured during the search and arrest.

Velasquez pled guilty to one count of possession with intent to deliver illegal drugs in 2010, and served just over nine months in prison for the offense later that year, according to online state court records.

The house on North Oak Street where Velasquez was arrested this morning is owned by Rosemary Velasquez of the same address, according to online county property records.


Summer Nights Program Providing Food, Food Education to Many Local Residents

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By Christina Georgiou

That the Summer Nights program in the West Ward's Centennial Park is fun and provides activities and a place to go for city kids in an effort to keep them off the streets and out of trouble is no secret. But the program also provides vital resources for many in the city whose income is less than sufficient to provide them with enough food to eat.

The Easton Weed and Seed Summer Nights program feeds
about 100 city children and 50 adults in need
four nights a week.

According to the lastest available statistics, food insecurity affected 34,670 people in Northampton County, and 42 percent of the county population qualifies for SNAP. Often, even with the assistance of food stamps, children and families are in danger of going hungry because they don't have enough.

The Summer Nights program, run by Easton Weed and Seed, is feeding an average of 100 children and 50 adults dinner per day, four days a week, said director Laura Accetta.

From Monday to Thursday, every week until August 24, anyone who shows up at the park between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. is fed.

The meals are light and simple, often featuring sandwiches. Water, instead of iced tea or lemonade, is being offered for drinking this year, in an effort to cut down on sugar and be healthier.

Children's meals, provided by Sodexo through the Easton Area School District's summer food service program, are balanced nutritionally in accordance with school lunch menu regulations. Yesterday, it consisted of a small sandwich wrap, a side, milk, and an apple. 

For adults, meals are provided and made by the Easton Area Community Center, and the menu varies based on what's available through the Second Harvest Food Bank and a few other local companies that donate their leftover-but-still-good items. Thursday, the adult meal included a salami bagel sandwich and a bag of chips.

And, by the end of the meal, all of the food was gone. A few leftovers from the adult meals were immediately taken when offered around, with some clearly stashing them away for later or the next day. There were no leftovers of children's meals.

"Generally, we run out of food," Accetta said.

Some of the problem is clearly due to families not having enough money or benefits to purchase all the food they need, particularly when it comes to fresh, healthy items. But better education, cooking skills, and making wise food choices can help make people's limited budgets go further, both when it comes to having enough to eat and their overall health.

Meagan Grega, a physician and one of the
founders of the Kellyn Foundation, talks
the importance of healthy eating, while
offering cooking instruction and
demonstrations.

For the third summer in a row, the Bethlehem-based Kellyn Foundation, is running their "Healthy Lifestyles" program every Thursday evening during Summer Nights.

Kellyn Founders Meagan Grega and Eric Ruth combine live food prep demonstrations, nutritional advice, and healthy living tips into an enjoyable hands-on presentation that engages both kids and their parents who attend Summer Nights.

Basic cooking skills and building confidence in the kitchen, along with introducing fresh, healthy foods participants may not be very familiar with, is a big part of the equation.

A young Summer Nights program participant gives sauteed
onions a stir.
"Sometimes you might feel like you don't know how to cook. But if you start experimenting..." Grega told the crowd of about 50 who gathered to see how to make "Summer Rice and Veggie Soup" this past Thursday evening.

Children are particularly encouraged by the team to participate in the food preparation demos, including how to measure ingredients and chopping up vegetables.

"The first thing you need are knife skills," Grega said, as one young volunteer was guided through the process by Ruth.

While some might discourage children from handling the sharp blades, Grega and Ruth emphasized safety while teaching the essential kitchen skills.

Eric Ruth, one of the Kellyn Foundation's
founders, shows a young boy how to properly
chop vegetables at during a cooking
demonstration at the Summer Nights program
Thursday evening.
"You need to be mindful and be sure you're paying attention," Grega told assembled kids.

One by one, each ingredient--all fresh and in season vegetables and herbs, were named and their healthy attributes described by Grega, who first asked the audience to guess what each was and why it was good.

As ingredients went into the pans and pots one by one, the colorful medley of mixed summer produce was shown off.

"The goal is to eat a rainbow of colors," Grega explained. "You want to eat all the different colors...because you want to have all the different types of vitamins that come with all the types of colors.

"If you do this, then you won't need a multivitamin because you'll be getting (vitamins) in your food," she added.

Tips about how to reduce preparation time, like cooking the rice for the soup while cutting up the vegetables, are also part of the enjoyable education.

To help participants be able to recreate meal items demonstrated, audience members are given $10 vouchers good for purchases at the Easton Farmers' Market, along with the recipe printed in both English and Spanish.

"Make sure you get a recipe at the end so you can make this at home," Grega tells the audience.

Those present also have the bonus of getting a taste of the spoils. That it's both good and that many are still hungry is obvious, as a premade batch of the summer soup is quickly consumed, as is the just-made batch, despite warnings that "it might still be a little crunchy."

A bowl of summer veggie and rice soup, using fresh, in
season vegetables from the Easton Farmers' Market. Those
who attend the city's Summer Nights program on Thursdays
not only get to watch and participate in a live cooking
demonstration and taste the results, but also receive market
vouchers to help them purchase the needed ingredients to
try the recipes at home.
But not only is the healthy food being consumed at Summer Nights, it's clear that audience members are taking skills home with them too. Several volunteered that they'd made a quinoa vegetable stir-fry, the last featured demo dish, at home and they'll be doing it again.

"We want to show people that you can eat healthy, delicious food on a budget," Grega, who is also a physician, said.

Grega creates the mostly vegetable-based recipes from scratch, based around what's immediately available at the Easton Farmers' Market and what's in season.

"I made this recipe up on Monday," she said. "Next week will have to do with peaches. We're figuring out exactly what we're going to do."

The Kellyn Foundation's Meagan Grega, who lives in Palmer
Township, talks about the nutritional value of purple carrots
Thursday evening in the West Ward's Centennial Park.
While the program isn't vegetarian or specifically promoting a vegetarian lifestyle, nearly all the presentations this summer will be based around fruits and vegetables. The location in the park makes proper handling of meat-based meals more of a challenge, plus having a high proportion of fruits, vegetables and grains in the diet is healthier, and most people already know how to cook meat, Grega said.

Those watching the demonstrations have been taking advantage of the farmers' market vouchers and presumably incorporating what they're learning from the "Healthy Lifestyles" program, Ruth said.

Nineteen vouchers were used at the twice-weekly market on Easton's Centre Square last week. The market is reimbursed in full by Summer Nights, who received a grant from the Walmart charity foundation to underwrite the voucher costs.

"I'm hoping to see more every week," Ruth said. "I want to see 50 families a week take advantage of the voucher program."

Kellyn's efforts at educating kids and their parents doesn't start in the kitchen though. After the demonstration, Grega and Ruth, led by several children, moved over to a corner of Centennial Park, where a small vegetable garden has been planted.

A young boy holds up a just-picked carrot. The vegetable was grown in
the small plot in Centennial Park, where Easton's Summer Nights program is
held Monday through Thursday, from 4 to 8 p.m.
While the gardening project is small and somewhat undeveloped at this point, the pair said they hope to involve some volunteers to tend it next year and produce some ingredients that can be used in their cooking demonstrations in the future.

The idea is to add one more layer of empowerment and understanding of what good, healthy food is and where it comes from, Ruth said.

"If people grow their own food, they 'get it.' If they don't, they don't," Ruth said.


This Week in Easton, July 15 to 18

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They say it's going to be very hot this week. So it goes--after all, it is July. Lots of cool stuff happening this week, as always. Of course, it's not a bad time to get involved in local government either, and the bonus is a couple hours of free air conditioning.

Monday, July 15


Open Mic: 6 to 10 p.m. New Seasons Event Center, 905B Line St. www.NewSeasonsEventCenter.net or email "slidetheblues" at gmail.com for additional info.

Easton Zoning Hearing Board meeting: 6:30 p.m. City Hall, city council chambers, 6th floor, 1 South Third St.

Williams Township Land Preservation Board meeting: 7 p.m. Williams Township Municipal Complex, 655 Cider Press Road, Easton (Williams Township)

Wilson Area School Board meeting: 7 p.m. William P. Tollinger Administration Building, 2040 Washington Boulevard, Wilson Borough.

Tuesday, July 16


Duplicate Bridge: 11:30 a.m. Temple Covenant of Peace, 1451 Northampton St.

Bingo: Doors open at 5:30 p.m., bingo starts at 7 p.m. Refreshments available. Williams Township Fire Company, 2500 Morgan Hill Road, Williams Township. www.wtfireco.com

Williams Township Garden Club meeting:
6 p.m. An enjoyable evening of garden events. Everyone is welcome! St. John's Church, 2720 Morgan Hill Road, Williams Township. For information, call Carol McIntosh at 610-253-3155.

Easton Recreation Board meeting: 7 p.m. City Hall, city council chambers, third floor, 1 South Third St.

Line Dancing: 7 to 9:30 p.m. Beginner lessons 7:15 p.m. Open dancing follows. $5 per person. Tatamy Fire Company, 164 Bushkill St., Tatamy. 610-759-2786 or www.purecountrydancers.com


Palmer Township Recreation Board meeting: 7:30 p.m. In the Palmer Library meeting room, at the Municipal Complex, 1 Weller Place (off of Newburg Road), Palmer Township.
 
Movies in the Park - "The Lorax": Movie begins at 8:30 p.m. Free. Bring your own blankets and chairs, weather permitting, Nevin Park, Lafayette St. and Taylor Avenue. Click here for more information and future Movies in the Park dates.

Wednesday, July 17


Weyerbacher Wednesday: 4 to 9 p.m. The Easton Farmers' Market's new weekday evening market. Twenty producer-only vendors offer fresh locally grown produce, herb, flowers, raw milk, cheese and yogurt, pasture-raised meat and eggs, artisan breads and baked goods, prepared foods, and vegan specialties. www.eastonfarmersmarket.org or click here for more information.

Easton Redevelopment Authority meeting: 5:30 p.m. City Hall, city council chambers, 6th floor, 1 South Third St.

Easton Business Association mixer: 5:30 p.m. An informal gathering where people get to know each other a little better. Held on the third Wednesday of each month Open to all EBA members. (Anyone can be a member by filling out a membership form, free.)  Mix and mingle between two stores with food and fun. Forgotten Treasure Chest and Crayton's Creations, 245 and 249 Northampton St. www.eastonpa-eba.org

Wilson Borough Council workshop meeting: 7 p.m. 2040 Hay Terrace, Wilson Borough.

Williams Township Planning Commission meeting: 7 p.m. Williams Township Municipal Complex, 655 Cider Press Road, Easton (Williams Township)

Zaire: 7 p.m. Vintage Restaurant, 100 Clubhouse Drive, Williams Township. 610-923-8480 or www.vintagerestaurantandbar.com

Texas Hold'em: 7 & 9 p.m. Free. La Pazza, 1251 Ferry St. 610-515-0888 or www.lapazza.com

Uncle Smiley: 7 p.m. The Widow's Tavern, 200 Main St., Stockertown. 610-365-8890 or www.widowstavern.com

Jam Session: 8 p.m. Hosted by Lou Franco. Rivals, 5 Lehn's Court. 610-392-2932 or www.rivalseaston.com


Mark Macmanus: 8 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Open Mic with Scott Harrington:
9:30 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Thursday, July 18


Easton Parking Authority meeting: 6 p.m. City Hall, city council chambers, 6th floor, 1 South Third St.


Art Opening Reception: 6 to 9 p.m. Opening reception for "Flow" and "Taking Note", two new exhibits that highlight works by Allison Bessesdotter and art of nature journaling. Nurture Nature Center, 518 Northampton St. www.nurturenature.org

Forks Township Board of Supervisors meeting: 7 p.m. Forks Township Municipal Complex, 1606 Sullivan Trail, Forks Township.

Wilson Borough Recreation Board meeting: 7 p.m. 2040 Hay Terrace, Wilson Borough.

Williams Township Rec Board meeting:
7 p.m. Williams Township Community Building, 655 Cider Press Road, Easton (Williams Township)

Bring (or wear) Your Own Vinyl night: 8 p.m. to midnight. With the Easton Record Exchange. Black & Blue, 683 Walnut St. 610-438-3604 or www.blackandblueeaston.com

YanCarlos Sanchez: 8 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Karaoke with Off the Grid Entertainment: 8 p.m. Rivals, 5 Lehn's Court. 610-392-2932 or www.rivalseaston.com

Karaoke: 8 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com
 
Anthony Zucchero: 9 p.m. Two Rivers Brewing Company, 542 Northampton St. 610-829-1131 or www.tworiversbrewing.com

DJ Discreet: 9:30 p.m. Pearly Bakers, 11 Centre Square. 610-253-9949 or www.pearlybakers.net

"This Week in Easton" lists what's happening during the weekdays, from special events to who's playing to government meetings, all in one handy place. Not just in the City of Easton, but for the entire greater Easton area...Published every Monday morning!

Is there a community or entertainment event you'd like to see here? Are you organizing something you'd like to have posted? Did we miss something? Email us!

Sneaker Drive Aims to Cover Many Student "Piggies"

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By Christina Georgiou

Going back to school may be the furthest thing from most Easton kids' minds right now, but several local organizations are hard at work making sure that when the school bell rings for that first day, area students have the basic necessities.

The "Let's Help Cover those Piggies!" drive is collecting new and like-new sneakers and shoes for the third year in a row, to ensure students have well-fitting footwear for the coming school year.

The initiative, coordinated by First United Church of Christ in cooperation with the Easton  Weed and Seed program, Easton Area School District's "Family Connection", Third Street Alliance, and other local churches and agencies, will provide sneakers to a couple hundred local students who might otherwise not be able to afford them, said First UCC's community outreach coordinator Margaret Parisi.

Those who will receive the sneakers don't necessarily rely on government benefits, she noted, though certainly many are recipients.

"We're really trying to reach the families not just in the social service programs, but also the folks in between," she said.

While the recession is officially over, there are still many in the Easton area who struggle to pay the bills, she said, and the need for the free footwear program has grown since it started.

"There are a growing number of piggies to cover," Parisi said.

While sneakers and shoes are being collected through a number of Easton houses of worship, local residents and businesses are more than welcome to contribute to the effort. The only stipulation is that donated footwear be in very good or new condition. All sizes are needed, from tiny preschool and toddler sizes all the way up to hard-to-find men's size 14.

"The goal is to get school-age children to have nice sneakers," Parisi said. "We make sure we have at least one pair in every size for everyone who is registered (to receive a pair of sneakers)."

Extra sneakers and shoes will go to students' family members, as they're needed, she said.

The church hopes that local businesses will get involved in the effort too, perhaps by local shops collecting gently used sneakers and shoes from customers and maybe offering an incentive like a small discount or free item for those who contribute, Parisi said.

"If people want to ask their job or their employees if they want to collect shoes, that would be great," she said, adding that churches and other houses of worship not yet involved in the footwear drive are also welcome to contribute.

Whether through a business or from private citizens, donations will be accepted through Monday, August 5.

To arrange to drop off a donation or for more information on how you can help, contact Margaret Parisi at 610-258-3361 or via  email at firstucc2@verizon.net

The church specifically asks that donors not leave sneakers and shoes by the door when the church is closed.

"That's our sexton's nightmare," Parisi said.

Donated sneakers and shoes are set be distributed to registered recipients on Saturday, August 17, a little more than a week before the school year starts again.

We Can Always Use a Little More Diversity in Easton

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Photos contributed by
Jessica Edwards

Easton Community Voices


By Jessica Edwards

Our fair little city has quite its share of multi-cultural aspects. From the thriving and blooming revolution of restaurants to ethnic festivals, such as the Greek food festival and St. Anthony's Italiana Festival and Lebanese Heritage Days, to name only a few of many events, one could literally travel the world by following their five senses in a series of visits to Easton.
 
The people who bring this international flavor to Easton also come from all over the world, and you can get a real sense of their upbringing and their trials and tribulations just by having a chat with any of them in passing.
 
I'm a Korean Irish Jew. I also serve the community full-time as an EMT with Suburban Ambulance, was a volunteer firefighter with Forks Township Fire Department, and when time permits, I volunteer down at the Farmer's Market. Hopefully soon, I'll be volunteering the Easton Community Center too.
 
I can clearly recall how when I worked as an EMT at the Crayola Experience how useful my knowledge of Hebrew was when I would meet Israelis or Orthodox Jewish families who would travel to our city to see the many colors and activities produced by one of the most well-known brands in the world. Turns out my Israeli dual-citizenship and subsequent learning of Hebrew came quite in handy!
 
So what does all of this have to do with anything?
 
In my spare time, I do another thing that I am particularly proud of. I'm a local coordinator for a Chicago-based educational non-profit organization, The Center for Cultural Interchange (CCI), which places high school-aged foreign exchange students into schools all over the United States.

One of the great things about America and Pennsylvania
in particular to one foreign student is getting Hershey's
chocolate on his birthday.

These students dream of studying for a semester or year in the United States to get a first-hand experience of our culture, society, customs and personalities.
 
However, in order to make this dream come true, they need hosts who are willing to take them into their homes and have them become an extended family member during their stay.
 
That's my job. I strive to make these matches and then throughout the year, I organize monthly meetings, activities, and volunteer projects to create memories that last a lifetime, not only for the student, but also the host family, the school and the community at large.
 
Easton Area High School has a rich history of foreign exchange students, but unfortunately, a few years ago, the local coordinator for a different program quit. At one point, the school had four foreign students per year studying in their classrooms, but they for the past two years, they have not had any.
 
I want to change that, but I need your help. After speaking with a number of teachers and EAHS' vice-principal, I have determined that not only are they still very open to the idea of hosting students, they in fact have determined quite a need for it.

Martin, pictured with exchange student coordinator
Jessica Edwards, on his way to the prom.

Not only do local students benefit from having their eyes opened to a new culture but the exchange students get to become a functioning member of the school's community, joining sports teams, presenting cultural programs, participating in after-school events and experiencing their first prom, with all the pomp and circumstance that goes with it.
 
This year, CCI has over 815 students representing 28 different countries who will be landing in America at the end of August and embarking on a year-long journey that will change their lives. So far, I have one girl from Finland who will be studying in Bangor High School this year, but call me selfish I want students in Easton!
 
I am currently looking for families that reside in the Easton Area School District who would be willing to host a student for a semester or academic year. Families can live anywhere in the district and can come from all types of backgrounds. Single parents, singles, working families, families with no children in the home, empty-nesters, grandparents, same-sex couples, etc. Our host families are some of the most varied and amazing people!
 
Host families are required to fill out an application, pass a background check, have an in-home interview which takes less than an hour, and promise to provide the student the following:
  • Open communication, encouragement, patience and sound advice
  • A separate bed, which can be in a shared room with a host sibling of similar age and same gender, and a quiet place to study
  • Three daily meals (school lunch may be one of them)
  • Local transportation (students are not permitted to drive while on the program)
  • Treatment as a member of the family, which may include household rules, responsibilities and privileges.
 
So, if I have grabbed your interest, I would love to speak with you! Our students are coming in mid-August, and the deadline for applying to host a student is July 31. Help me to bring Easton some more international flair!
 
To contact Jessi Edwards for further information or to apply to become a foreign exchange student host family, contact her at 484-544-3684 or click here to email her.
 
For more information about CCI's foreign exchange student program, click here.

Do you have something to say? The Easton Eccentric would love to hear it and so would our readers! Whether a once, occasionally, or regularly, we're always looking to add voices from the  local community. Send us your idea for a post--chances are good that we'll say 'yes!'

Cooling Stations Open in Easton, Plus Other Ways to Beat the Heat

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Due to the current heat wave and expected high temperatures, cooling stations have been opened in the City of Easton.

The Salvation Army at 1110 Northampton St. in the city's West Ward is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. They can be reached at 610-258-9531

Boys & Girls Club of Easton at 210 Jones Houston Way in Southside is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Club asks that people call ahead before arrival. 484-239-2075

"In addition, we can recommend that seniors take the bus to the area malls which are air conditioned," said Easton Fire Chief John Bast.

Taking a trip to the local library is also a way to beat the heat, at least for a little while. Pop by those air conditioned stacks and pick out some cool summer reading to enjoy in the shade when you get home.

Cooling off in community pools is another way to beat the heat, with the added benefit that they provide something for all ages for a minimal fee.

Easton pools are open daily from noon to 7 p.m. A day pass for city residents is $5 or $3 for children and seniors. Day passes for those from outside the city are $7 for adults or $5 for children and seniors. There is a $2 discount on admission beginning at 4:30 p.m.

Heil Pool is located at 900 Packer Avenue in Southside Easton--reach the pool at 610-250-6714
(Note, Heil Pool will close at 5 p.m. today, July 16 for a swim team meet. Otherwise, regular hours of operation apply.)

Eddyside Pool is located on Route 611 North at the base of College Hill. The phone number there is 610-250-6713

For more about Easton's pools, including pool rules, click here.

Not up for a swim in the pool, but you'd still like to get a little wet and cool off? Go old-school. Consider dunking your feet in the Bushkill Creek or wade in the shallow, calm parts along the Karl Stirner Arts Trail. Stream-fed, this is probably the coolest waterway in Easton, in more ways than one.

According to the Center for Disease Control, you can take these steps to prevent heat-related illnesses during hot weather:
  •     Stay in an air-conditioned indoor location as much as possible.
  •     Drink plenty of fluids even if you don’t feel thirsty.
  •     Wear loose, lightweight, light-colored clothing and sunscreen.
  •     Schedule outdoor activities carefully.
  •     Pace yourself.
  •     Take cool showers or baths to cool down.
  •     Check on a friend or neighbor and have someone do the same for you.
  •     Do not leave children or pets in cars.
  •     Check the local news for health and safety updates.

Other simple ways to beat the heat include:
  • Keep frozen treats such as ice cream and popsicles in the freezer that can help you keep cool during hot weather
  • Eat cold foods such as sandwiches and salads instead of cooking, especially if you don't have air conditioning
  • Eating fresh fruits and vegetables are also another way to help keep hydrated.

Veggie Van Proves to Be a Hit with Local Residents

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By Christina Georgiou

The Easton "Veggie Van" arrives Tuesday evening at Centennial Park
in the city's West Ward, with an estimated 300 pounds of fresh, locally
grown produce for distribution to enthusiastic residents.
Contributed photo by Larry Malinconico.
Loaded with an estimated 300 pounds of locally grown fresh produce, the new Easton Veggie Van was scheduled to be at the city's Summer Nights program for an hour and a half Tuesday evening. Stuffed to the gills, organizers wondered if they'd brought more food than they could distribute.

Instead, more than 90 percent of the vegetables were eagerly snatched up in about 15 minutes.

Less than an hour later, Veggie Van volunteers packed up, with only four zucchini and eight leaves of collard greens remaining.

The project, one of several to get more fresh, healthy food into the hands of Easton residents, is a collaboration between the West Ward Neighborhood Partnership and Lafayette College's Technology Clinic, which has been studying ways to make healthy food more accessible in the city neighborhood where many don't have cars and struggle to make ends meet.

Lynne Holden, with the West Ward
Neighborhood Partnership, assists
with bagging collard greens, while
right, Lafayette student Tech Clinic
coordinator Allie Nagurney, stands
ready with recipes to distribute.
 The Veggie Van--a small pickup truck, actually--came laden with 80 pounds of cucumbers, 100 pounds of zucchini, 40 pounds of summer squash, buckets of collard greens and swiss chard, beets, carrots, string beans, potatoes, rutabagas, cabbages and onions, along with some herbs like basil and parsley. All the produce was grown locally, coming from the Lafayette farm project, the Easton Urban Farm, the Crayola garden, and various other community gardens around the city.

The Tech Clinic has been working on coming up with solutions to much of the West Ward being a "food desert"--defined in this case as a mostly low-income neighborhood where many residents don't have a vehicle and live more than a mile from the closest full-service grocery store--for the past two years, said Lafayette College geology professor Larry Malinconico, who serves as the group's advisor.

Students in the clinic come from a variety of backgrounds and majors, and aim to come up with solutions to local issues using an interdisciplinary approach. This year, the group decided to focus on better ways to get fresh food to those who may have difficulty getting to a grocery store  or affording it a the city's twice weekly farmers' market.

Nearly completely cleaned out of food in less than an hour,
the Veggie Van crew is ready to pack up.

While the city has a number of community gardens, these weren't solving the problem of getting fresh food to residents either, he said.

"People weren't coming to the community gardens, and (the vegetables) were getting wasted," Malinconico said.

The Tech Clinic looked at what people in other communities were doing to solve their issues, and eventually decided to try "the ice cream truck" model--that is, bringing the food to the neighborhood, he said.

Lafayette sophomore Allie Nagurney, who serves as the project's student coordinator, said the approach seems to be a success so far.

"Once it was announced, everyone wanted some," she said, adding that the truck will be visiting various locations in the West Ward weekly for the next five or six weeks.

A Veggie Van enthusiast sets off for home.
 The method of distribution will probably be tweaked for the Veggie Van's appearance next week, she added. While this week was certainly a success, and about 40 people were recipients of the truck's bounty, some received more produce than others, and some vegetables ran out before others had the chance to get them.

But Nagurney had no complaints about the food going so quickly and said the project seems to be a success so far.

"We worked really hard to make this happen," she said, adding that she hopes the Veggie Van will become a permanent fixture in the neighborhood for years to come.

"We're hoping to make this a yearly thing," she said. "We want to make it sustainable."

For now, the vegetables are free, though donations to help offset costs are welcomed.

Running the Tech Clinic costs about $8,000 annually, Malinconico estimated, noting that it's the one program Lafayette doesn't fund, and that he and students must cover the costs of the projects the program undertakes themselves.

Along with the produce, the volunteers also handed out recipes for the individual vegetables on hand, which might eventually provide one source of offset revenue for the future.

"It would be fun to get a little cookbook together by the end of the summer too," Nagurney said.

Next week, the Veggie Van will be stopping at South 10th and Pine streets, the site of one community garden in the West Ward, beginning at 5:30 p.m.

The community garden at South 10th and Pine streets will
be the site of the next Veggie Van stop, next Monday,
beginning at 5:30 p.m.

Expected to be on the truck are zucchini, cucumbers, beets, summer squash, beans, carrots, lettuce and other greens, onion, garlic, and more, Nagurney said, adding that the program will continue weekly, on Mondays, for the next five or six weeks.

Next Monday's location was deliberately chosen to further help raise awareness and hopefully help residents begin to grow their own summer crops too, Malinconico said.

"We want people to know where the community gardens are," he said.



Beyond next Monday, July 22, future Veggie Van drop-off locations are yet to be determined. Bookmark this page and check back for more dates--we'll provide updates as soon as they're announced.

Local Town Crier Headed to Canada for World Championships

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By Christina Georgiou

Easton's appointed town crier, David Rose, as seen at
the city's Heritage Day celebration earlier this month.
Rose is headed to Canada in August to compete at
the World Invitational Town Crier Championships.
David Rose, Easton's official appointed town crier, will be heading to Kingston in Ontario, Canada on August 1 to represent the city at the World Invitational Town Crier Championships, Mayor Sal Panto's office announced today.

The five day competition will feature more than 30 town criers from Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands, England, New Zealand, and the United States. 

Rose will be accompanied by his wife, Kimberly Rose, who will act as his "escort". In the "Queen’s Jubilee Competition" held last year in Bracebridge, Ontario, she received recognition as “Best Dressed Escort” for her Victorian era ensemble.

At the August event, competitors will be judged on their ability to deliver a prepared "cry", the topic of which is assigned before the competition, in the open air before a panel of judges without the use of any electronic amplification. The First Prime Minister of Canada, Sir John A. MacDonald, and a response to the question of whether Kingston should have remained the capital of Canada instead of it being moved to Ottawa will be the subject addressed at this year's Town Crier Championships. Judges' evaluation of competitors' performances are based on a variety of criteria.

Each crier will also be required to perform a "hometown cry", which will give Rose the opportunity to present the City of Easton to an international audience, Wednesday announcement noted.

Rose said he plans to base his entry on an 1893 edition of The Easton Express that highlighted the many successful city businesses of the day and will perform the cry in period Victorian attire.

"It's going to be a promotional cry, encouraging businesses to relocate to Easton," he said.

Many of the most serious town criers from around the world are local history buffs, and use their town crying to spread the word about their city of origin, Rose said.

"This is the first time I've competed at this level," he added. "It's a great chance too to promote Easton."

Report of Armed Suicidal Man Closes Ferry Street, Disrupts Summer Nights Program

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By Christina Georgiou


Numerous police vehicles and officers were called to the scene of a house
on the 1200 block of Ferry Street Thursday evening for a report of an
armed man who reportedly threatened to harm himself.
Reports of an armed man "tearing up" his house and fears that he was planning to commit suicide disrupted the city's Summer Nights program and had the entire 1200 block of Ferry Street shut down for nearly two hours this evening.

Police say they received a report shortly after 6 p.m. of a man at his residence on Ferry Street just west of Cherry Street armed with multiple firearms who threatened to harm himself. Numerous police officers, along with a car from the Northampton County Sheriff's office, an Easton EMS ambulance, and a few members of the Easton Fire Department were also called to the scene.

The man's wife exited the house safely but was worried he planned to commit suicide, authorities said.

Police said they attempted to communicate with the unidentified man, but were initially unsuccessful. Just as they called special response officers and were seen being about to deploy a robot with a camera, the man, barefoot and shirtless, peacefully surrendered.

The unidentified man surrended and was transported by
ambulance to a local hospital, as worried-looking family
members watch.
EPD officers quickly took him into custody, and, handcuffed, the man was put into a waiting ambulance.

"While we were setting up negotiations, he surrendered peacefully," EPD Captain Scott Casterline said, adding that the man did not appear to be intoxicated.

The man was transported to a local hospital for evaluation, Casterline said.

"At this point, he is not facing any criminal charges," Casterline said. He added that the unidentified resident does not appear to have a criminal record and the EPD has not had prior dealings with him nor have they been called to the address for anything similar before.

"He just had a bad day, I guess," Casterline said.

Police found firearms in the house, but they were all legally owned, police said. The exact number of weapons was not immediately available, but Casterline estimated there were between two and six involved in Thursday evening's incident.

Several neighboring residents were forced to wait behind police lines to reenter their homes during the incident. Those that were home at the time of the event were not evacuated. A number of Summer Nights program participants were delayed from leaving the scene until the conclusion because their cars were parked behind police barricade lines.

Casterline credited the neighborhood with making authorities' jobs easier, especially in the heat. Summer Nights program participants quickly cleared Centennial Park when police ordered them away for their safety, and the immediate neighbors of the man who was the center of the incident were helpful, he said.

"There was a high level of cooperation from the neighbors," he said.

And, at least some neighbors were grateful for the EPD's professionalism in handling the situation.

"I'm glad everything turned out good. I thought there was going to be a worse outcome," said Henry Rivera, who lives about a block away and said he's been a friend of the unidentified man for about eight years . "I'm glad it turned out peacefully."

He added, "A lot of people talk about the Easton Police Department, but I think they did a great job. They treated him gently. They even gave him a cigarette."

Ferry Street was reopened to traffic at about 8 p.m., and residents that had been prevented from accessing their homes were also let back in.

No one was physically injured during the event.

Scene in Easton: A Young Entrepreneur Takes Advantage of the Heat Wave

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Sydnay Dennis, 10, sits by her lemonade stand outside her parents' hair salon, Sydlex Styles, on Ferry Street in Downtown Easton Thursday afternoon.
While most that could retreated indoors to cool, air conditioned spaces in Thursday's record temperatures, Sydnay Dennis, 10, saw the continuing heat wave as an opportunity to make some extra cash selling bottled water, lemonade, and face paint.

The West Ward tween said she plans on running the stand in front of her parents' salon throughout the summer while she's off from school. While relatively few people were seen walking around Easton's Downtown Thursday, by midafternoon she'd made about $15 from thirsty passersby, she said.

Sydnay's venture is good practice for what will undoubtedly be a bright future as an entrepreneur when she grows up.

"I want to run my own lemonade and ice cream shop," she said.

Weekend Guide, July 19 to 21

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After such a hot week, you deserve a cool time. And Easton's the place!


Friday, July 19


Dancing: 7 to 10 p.m. Instruction in the country two-step with Con Callagher from 7 to 8 p.m., open dancing with DJ Carol Coffinger from 8 to 10 p.m. $10 per person, benefits the Third Street Alliance. 41 North Third St. 610-433-7804 or www.thirdstreetalliance.org

Line Dancing: 7 to 10:30 p.m. Lessons at 7:15 p.m. $5 per person for members, $6 for non-members. Tatamy Fire Company, 164 Bushkill St., Tatamy. 610-759-2786 or www.purecountrydancers.com

Line Dancing: 7 to 10:30 p.m. Lessons at 7:15 p.m. $5 per person for members, $6 for non-members. Tatamy Fire Company, 164 Bushkill St., Tatamy. 610-759-2786 or www.purecountrydancers.com

Philadelphia Funk Authority, DJ LAX: Band at 7:30 p.m., DJ at 10:30 p.m.  Rivals Sports Bar & Nightclub, 5 Lehns Court. 610-923-7625 or www.rivalseaston.com

Second Annual Easton Comedy Night: 8 p.m. Easton comedienne Liz Russo will host a comedy show featuring nationally known comics Keith Purnell, Alex House, and Regina DeCicco. Free, for those 18 and over. Beer, wine, and light dinner fare will be available, provided by Porters' Pub. In case of rain, the show will be postponed until Friday, September 13. Riverside Park Amphitheatre, Larry Holmes Drive, just north of the free bridge. For more info, click here.

Brook Shive and the 45s: 8 p.m. The Riegelsville Inn, 12 Delaware Road, Riegelsville. 610-749-0100 or www.riegelsvilleinn.com

Paul Kendall: 9 p.m. Two Rivers Brewing Company, 542 Northampton St. 610-829-1131 or www.tworiversbrewing.com

Schubert &  Binder: 9 p.m. Colonial Pizza & Spaghetti House, 136-138 Spring Garden St. 610-252-3033 or www.colonialpizzapub.com

DJ Mikey Z: 10 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Pam Purvis & The Blue Skies: 10 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Christopher Dean's Band: 10 p.m. Pearly Baker's Alehouse, 11 Centre Square. 610-253-9949 or www.pearlybakers.net


Saturday, July 20


Easton Farmers' Market: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The oldest continuous open-air farmers' market in the United States. Centre Square. www.eastonfarmersmarket.com

Boy Scouts Troop 3 Car Wash: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Merchants Bank, 1250 Braden St., Forks Township. 484-548-6095 or 484-548-6084

RE:find Grand Opening: Ribbon cutting at 11:30 a.m., followed by cookies and coffee, free ice cream samples of a custom RE:find ice cream flavor by the Bank Street Creamery from 2 to 4 p.m., music by DJ Telly with free food bites from 5 to 8 p.m. RE:find is a home furnishings store focusing on environmentally responsible and sustainably sourced home furnishings and gifts. The grand opening will also highlight the work of Pablo Molgora, in a show, titled "Icons Revised". 437 Northampton St. 610-829-1313 or www.refindeaston.com.

Heritage Walk in Hugh Moore Park: 1:30 p.m. Walking tour of canal structures, visit the Change Bridge and locktender's house. Conducted by Charles Derr, retired park ranger. Free, approximately 1 1/2 hours long.  Weather permitting, begins at the Canal Boat Store. Hugh Moore Park, 2750 Hugh Moore Park Road.

Riverside Jazz Explosion: 7 p.m. Leaf Cigar Bar, 90 Mort Drive, Forks Township. 610-559-1336

The Large Flowerheads, DJ Nicky K: Band at 7:30 p.m., DJ at 10:30 p.m.  Rivals Sports Bar & Nightclub, 5 Lehns Court. 610-923-7625 or www.rivalseaston.com

Free Texas Hold'em: 7 & 9 p.m. La Pazza, 1251 Ferry St. 610-515-0888 or www.lapazza.com

Lelica, BD Lenz & Doug Hawk: 8 p.m. Maxim's 22, 322 Northampton St. 610-252-2622 or www.maxims22.com

Andy Killcoyne & Friends: 8 p.m. The Riegelsville Inn, 12 Delaware Road, Riegelsville. 610-749-0100 or www.riegelsvilleinn.com

Second Chance Rodeo: 8 p.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Trevor Purdy & Scott Young: 9 p.m. Colonial Pizza & Spaghetti House, 136-138 Spring Garden St. 610-252-3033 or www.colonialpizzapub.com

TBA: 9 p.m. Two Rivers Brewing Company, 542 Northampton St. 610-829-1131 or www.tworiversbrewing.com

Connie Edinger: : 9 p.m. The Widow's Tavern, 200 Main St., Stockertown. 610-365-8890 or www.widowstavern.com

Karaokewith Nort: 9 p.m. Rip Van Winkle's Pub, 3700 Nicholas St., Palmer Township. 610-258-8873

Frank Giasullo: 9:30 p.m. The Lafayette Bar, 11 North 4th Street 610-252-0711 or www.lafayettebarjazz.com

Madame Freak & The Funky Fever: 10 p.m. Porters' Pub, 700 Northampton St. 610-250-6561 or www.porterspubeaston.com

Dear Anna: 10 p.m. Pearly Baker's Alehouse, 11 Centre Square. 610-253-9949 or www.pearlybakers.net

"Dance-a-Palooza": 10 p.m. With a DJ. Mesa Modern Mexican, 42 South Third St. 610-829-2101 or www.mesamexican.com


Sunday, July 21


Blues Jam with BC Combo: 5:30 p.m. Bella Luna, 3417 Sullivan Trail, Forks Township. 610-253-7458

Open Mic Hosted by Jim Stocker: 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Riegelsville Tavern, 1274 Easton Road, Riegelsville. 610-510-3030 or www.riegelsvilletavern.com

Industry Night: 10 p.m.  Rivals Sports Bar & Nightclub, 5 Lehns Court. 610-923-7625 or www.rivalseaston.com


Save the Date!


The Easton Hispanic Cultural Festival is Saturday, July 27, noon to 9:30 p.m. in Scott Park. Live music and entertainment, food, and much more is planned for this special event. Fireworks over the river beginning at 9 p.m. too! Click here for more details.

The Easton Farmers' Market "Zucchini 500" will take place on Saturday, July 27 during regular market hours, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Postponed due to predictions of a continuation of the weeklong heat wave, participants build their own race vehicles from zucchini and then compete to see who has engineered the speediest squash on wheels. Click here for more details.Easton's most comprehensive guide to what's happening over the weekend, in the city and beyond, is published every Friday.

Are you planning an event? Did we miss something? Let us know! Email us.

Sponsoring the Weekend Guide is an excellent way to advertise your local business. Plus, you get a permanent link to your website, also a great way to drive more traffic to your door. It's affordable too. Email us for details.

Easton Police Looking for Man Who Threatened Crowd with Gun

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Easton police are reportedly looking for a man who threatened a group of people with a gun Friday evening.

An arrest warrant has been issued for Emannuel Miranda-Torres, 25, who also goes by the name "Blanco". He is charged with aggravated assault with a firearm, five counts of recklessly endangering another person, making terroristic threats, and conspiracy.

Police say Miranda-Torres, along with another person who was not identified, pointed guns at a group of people around 8:30 p.m. Friday night on the 600 block of Ferry Street.

Miranda-Torres is to be considered armed and dangerous, authorities said, and anyone who sees him or who has information about his whereabouts should call 911.

Scene in Easton: Production Company Filming Potential Cable Show in City

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By Christina Georgiou

A New York video production company visited Downtown Easton Friday afternoon
to shoot footage for a potential new cable television show.
 An unidentified production company from New York was seen filming footage for a potential new history show for a major cable television network on the first block of South Third Street in Downtown Easton late Friday afternoon.

A production assistant with the company declined to give detailed information about the show or who's involved, saying that the group was filming pilot footage to pitch to the network, which has not yet approved its production or agreed to fund it.

"You never know about these things," she said. "We could hear back in two weeks, or it could be four months."

She said the show being pitched is about the "love of American history, the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, that sort of thing." It was hinted that the test footage may be intended for The History Channel.

If the show is approved to be taped for air, the crew will definitely be returning to Easton in the future to shoot more scenes, she said.
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