I a AI. i. The Dallas Post SI =I SAA INCTE Eo | =H O1@]\V I \V ISI NI RRI=ISHO Li No | S80 B VAM WVARS IOS WAY SSM Se [VY AVN BS 07 2 (60 BE BI IS) i 21 [03 BS Vol. 111 No. 47 Rec board sets timeline J Land is nearly in center of Back Mountain By ELIZABETH SKRAPITS Post staff DALLAS - The peer counselor, Julie McMonagle, has been hired, the study committee has been formed, the grants are applied for, and plans for the pro- posed recreational complex are moving full speed ahead. The Back Mountain Recreation board of directors were present on Thursday, Nov. 16 at the Dallas Middle School audi- torium to introduce its plans to an audi- ence of around 30 people and to field comments and questions. “The public said they wanted this, so we wanted to keep them involved,” said Dave Sutton, Chairman of the Back Mountain Recre- ation Board. “So far we've had nothing but support.” Dr. Gilbert Griffiths, who was one of the first to recognize the need for a recre- ation facility in the Back Mountain, said when he started to do some digging into the history of the project in 1997, he found the idea had always been there. An ad-hoc committee of approximately 19 people was formed to discuss feasibility. “Everyone had a different idea of what recreation in the Back Mountain could or should be,” Dr. Griffiths said. So many ideas and so much enthusiasm were generated that the ad-hoc committee was eventually transformed into the Back Mountain Recreation Board (BMR), an official non-profit organization, with most of the original ad-hoc members still in- volved. The newly-formed Recreation Board sent out 15,000 surveys to Back Moun- tain residents to get a better idea as to what the community thought about the project. “We ran from pillar to post,” Dr. Griffiths said. “We had drop-off boxes in Noxen, in Dallas ...” The response was overwhelming, with 98 to 99 percent of it in favor. “Parents liked the idea, kids liked the idea — we got a lot of positive comments,” he said. Community feed- back was encouraging enough for the committee to begin to move forward, even if it was “a couple of inches at a time,” according to Dr. Griffiths. By a near-miracle, the perfect location became available at an opportune time. Dr. Griffiths came across a real estate ad which looked promising, so Dave Sutton and fellow board member Gary Baker See REC PARK, pg 3 The Back Mountain's Newspaper Since 1889 Dallas, Pennsylvania 50 cents November 22 thru November 28, 2000 Colorful little Indian John Henry, dressed in Native American costume, was one of 28 third graders at the Wyoming Seminary Lower School who shared a Thanksgiving feast with parents and classmates last week. More photos on page 8. By M.B. GILLIGAN Post Correspondent DALLAS - Caring and shar- ing is the theme running through local schools this ‘month. Many schools are hold- ing food drives and Dallas High School is sponsoring a coat drive. “The Parent Teacher Student Organization (PTSO) started this (coat drive) four years ago,” ex- plained guidance counselor Robyn Jones. “Wereally expect to have our most successful year, yet.” Used coats and jackets are brought in by the students and then the Commission on Eco- nomic Opportunity’s People Helping People program distrib- utes them to needy families in the Back Mountain. “We've already exceeded last year’s total of 158 coats col- lected and we don’t finish until November 22,” said Pam Pambianco, the parent volun- teer who is helping with the drive. “We put flyers up in some of the stores and around the school. The students have just been wonderful. They sorted the coats into sizes and filled boxes that I brought in for them.” “We even received a call from aresident at the Meadows Nurs- ing Center,” said Jones. “She donated two beautiful coats that The schools are alive with holiday spirit i PHOTO CONTRIBUTED Lindsey Jayne, right, dropped into a container some of the 67 pounds of pennies she brought for the Penny Wars program at Dallas Elementary School. Kaitlin Kean lent a helping hand. she can no longer use. Heather Shultz and Stefanie Salavantis came with me to pick them up. These two seniors are very com- munity service oriented and are the student coordinators for the program,” explained Ms. Jones. Lake-Lehman High School stu- dents sponsored a Feed A Friend program. “This year we're provid- ing food for 10 local families,” explained Cathy Wolfe, a teacher at the high school. “The students brought in so of giving much this year that these fami- lies will really get a nice pack- age-much more than just Thanksgiving dinner,” she said. The Harvey's Lake Lions Club made a generous cash dona- tion that will help to buy the turkeys and Lake-Lehman Stu- dent Council funds will be used to make up the difference. Lake-Lehman Middle School students will receive a unique reward for their successful food drive. “Each homeroom adopts a family and gets a list of things to bring into school,” explained eighth grader, Kristen Noler. “Then, each class that brings in everything on their list gets to throw a pie at their homeroom teacher. We have 14 families this year.” The Dallas Middle School Student Council is sponsoring a food drive for the Back Moun- tain Food Bank. “We've been doing this for more than 10 years,” explained Student Council moderator Norine Amesbury. “This drive finishes the day before Thanksgiving and is used mostly for distribution at Christmastime.” The food is delivered to the food bank by the guidance coun- selors and the school principal, Anthony Martinelli. The class- room that collected the most See GIVING, pg 8 POST PHOTO/CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK Sheetz submits store plan ER 30 parking spaces on Trucksville site By ELIZABETH SKRAPITS Post Staff Woodridge residents oppose cell tower A Nextel plan called incomplete, inappropriate By ELIZABETH SKRAPITS Post staff KINGSTON TWP - A “monopole” isn’t a fancy seaside hotel or a French version of a board game — it’s a tower for wireless telecommunication transmission, and township residents who live in the Woodridge section of Shavertown don’t want one in their backyards. “What this is all about is putting a tower in the middle of a neighborhood,” said Woodridge resident Robert Riley. Reston, Virginia-based Nextel wants to build a communication tower on a piece of land leased from Daniel Voitek and Mary Lukasavage, and is fighting prop- erty owners for its right to do so, despite residents’ concerns about esthetics, po- tential health risks, and loss of property value due to the proximity of the tower. A year ago, Nextel applied to Kingston Twp. for an exception to be allowed to build its tower on the Voitek property. It was denied by the zoning hearing board in December, 1999, and Nextel promptly took the township to district court. The case was dismissed. In April, 2000, Kingston Twp. passed Ordinance 2000-3, which specifically deals with communication towers, set- ting up a list of regulations for their construction and placement. The ordi- nance, says Township Manager Jeffrey Box, was passed out of necessity, due to the increasing number of communica- tions companies coming forward with requests to erect towers. “Every munici- pality should be upgrading their zoning ordinances to deal with this new technol- ogy,” Box said, noting wireless technol- ogy wasn't around when PA township zoning standards were first drawn up in the 1960s, so the old ordinances made no provision for it. Nextel filed an application Oct. 18 for a conditional use on the same site. “Con- ditional use” means use of a property in See CELL TOWER, pg 5 14 Pages, 2 Sections Calendar.................. 14 Classified............. 12-13 Crossword...p........... 14 Editorials.....c....cee ik 4 ObRUAeS........ cc cocsmdes 2 CALL 675-5211 FOR HOME DELIVERY, NEWS OR ADVERTISING E-mail: dalpost@epix.net KINGSTON TWP. - Sheetz has submitted its preliminary land development and minor subdivi- sion plans to the Kingston Twp. authorities, and they will be put on the agenda for discussion at the township planning meeting on Dec. 5. Minor subdivision plans are a requirement of the Pennsylvania State Planning Code, to be com- pleted any time a piece of land is divided for sale or lease. According to the preliminary plans, the proposed Sheetz will be located at the Pendragon Center on Memorial Highway (Rte. 309 South) between the Grange Bank and Verizon, on a leased plot to- taling 1.93 acres, already zoned for commercial use. It will have See SHEETZ, pg 3 The Dallas Post MAILING LABEL- Please enclose this label with any address changes, and mail to The Dallas Post, P.O. Box 366, Dallas PA 18612-0366