B36 BOX BRIGHTON, Yol.91 No. 34 _ Another nearby resident p concern: I was a A Dallas’ Township resident has baen charged with arson during the iksestigation into the suspicious burning of a shack on Lower & una Rd., Dallas Township. Leslie Trudgen, RD6 Dallas, is being held by the joint investigation team comprised of the State Police and the Dallas Township Police departments who made the arrest shortly after the blaze was doused by the Dallas Fire Department last Thursday. Trudgen will face a hearing September 11, before Magistrate Kar] Gregory of Shavertown on the charges of arson and criminal mischief. SR Ra Review of the plans for the building designs of a new nursing home which is to be constructed adjacent to the nearly completed Meadows Apartment complex on Lake St. and Center Hill Rd., are nearing completion. “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has : ‘been reviewing the building designs for the Meadows Nursing Home for Condo, Executive Director of Ecumenical Enterprises. ‘HHS is 95 percent finished with their review, and we are expecting ap- proval within a few weeks.” After approval of the designs, construction bids will be solicited for the 120-bed skilled health facility for the elderly which is being built by Ecumenical Enterprises Inc. of Wilkes-Barre, a non-profit organization. “Farmers Home Administration will finance the construction with a $3.5 million loan, and a local commercial lender will complete the balance of the necessary building funds,” said Condo. The building will include a community room to be used for religious purposes, birthday and anniversary parties, and any other festive occasion. “It is going to be constructed in Dallas Township because there is a need for additional nursing home services here,” said Condo. ‘This facility should fill that need for the Police Reports. P.2 People in the News. 3 School Menus. .p.7 Local SportsPp.8,9 School is open. P.11 ‘Politics’ Change of venue granted The - case of Michelle Boice, Harveys Lake councilwoman, and of Richard Tattersall, her father, has been granted a change of venue because of its “‘political overtones.” Boice, who is facing a hearing on charges of criminal mischief and official oppression stemming from her alleged opening of an outgoing letter from borough council to the district attorney’s office, said her father had requested the change. Tattersall has been implicated in the case because he is alleged to have had possession of a tape recording that was missing from the borough building. Both Tattersall and Coun- cilwoman Boice have charged that the letter and tape in question referred specifically to her and her father and that the council was attempting to discredit them with the public. Boice is the lone Democrat on council. Her father has a trash collection contract with: the borough. “My attorney and Magistrate Harvey decided that since the case has many political overtones, it would be best for all involved to take the case out of the jurisdiction of Magistrate Harvey and place the case in a less political setting, such as the office of Kingston Magistrate Mitchell,” Tattersall told the Dallas Post. oT es Boice contends that since she wal member of Harveys Lake Borough Council she is entitled to- know the contents of official envelopes. She has also charged that taping of citizens while at the borough building is illegal and an invasion of privacy. A date for the hearing has not yet been set by Magistrate S. Keene Mitchell. 25¢ Wednesday, Sept. 9, 1981 2 BY GLEN HOFFMAN : The use of a tape recorder by a member of the Harveys Lake Council attending the meetings and hearings of Harveys Lake Zoning Board, has erupted into’ a juris- dictional dispute between the two groups. : Ben Orfaly, chairman of the Zoning Hearing Board disapproved of the use of a tape recorder at a re- cent hearing by attending coun- cilman, Richard Myers. ‘One and a half years ago the Zoning Board passed a resolution by a two to one margin forbidding the use of any tape recording devices at ‘any of the board's meetings or hearings,” said Orfaly. Orfaly added, ‘‘I and other members of the board informed Myers about the resolution about one year ago, so he must have been aware that recorders were not to be used.” Myers is reported to have said that if the Zoning Board does not want a recorder used, the board must have something to hide. “Our meetings and hearings are always open to’ the public,” said Orfaly. “My main objection to recorders is that a tape could be changed or erased and statements “Our meetings are always held at the same time, 8 p.m. on the last Wednesday of every month,” ‘said Orfaly. ‘‘So then the public can conveniently attend our Zoning Board sessions. We do not hold closed session so as to circumvent the Sunshine Law.” 3 Attorney Gifford Cappellini, a councilman whose motion last week to, authorize council members to attend and record any board session for use by council, said that this issue involves the responsibility of the council to the public. “The council is an elected body, the Zoning Board is appointed, so the council has.a responsibility to the public to insure that the business of the board is conducted properly,” said Cappellini. Cappellini = added, ‘‘a tape If you ask Thomas Rese, Dallas Borough tax collector, what are the duties and responsibilities of his new job as chairman of the Fifth District Republican organization, he will itemize a laundry-list. But ask him what his new job is really like: “I, and the committee persons, try to’keep everyone in our district happy,”’ commented Reese with his characteristic smile. As a public servant for the last 16 years, Reese forms a . relaxed relationship with the people who enter his orbit. But with his robust manner, Reese hopes he can suc- cessfully take the place of former chairman Emerson Harris, who recently died. “I will get involved with the people of the GOP, and coordinate the efforts of the 18 committee persons of my district to get the vote out, register new voters, help raise funds, organize rallies, recruit volunteers to man voting booths, hang posters, and do anything else that comes up.” Luzerne County has six districts represented by one chairperson from each district, comprising the Executive Committee. Reese's district covers West Pittston, Wyoming Borough, Forty: : y i he 4 FBOROLIEHS. “As a chairman representing the 5th District it is my duty to help formulate county wide policy and select county candidates that will Reese who was appointed chairman by the executive committee several months ago. “Basically, I am the go-between of my district and the Luzerne County Executive Com- mittee, carrying feed back to the county and ‘the people of my district,” added Reese. Reese will be up for election next May, during the primary. “I have not decided whether I will run,” said Reese. ‘‘I will wait and see how this term goes.” “I believe that one of today’s biggest problems: is voter apathy,” said Reese. ‘‘One of my main ob- jectives will be to get more people to vote more often.” TOM REESE recording is the best way to record the entire board hearing or meeting. The secretary-treasurer seals the tape in an envelope and . the council then has access to every detail of the session of the board.” Orfaly said, “Myers and the council are just trying to harass the board by keeping a tape recorder hidden at a recent board session, and then at the end of the session recorded the session, which was in defiance of the board’s resolution banning the use of tape recorders.” Myers argued that he has been taping the board’s mneetings for years. “The tape recorder was not hidden; it was on a chair in plain sight,” he said. \ “The Sewer Authority, the Council, and the Planning Com- mission do not bar the use of tape recorders, why should the Zoning Board? asked Myers. “Now that I am zoning commissioner it is my responsibility to watch over the matters concerning zoning.” Year old hearings still on The American Asphalt Com- pany’s challenge of the Jackson Twp. zoning ordinance may not be settled until late this year. David Roskos, chairman of the zoning hearing board, said that the next round of hearings will not take place until late September and that it may be necessary to take more than the normal 45 days for the board to make its decision. The American Asphalt Co., which conducts mining and excavating operations in the township, is challenging the legality of the or- dinance, which places much of the territory it wants to mine off limits for that purpose. Roskos said the next hearings will be held Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. and Sept. 22 at9 a.m. at the township fire hall. The hearings have been going on since early this year. The zoning hearing board is listening to arguments by attorneys from the Dwi up in 1979. One of its effects was removal of a large section of the township from mining to residential areas. American Asphalt contends that the ordinance is improper and that mining should be allowed in the disputed territories.