VOL. 85 NO. 12 Under Home Rule TWENTY CENTS Kingston Township is destined to al- most change its system of government completely if a report on a proposed home rule charter study is adopted by voters in the May primary election. And that’s what the home rule charter com- mission chairman John Hibbard suggest- ed should happen when he addressed township supervisors Wednesday night. TiQy recommendations made by the cominission were contained in a booklet, 2,000 copies of which will be distributed to residents in the township prior to the election.’ Mr. Hibbard told supervisors that the first recommendation of the commission was that the proposed charter be placed on the May 21 ballot for a yes or no vote of township residents. Secondly, he said that the commission recommends that the township government be changed to a council-manager form with a board of supervisors consisting of five members, to be elected to four-year terms. The township manager would be appointed by supervisors and would serve as head of the government. Under the commission’s plan, the manager would be responsible for the hiring and supervising of all township employees. Citizen initiative and referen- dum to initiate legislation or withdraw it by Kurt Weidner Gasoline.stations in the Dallas are in slightly better shape this month than they were in February, according to a polleconducted by the Dallas Post Tues- day, th only one out of seven contacted out of gas. Some dealers said they have had their allotments refigured and are getting more gas; several said they are depeigyos on the emergency hot line should” they run out. Arco station operators said their gas is so expensive that people simply aren’t buying it. None of the dealers polled said they would cooperate with a planned shutdown March 25, and none said they thought the Federal Energy Office was doing a good job with the new allocating system. Rough estimates made by local station operators indicated vast inequities in the allocation system. Ken Martin, who was out of gas, said he was only doing about 40 percent of the business he was a year ago. : “I don’t know how this thing could get any harder for me,” he said. ‘My gas doesn’t last anytime at all. I called up on the state hot line but there is no guar- antee they will come through.” DongHinkle, a Citgo dealer in Trucks- ville, Who is getting 90 percent of the gas he received in 1972, said he isn’t having any trouble at all. “I’ve been able to get just about all I need,’’ he told the Post. ‘I cut my hours down a few times to make sure I wouldn’t run out, but I haven’t had much trouble getting gas. In fact, my company just cut their price to me by four cents a gallon.” An Arco dealer in Shavertown, Gerard an «0 perry uh allotment over last year, said he can sell only 70 percent of what he sold a year ago be- cause of the price. ‘I have more gas in the ground than I can use. The people aren’t buying it at these prices. Two weeks ago Arco put their price per gallon up four cents more than anybody else.” Most dealers said they did not expect the situation to get worse during April and May. They said under the allocation system they expect to be entitled to an in- crease in their allotment for the peak months. Mr. Schmid seemed to sum up the group’s sentiments of the FEO. ‘Once the government gets their hands on any- thing, they mess it up.” In nearby Lackawanna County, a Greenstreet News survey indicated al- most an opposite viewpoint. ‘‘Any dealer who doesn’t shut down is not being fair to his customers,’ James Summa, a Dun- more service station owner and head of the county Pennsylvania Service Station Dealers’ Association, said. The PSSDA has set March 25 as the tentative date for a statewide shutdown in hopes of obtain- ing increased gasoline allocations and other concessions from the FEO and the oil companies. Service station owners in the Abington area north of Scranton indicated the or- ganized shutdown may be ccademic by Monday anyway, because they will vir- tually be out of gas by then. Schmid, with is included as a provision of the charter. It also contains a provision for a recall of elected officials. Mr. Hibbard noted that the major change in the present form of govern- ment would be that the township would operate under its own administrative code rather than the one set by the state. Members of the commission were Mr. Hibbard, chairman; William Clewell, vice-chairman; Joseph Purcell, secre- tary-treasurer; Ambrose Gavigan, Ed- ward Richards (chairman of the present board of supervisors) David Phillips and William Pugh. Mr. Hibbard requested that since the commission, which had begun work on the charter study in November of 1972, had completed their assignment it should now be discharged. The board of supervi- sors unanimously voted to dismiss the group. The study will be submitted to the County Board of Elections for placement on the ballot in the primary election. Should the township residents vote in favor of the charter, it would become effective in January 1976. The Giant (Conrad Gonzalez) and his wife (Helen Rudolph) a) prepare to go to sleep as the Harp (Kitty Chowske) plays a lullaby in this rehearsal scene from the Misericordia Players oi production of “Jack and the Beanstalk.” The Children’s Theatre by Russ Williams Testimony was completed March 13 be- fore Luzerne County Orphans Court . Judge Edward Lopatto in the case of former Jackson Township police chief Robert Cooper, charged with contempt for allegedly making juvenile records of the current chief, Donald J. Jones, and constable Corey Askew, both of RD 5, ed after Judge Lopatto hears arguments from attorneys for both sides. In their quasi-criminal action, Mr. Jones and Mr. Askew attempted to prove contempt by showing that Mr. Cooper, while Jackson Township police chief, ac- quired their private juvenile records and made them public to certain individuals. Mr. Cooper has since been relieved of his police chief duties by township supervi- sors (who offered him the position of assistant chief, which he refused) and re- placed by Mr. Jones. Mr. Cooper, in a re- Evidence of skyrocketing building costs was apparent when bids were opened March 12 by the Lake-Lehman School Board for the renovation of the Lehman-Jackson Elementary School. The architect’s estimate for the project, which will convert the elementary into a junior high school, called for expendi- tures of $294,012;; actual bids totalled $331,066. Noting this discrepancy, project archi- tect John Gregorski of the firm of Lacy, Atherton & Davis observed that while the higher bids were not seriously out of line with estimated costs, ‘‘the so-called Taj Mahal Act requires that a public hearing . be held if the bids exceed by eight percent the estimated costs.” The bids opened Tuesday night were 11 percent higher than the architect’s projected cost. Two days after the meeting, however, Mr. Gregorski told the Post that he had learned that no public meeting would be required inasmuch as the project was “primarily renovative in nature rather than new construction. Apparent low bids for the project were: General construction, Bilmar Enter- prises—3$157,000; plumbing construction, Hughes Corporation—$61,200; heating, ventilating and air conditioning—$31,846; electrical construction, Brennan Elec- tric—$84,280. The welcome news that the Pennsyl- vania Gas and Water Company has once again agreed to waive a penalty charge levied against the school district for ex- cessive gas usage was reported by Atty. Charles D. Lemmond Jr. The solicitor in- formed the board that he was assured by a PG&W spokesman that penalties im- posed in January and February would be (continued on PAGE EIGHTEEN) chief position through legal action, based on his contention that his removal was in- valid because supervisors gave him no formal reason as required in the Police Tenure Act. ; Since the initial action by supervisors to replace Mr. Cooper, they have voted to and conduct unbecoming an officer, stemming from the contempt proceed- ings. Mr. Jones was formerly a salaried cer of Luzerne County, first witness in the case, told the court that he allowed then chief Cooper to look at the private file of Donald Jones because the chief told him that he was investigating the patrolman Jones had a record.” He also told the court that Mr. Sooper it is unlawful for a man convicted of a felony to carry a gun. Based on that, Mr. Adonizio said, he al- lowed _his secretary to send a typed ver- batim copy of the juvenile record to Mr. Cooper. He said he had no record of any- and he said scveral times that he remind- ed the chief that such records should not be ‘Passed around.’ Adonizio handed the records to him. Atty. Joseph Gale, representing the complainants, emphasized that juvenile offenses are not considered criminal offenses or felonies, and are therefore not affected by federal gun regulations. sonal attorney Ben Jones III, and Joe Police Chiefs Association. Several area police chiefs attended the two-day trial. The county association and the Back Mountain Policemen’s Association have ffered support to Mr. Cooper in his at- Jtempt to regain his former position. ' Prosecution witness Frank Elenchik, a township supervisor, testified that he (continued on PAGE EIGHTEEN) Unless the state Department of En- vironmental Resources and local vege- table growers canreach an agreement on new standards for migrant labor camps within ‘“‘a matter of days,” vegetables will be a scarce, and expensive, commod- ity this summer. o That sobering prediction was made last week by Keith Eckels, Schultzville, chief spokesman for a group of farmers who are protesting new regulations for migrant labor camps imposed this year by the state. Eckels, a member of the ciation and the Pennsylvania Farmers’ Association, will meet with state officials in Harrisburg today in an effort to iron out the problem. But he said it may al- ready be too late for many farmers, who have decided to go out of business rather than comply with the DER directives. The dispute, which may force 80 per- cent of the vegetable growers in the area out of business this year, stems from NAR RE Ean LS several new regulations which the DER has established for the migrant labor camps. The regulations affect approxim- ately 30 farms in the area which employ 900 migrants and produce more than $3 million worth of vegetables for the North- east, Eckels said. The new regulations which the farmers are protesting include: —mandatory central heating in all housing units in the camps; —farmers must maintain clean bed- ding in all housing units in the camps; —electrical wiring must conform to the National Electrical Code; —camps must be ready for inspection 45 days prior to occupancy. “We have no sympathy for operators of ‘outlaw’ camps,’ ‘those that aren’t licen- sed by the state,”’ Eckels said. “But most camps in the area have always complied with state regulations, and now, all of a sudden, the DER steps in and changes the rules without warning. “When the DER made its initial inspec- tion of the camps,’”’ he explained, ‘it was after the growing season was over and the camps weren’t occupied. So of course, they were run down, and many had been buildings. But they would have been cleaned up and repaired by next summer before the migrants came, just as they always were. Now they (the DER) want prior to occupancy. That would mean the farmer would have to work on the buil- season. And even if the camps were ready then, what would be the point? They would naturally deteriorate some before the workers came. Certainly, the camps should be inspected, but not until about 15 days prior to occupancy (about ) August 1) as in the past,” Eckels said. (continued on PAGE FIFTEEN)