Chester CountyPRESS
Covering Avon Grove, Chadds Ford, Kennett Square, Oxford, & Unionville Areas Volume 149, No. 20
INSIDE
Kennett Library staff member hailed as an ‘Emerging Leader’.....................1B
Kennett Township announced in an e-mail to township residents on May 14 that its Police Chief Albert McCarthy will retire after 42 years of police service. The township’s Board of Supervisors will give Chief McCarthy his retirement badge at its May 20 meeting, beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the township building. This news comes on the heels of the April 15 Kennett Township Board of Supervisors meeting, when it was announced that McCarthy was placed on administrative leave from his duties, stemming from his April 13 vehicular crash involving the 2015 Ford Taurus police vehicle he was driving with a 2006 Honda Accord driven by Michael S. Hammon, 51, of Kennett Square at approximately 12 noon on Hillendale Road. McCarthy’s administrative leave was identified as “non-disciplinary.� At the time of the accident, it was revealed that McCarthy told State Trooper Erick Baker of the State Police that he suffered from a seizure that was
caused by a previous brain injury, which he said contributed to the collision. The public information police report said that McCarthy was following the vehicle ahead of him too closely, and at a rate of speed that led to McCarthy’s vehicle colliding with Hammon’s vehicle. Both vehicles proceeded to the intersection of Hidden Pond Drive and East Hillendale Road, before they both stopped. Hammon sustained a minor injury but did not require EMS transportation. McCarthy was uninjured in the accident, and a family member picked him up from the scene. Although McCarthy was not charged in the accident, the primary violation was identified as “VC 3310(A) Following Too Closely.� According to information provided to the Chester County Press by Township Manager Lisa Moore, McCarthy, whose last day of service was May 7, approached the township, asking to retire with certain terms. Both the Board of Supervisors and Moore agreed to McCarthy’s retirement package request, but they, too, also had specific Continued on Page 3A
Twenty-sixth annual event draws competitors, volunteers and community
Photo by Steven Hoffman
Bob and Jan Curran celebrate after finishing a 5K run together at the 26th annual Kennett Run on May 16.
Kennett Run 2015: A race of goals, commitment and unity By Steven Hoffman and Richard L. Gaw Staff Writers When Bob and Jan Curran crossed the finish line together at Saturday’s 26th annual Kennett Run after competing in the 5K run, they raised their hands up, clasped them together, and celebrated. “When I turned 60, I said I was going to do this,� Bob explained,
adding that he and Jan finished in 40 minutes, which was better than their goal of 45 minutes to complete the 5K course. The Currans said that they both wanted to run this race together. This was Jan’s third time taking part in the Kennett Run, but Bob’s first. For the Currans, crossing the finish line was the culmination of a goal – one of hundreds of individual goals that dotted the course from Union and Sickle
streets to Anson B. Nixon Park. Annually advertised as “Small Town...Big Race,� the Kennett Run lived up to expectations again this year, as more than 1,500 competitors in several age groups either ran or walked along the 5K and 10K course routes. In addition, more than 100 youngsters from local schools participated in the one-mile FundRun. Run the Day Race Management Continued on Page 4A
Kennett Public Library officials address behind-the-scenes turmoil
Hood’s Barbeque in Unionville reopens with a new look‌...1C
INDEX
By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer
Calendar of Events........6B Opinion..........................7A Obituaries.......................8A Police Blotter.................7B Classified.......................8B Photo by Steve Hoffman
Oxford Mayor Geoff Henry (at left) is pictured with the recipients of Citizen Recognition Awards for their work to improve the quality-of-life in Oxford in 2014. The recipients include Melissa Sheerin; Kassidy England; ACE Anti-Human Trafficking members George Goglia, Peggy Ann Russell, Karen Goglia, MaryLou Meyers, Dianna Stuckey, Sylvia Reyburn, Jean Hardy, and Jim Sumner; Jerome Rodio, Kathy Garvin; and Donna Moore.
Oxford honors citizens, organizations for making a difference in the community There are six recipients of the Citizen Recognition Award for their work in 2014, bringing the total to 70 individuals, businesses, and organizations that have been presented with the award since it was established in 2006 By Steven Hoffman Staff Writer
Š 2007 The Chester County Press
60 Cents
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Kennett Township Police Chief Albert McCarthy to retire By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer
Fine antiques at Brandywine River Museum of Art ‌... 1B
www.chestercounty.com
The one thing that all the 2015 recipients of the Oxford Citizen Recognition Awards have in common is that they are all working to make the lives of others in the community better. Oxford Mayor Geoff Henry presented the awards to Donna
Moore and the Divine Sent Food Cupboard, Kassidy England, Melissa Sheerin, Jerome Rodio and Kathy Garvin of J & K Slightly Touched, and the ACE AntiHuman Trafficking Alliance of Oxford at the May 18 borough council meeting. Henry said that this year’s inductees are a very diverse group, ranging Continued on Page 2A
On May 5, the embattled Kennett Public Library Board— or what remains of it after three members resigned together in a protest—held a special public forum to quell the controversy surrounding the exit of those members, to answer lingering questions about the recent library name change,
and to address the long-term plans to move the library to the Waywood Road site in Kennett Township. While the long-term vision is to build a larger, modern facility, before that can happen the library board must rebuild a lot of strained relationships with the community that it serves. The public forum, the fourth public such meeting the board has held in the last three months,
New Unionville principal appointed, residents sound off on teacher contract By John Chambless Staff Writer It was a busy night for the Unionville-Chadds Ford School Board on May 18, but one of the first actions they took was approving the appointment of a beaming James Conley as the next principal of Unionville High School. Conley, who had been serving as the assistant principal at the school, will be taking his new position on July 1. He came to the meeting with his wife and two of his three sons as the board unanimously voted to appoint him. Conley’s salary will be $142,290, and his specified eighthour day “will be longer than
eight hours, I can promise you that,� said district superintendent John Sanville, smiling. “Thanks very much,� Conley said as the audience applauded. “I’d first like to thank the board, and Dr. Sanville. I’m very excited. I promise you I will work tirelessly for the students and the staff and the families of Unionville High School to continue the level of excellence that is a hallmark of who we are.� “We are so excited to have you on board,� Sanville said. “But you’ve already been on board. For those who don’t know, Jimmy was an English teacher for us, an assistant principal, and now a principal at the high school. We Continued on Page 3A
Less waiting where it matters most – our emergency room. In a medical emergency, every minute matters. So, at Jennersville Regional Hospital, [QWoNN ƂPF HCUVGT ECTG KP VJG GOGTIGPE[ TQQO 9G YQTM FKNKIGPVN[ VQ JCXG [QW KPKVKCNN[ UGGP D[ C OGFKECN RTQHGUUKQPCN KP OKPWVGU s QT NGUU #PF YKVJ C VGCO QH FGFKECVGF OGFKECN URGEKCNKUVU YG ECP RTQXKFG C NQV OQTG ECTG KH [QW PGGF KV *Medical professionals may include physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners.
Jennersville.com
was part of that effort. Library board president Susan MackeyKallis and vice president Geoff Birkett took the lead in talking on behalf of the board. Birkett said that one of the purposes of the meeting, from his view, was to dispel some of the myths and misconceptions that exist about the library or the board itself. The first misconception, he said, was that the library is Continued on Page 3A
Not enough police and firefighters By Uncle Irvin Another sign that the Kennett region of southern Chester County is changing to a more dense, suburban area is a recent Letter to the Editor from Longwood’s Fire Chief. “We are losing our volunteer firemen,� according to Fire Chief A.J. McCarthy. He cites statistics that show an attrition of 250,000 Pennsylvania volunteer firefighters in the last 40 years. The drop in volunteers has occurred when the population has exploded, along with distress calls. Uncle Irvin has already addressed the shortage of adequate police protection. It is clear that if we want adequate fire fighting and police protection, we are going to have to allocate more state and local resources Continued on Page 2A