Potter & McKean County Community Source | 6/1/21

Page 1

JUNE

1 2021

Concerns raised about McKean County’s emergency radio system BY JOELLEN WANKEL

Photo provided From left are Celeste Baker, Sabrina Tanner, Smethport Guidance Counselor Brian Lawson, August Cox and Jenna Gregory. The students won Bonnie Scholar awards.

Four Smethport juniors win Bonnie Scholar awards SMETHPORT — In recognition of their academic achievement and service to the school and community, four juniors at Smethport Area Junior-Senior High School have earned the Bonnie Scholar Award, a scholarship that carries a $20,000 scholarship annually — $80,000 over four years of study at the St. Bonaventure University. In addition, the students, August Cox, Sabrina Tanner, Celeste Baker and

Jenna Gregory, all National Honor Society members, have received certificates of scholarship. The university has invited these students to schedule a visit to the campus this summer. All Bonnie Scholar Award recipients who visit the campus in person prior to Aug. 31 will receive an SBU t-shirt as a gift. High schools were invited to nominate up to five students from the junior class who met the following

qualifications: maintaining a minimum grade point average of 85, exhibiting involvement in or leadership qualities through school or community activities and desiring to attend a college that fosters the mission represented at St. Bonaventure University. SBU’s Office of Admissions scholarship committee determined the winners. These four students represent all four Smethport students nominated by

Brian Lawson, guidance counselor. August is the daughter of Tony and DiAnn Cox. Her extracurricular activities include marching and concert band, golf, mock trial, DECA, student council and statistician for track and field. She is also junior class president and NHS treasurer. In the community, she volunteers at the McKean

Smethport continued on ......... page 3

activate their pagers. “The consequences of the county thus far ignoring my repeated warnings has now escalated to that of a real-life safety hazard for our firefighters,” Johnson wrote. He also voiced his intent to be more active in raising awareness for this issue and lobbying for its resolution. “The citizens of McKean County deserve to know that firefighters may be left unaware of a life-ordeath emergency and they deserve to have an answer as to why,” Johnson concluded. McKean County Commissioner Carol Duffy explained May 21 that she and Johnson have had conversations regarding the issue. Johnson mentioned email exchanges in his letter, which Duffy confirmed as she explained, “Alex has been in touch with me regarding the paging issues. Each and every time that he emails me, of course our director is aware, and he has been pulling in people to troubleshoot and try to assess the situation and come to a solution. “So far the testing has not really shown anything. Our director, I believe, has some additional people coming in next week to try and help with that situation. We are trying to come

PORT ALLEGANY — A fire at a residence on Church Street in Port Allegany May 19 put a known issue with the county’s emergency radio system at a tipping point. Star Hose Company Chief Alex Johnson wrote a letter to county officials in an effort to bring the issue to resolution. Addressed to Tracy Carl, director of the McKean County Department of Emergency Service and McKean County Commissioners Carol Duffy, Tom Kreiner and Cliff Lane, the letter noted Johnson had been in touch with many of the above (with the exception of Duffy) the morning of May 19, outlining concerns about “the shortcomings of the McKean County emergency radio system.” He noted that this has been an ongoing conversation, and that the commissioners acknowledged they were aware of the problem prior to May 19’s emergency. Johnson further explained that the fire at 55 Church St. in Port Allegany Borough led to three firefighters requiring treatment for overexertion. Meanwhile, Johnson stated that six members of the department did not receive the alert for the call, as the county’s system did not Raised Concerns continued on page 4

No. Pa. Regional College celebrates inaugural commencement WARREN — In a virtual ceremony held May 22, Northern Pennsylvania Regional College (NPRC) celebrated the achievements of 17 graduates in its inaugural commencement ceremony. NPRC’s students have remained resilient during the challenges of the pandemic. Local residents graduating from NPRC include Darian Bruno, who graduated with honors and received an Associate of Applied Science in early childhood education and a certificate degree in general studies. Bruno attended Otto-Eldred High School. During Saturday’s ceremony, Jacob Meyer, a spring graduate from St. Marys, shared his story of finding his path in business administration. After hopping from job to job, he ended up at a pizza shop in Erie where he started as a driver, worked his way up to assistant manager, and became manager the day after his assistant manager promotion. A year later, he moved back to St. Marys with his now wife and looked into college, but money and location were a barrier. He didn’t qualify for loans or grants and was at a loss until he heard about NPRC — local classes, affordable, and has a degree he is looking for. Meyer addressed his fellow graduates expressing, “The only way for NPRC to work is if we, as students, believed in ourselves and never gave up. NPRC helped us every step of the

way and now here we are because we believed in ourselves and never gave up.” Sen. Joseph B. Scarnati III, a third-generation businessman and public servant of more than 30 years, joined Meyer and NPRC as the honored commencement speaker. Now recently retired, he was elected to represent the 25th Senatorial District in 2000 and served Pennsylvania for 20 years.

Scarnati was a catalyst in the development of NPRC as the author and primary sponsor of the legislation that established a regional college in northern Pennsylvania and led to the creation of the Northern Pennsylvania Regional College. Scarnati’s message was one of hope and unity. He closed his remarks by sharing with NPRC graduates, “Life is a journey we go

through together, not alone. Use the skills and knowledge that you have gained here at NPRC to be a bridge to unite others in a world that continually creates barriers between us.” NPRC’s commencement ceremony can be found at https://regionalcollegepa. org/commencement-2021/ The Northern Pennsylvania Regional College is authorized by the Pennsylvania Department

of Education to award associate degrees and certificates in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The NPRC’s mission is to provide affordable and accessible post-secondary education to the residents of northern Pennsylvania. NPRC provides education to a nine-county region comprising Cameron, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Forest, McKean, Potter, Venango and Warren counties.

Classroom instruction is powered through live, interactive audio-visual communication technology that connects classrooms together across the region, allowing for robust classroom discussion and real-time student/instructor interaction. NPRC is pursuing accreditation.

Photo provided Northern Pennsylvania Regional College celebrated its inaugural commencement on Saturday. Commencement ceremony participants included, from left, Susan Snelick, NPRC president; Kate Brock, board of trustees chairperson; Jacob Meyer, Class of 2021 student speaker; Mindy Saunders, dean of curriculum and instruction; and Dr. Linda Fleming, outgoing vice president of academic and student affairs.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.