Chester County Press 03-17-2021 Edition

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Chester CountyPRESS

www.chestercounty.com

Covering Avon Grove, Chadds Ford, Kennett Square, Oxford, & Unionville Areas

Volume 155, No. 11

INSIDE

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Kennett schools will reopen for full in-person instruction on April 5 By Chris Barber Contributing Writer

The Kennett Consolidated School District (KCSD) will return to full-time, in-person education on April 5. Parents will have the choice, however, to continue the full, virtual education for their Dedicated volunteer steps children, which is known away from Mushroom as Kennett Virtual Academy. This comes after more than Festival post...3A a year of closings and constant changes brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. The reopening process has been facilitated by a decrease nationwide, state-

Thomas McKean, the ‘Forgotten Founding Father’...1B

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wide and countywide in the number of COVID cases, as well as the recommendations by the Chester County Health Department that enable the superintendent and governing bodies of schools to make changes based on their own judgement. During the school board meeting on March 8, Superintendent Dr. Dusty Blakey exhibited graphs showing that as of the end of February there were no Photo by Chris Barber cases of COVID among the Students disembark from a Kennett school bus along North Walnut Street in KCSD staff and only one Kennett Square. The Kennett Consolidated School District will return to full-time, Continued on page 2A

in-person education on April 5.

‘We still have not felt the effects in Chester County’

Candidates file for the Primary Election

Vaccinations may be on the rise in Pa., but not here, Commissioners tell state

Voters will see a lot of familiar names when they vote on Tuesday, May 18 as many incumbents are seeking re-election By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer

Avon Grove Charter School students raise $80,000 through kindness...4B

INDEX Opinion.......................5A Obituaries..............2B-3B

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Despite Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf’s optimistic forecast for COVD-19 vaccinations forecasted for the state, vaccination supplies are still not reaching Chester County fast enough, the County Commissioners said in a March 12 statement.

By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer Chester County stakeholders in the fight to vaccinate its residents against COVID-19 are giving notice to state officials about the amount of vaccines it has been making available in the county. It’s not enough, and they have had enough.

County, and we know our residents are rightfully frustrated,” the statement read. “Our vaccine supply has been limited when compared with the capabilities of our Health Department to set up clinics and schedule vaccines across the whole of the County.” To date, the Chester County Health Continued on page 2A

Continued on page 3A

Star and Lantern will be newest addition at Kennett Creamery

Square Roots Collective to open new tavern in June By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer As if Square Roots Collective has not already made a significant social, natural and cultural impact on southern Chester County, the Kennett Square-based organization is about to unveil another notch in its growing catalog of community-based projects. It’s opening up a tavern,

one that will not only serve drinks with names that will impress any mixologist, but one that will also honor the heroes of The Underground Railroad movement. With a goal of opening in commemoration with the Juneteenth celebration this year, Square Roots Collective’s Star and Lantern will be an intimate cocktail bar located in the former site of a boiler room

at the Kennett Creamery on Birch Street in Kennett Square. The 100-seat venue will borrow some of its architectural design from the Creamery, combining the high ceilings and original stone walls with a menu and list of cocktails that evoke an era when the speakeasy served as a desCourtesy photo tination point for revelers. Square Roots Collective is intending to open the Star “The entire theme of this and Lantern, a speakeasy-style cocktail tavern, at the Continued on page 4A

Kennett Creamery in June.

Phillies minor league history featured in new book By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer

© 2007 The Chester County Press

In a statement released on March 12, County Commissioners Marian Moskowitz, Josh Maxwell and Michele Kichline issued a strong rebuke of the state’s distribution methods of the virus vaccine, stating that while they acknowledge that the pace of vaccinations across the commonwealth is on the rise, “we still have not felt the effects in Chester

The Pennsylvania Primary Election is now just two months away and the races for various elected positions in southern Chester County are starting to take shape as candidates have circulated and filed the necessary nomination papers to have a spot on the ballot. The Primary Election allows registered voters of each political party to select the candidates who will be nominated for the General Election. The Primary Election will take place on Tuesday, May 18, while the General Election will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 2. Here’s a look at some of the candidates who have filed for the upcoming election: Borough Council races In Oxford Borough, three incumbents are seeking reelection in a crowded field that is likely to remain that way heading into the

General Election. With four seats up for election in 2021, the Democratic candidates who have filed are incumbents Robert Ketcham and Ron Hershey, as well as Amanda Woolston and Mary-Laura Buchner Hulse. On the Republican side, Amanda Birdwell is seeking re-election and Michael McMurrough and Bill Fitzpatrick are looking to win their first election to Oxford Borough Council. In Avondale Borough, the borough council candidates who have filed are Democrats Janet Watts and Michael Essmaker and incumbent Republican William Shore, Jr. Council president David Prosser is seeking re-election in West Grove Borough, as is council member William Temme. Lauren McDevitt, Leandria Hall, and Michael Ranieri have also filed for the Primary Election. Big changes appear to be

When the pandemic halted the 2020 minor league baseball season before it began, Steve Potter missed the games as much as anyone. Potter is an avid baseball fan who has made writing about the sport—and specifically his beloved Philadelphia Phillies—his main hobby in

retirement. During a typical year, baseball would provide Potter with the rhythms of summer, when he would watch as many games as possible and talk to the players, coaches, and scouts. He would take notes and chart data. He would write regular updates about the future Phillies that he was watching. And at the end of the year, he would

compile all that information into his Phillies Minor League Digest, a must-read book filled with notes, nuggets, statistics, photos, and Potter’s insights into the season. Each year between 2016 and 2020, the book arrived in the off-season. And then 2020 arrived, the pandemic hit, and suddenly there was no minor league season for

Potter to follow or write about. He explained, “When play halted due to the pandemic and it was determined that there would be no minor league season, I decided to write a series of articles on my webpage on Phillies minor league history instead.” He received a call from Larry Shenk, the retired,

longtime Phillies executive, who enjoyed reading the articles. Shenk suggested that the history of the Phillies minor league teams through the years might be a good subject for a book. “We chatted and decided to collaborate on writing the first and only Phillies minor league history book,” Potter explained. “He arranged to Continued on page 4A


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