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Business Route 6 reopens after temporary repairs

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DICKSON CITY

Business Route 6 reopened Friday afternoon after a 10-inch water main break shut it down for most of the day.

Pennsylvania American Water crews isolated the break and installed a pump and temporary line to restore service to customers and will also temporarily restore the road.

Contractors will be on site this morning to make permanent repairs, and traffic restrictions again will be in place. Water service, however, will not be affected during the repairs Saturday, according to the utility company.

— KATHLEEN BOLUS


Police officer allegedly forced 2nd woman into sex; jailed

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A police officer who allegedly blackmailed women into performing oral sex was jailed on $1 million bail Friday.

Mark E. Icker, 29, of Dickson City pulled over two women in separate encounters earlier this month while on patrol and coerced them into sex acts in exchange for not being arrested, according to criminal complaints.

Police charged him with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and sexual assault, which are felonies, and with other crimes.

Law enforcement is continuing to investigate, said Luzerne County Detective Chaz Balogh. He urged anyone with information or who might have been a victim to contact police by calling 911 and asking for him or Chief County Detective Michael Dessoye. People can also call the district attorney's office during work hours at 570-825-1674.

Icker is suspended from police departments in Ashley, Sugar Notch and Jessup.

Police charged Icker on Thursday with misdemeanor counts of official oppression and using the threat of an official action. A criminal complaint alleged he pulled over the victim on Dec. 9 in Ashley Borough and told her she was speeding and crossed the center line. The woman gave Icker permission to search her car. When he found a bottle of pills, he warned her she could be arrested for driving under the influence because she was on prescription medications and said she could go to jail for violating release conditions in another case.

“What can you do to help me help you?” Icker allegedly asked.

According to the complaint, he said he would not arrest her in exchange for a sexual favor.

Icker was released on $25,000 unsecured bail Thursday. During questioning, he admitted that in exchange for the sexual favor, he did not charge the woman with driving with a suspended license, speeding and driving under the influence.

A law enforcement investigation into him continued.

On Friday, county detectives came to his house. Icker was not home, but he returned to go with the detectives to Magisterial District Judge Joseph D. Spagnuolo, Jr.

The judge read the criminal complaint for another case. This time, Icker was facing felony charges of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and sexual assault.

The criminal complaint in this case followed a similar pattern to the Dec. 9 case. Icker pulled over a driver while on patrol in Ashley and told her she was driving under the influence and on a suspended
license, according to the complaint. He handcuffed her in the back of his patrol car.

“What can you do to help me help you?” the complaint quotes Icker as asking.

The victim told investigating law enforcement that she realized then the officer may have been insinuating a sexual encounter.

"That's up to you," Icker allegedly said. He allegedly drove to Conyngham Street Park, and told the victim he was taking her to a police station and was working by himself. He directed her to perform
oral sex, then to wash her hands, police said.

Icker's preliminary hearing in the felony case is scheduled for 9 a.m. Jan. 2 in Luzerne County Central Court.

NEPA’s Most Wanted Fugitives, 12/23/2018

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Elijah M. Watson

Wanted by: Wayne County detectives.

Fugitive since: 2017.

Wanted for: Possession with intent to deliver, criminal use of a communication facility and related offenses.

Description: Black man, 31 years old, 5 feet 9 inches tall, 200 pounds, black hair, brown eyes. Last seen driving a silver 2006 Chrysler 300 with New Jersey registration H19-JHF.

Contact: Wayne County detectives, 570-253-5970, ext. 2255.

Kareem Dixon

Wanted by: Scranton office, state Board of Probation and Parole.

Fugitive since: Sept. 28.

Wanted for: Possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute. Sentenced to one year, six months to four years of incarceration. Paroled Feb. 27.

Description: Black man, 30 years old, 5 feet 8 inches tall, 175 pounds, black hair, brown eyes.

Contact: Agent Gary Demuth, 570-614-7244 or 800-932-4857.

Brian Kennedy

Wanted by: Scranton office, state Board of Probation and Parole.

Fugitive since: Nov. 30.

Wanted for: Fleeing and attempting to elude an officer. Sentenced to six months to two years of incarceration. Paroled April 15.

Description: White man, 52 years old, 5 feet 11 inches tall, 230 pounds, gray hair, blue eyes.

Contact: Agent Gary Demuth, 570-614-7244 or 800-932-4857.

Shantae Ross

Wanted by: Lackawanna County Adult Probation/Parole.

Fugitive since: Nov. 19.

Wanted for: Probation violations for underlying offense of delivery of a controlled substance.

Description: Black woman, 28 years old, 5 feet 2 inches tall, 250 pounds, black hair, brown eyes.

Contact: Warrant Officer Jerry Spiegel, 570-963-6876 or Spiegelj@Lackawannacounty.org.

Josh Jezorwski

Wanted by: Scranton office, state Board of Probation and Parole.

Fugitive since: Dec. 7.

Wanted for: Theft of movable property, receiving stolen property and obstruction of administration of law/government. Sentenced to three years, 20 days to eight years of incarceration. Paroled July 3.

Description: White man, 32 years old, 5 feet 10 inches tall, 190 pounds, brown hair, blue eyes.

Contact: Agent Gary Demuth, 570-614-7244 or 800-932-4857.

Anson Salsman

Wanted by: State Board of Probation and Parole.

Fugitive since: Nov. 20.

Wanted for: Illegal disposal of chemical waste and driving under the influence. Sentenced to nine months to five years of incarceration. Paroled May 4, 2017.

Description: White man, 42 years old, 6 feet 3 inches tall, 360 pounds, brown hair, brown eyes.

Contact: Agent Gary Demuth, 570-614-7244 or 800-932-4857.

CAPTURED: Efrain Dones

Wanted by: Scranton office, state Board of Probation and Parole; Scranton police.

Fugitive since: Aug. 31.

Wanted for: Firearm not to be carried without a license, robbery, theft, receiving stolen property. Sentenced to three to seven years of incarceration. Paroled May 4.

Description: Hispanic man, 24 years old, 5 feet 8 inches tall, 155 pounds, black hair, brown eyes.

Contact: Agent Michael Roberts, 570-963-4326 or 800-932-4857; Scranton police, 570-348-4134.

VETERANS

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New Year’s Eve party at Post 4909

Dupont VFW Post 4909 New Year’s Eve party, Dec. 31, post home; buffet dinner, 7:30 to 9 p.m.; bar open, 7:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.; entertainment by Millennium and dancing, 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.; hats, leis, noisemakers, horns, balloons and streamers, coffee, doughnuts, snacks and platters; donation, $40; tickets, post or Bob, 570-654-9104.

Meetings

POST 25

Gen. Theodore J. Wint VFW Post 25, Jan. 6, 2291 Rockwell Ave., Scranton, canteen meeting, noon, post meeting, 12:30.

POST 4909

Dupont VFW Post 4909, Jan., 7, 7:30 p.m., post home, home association meeting follows.

Merli Center

Today: Fresh brewed coffee, 8:30 a.m.; morning visits, 8:45; Eucharistic ministry visits, 9:15; parfaits and movie, third floor, 2 p.m.

Monday: Christmas Eve. Morning visits, 8:45 a.m.; Bible study visits on units, 9:30; fitness express, second floor, 10:15; Christmas Eve party with Millennium, holiday treats, 2 p.m.

Tuesday: Christmas Day. Christmas Mass with Bishop Joseph Bambera, 9:30 a.m.; Christmas party celebration with music by the Reynolds duo and holiday treats, 2 p.m.

Wednesday: Morning visits, 8:45 a.m.; arts and crafts, third floor, 10:15; bingo by the Stone family, 2 p.m.; unit visits, 4.

Thursday: Morning visits, 8:45 a.m.; chapel service, 10; ring toss, third floor, 10; Vincenzo’s dine-in, 12:15 p.m.; Frankie Gervasi music program, 2 senior fitness, 3.

Friday: Morning visits, 8:45 a.m.; coffee and doughnuts, 10:15; peer group, 1:15; bingo by Citizens Bank, 2 p.m.; senior fitness, 3.

Saturday: Morning visits, 8:45 a.m.; morning stretch, third floor, 10:15; pool shooting tournament and card games, 2 p.m.

VETERANS NEWS should be submitted no later than Monday before publication to veterans@timesshamrock.com; or YES!desk, The Times-Tribune, 149 Penn Ave., Scranton, PA 18503.

Local news quiz

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1. What retail store and surrounding center in Dickson City was shut down Sunday after a man with a suspicious backpack and a timer was located in the cafe?

A. Walmart

B. Target

C. Home Depot

D. Kohl’s

2. What town is installing a high-tech electric meter system worth $450,00 that will replace meter readers?

A. Throop

B. Jessup

C. Olyphant

D. Dickson City

3. True or false? Two members of the curatorial staff resigned from the Everhart Museum of Natural History, Science and Art in Scranton.

A. True

B. False, they were members of the marketing staff

4. What religious order released a list of priests with local ties credibly accused of sexual abuse?

A. Society of St. Michael

B. Jesuits

C. Oblates of St. Joseph

D. Franciscans

5. The state approved locations for three new marijuana dispensaries in Lackawanna County on Tuesday. Where are they located?

A. Old Forge, Scranton, Jessup

B. Moosic, Thornhurst Twp., Olyphant

C. La Plume Twp., Archbald, Carbondale

D. All in Scranton

6. The Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza is implementing what new security measures?

A. Metal detectors

B. Clear bag policy

C. Soft baby carriers

D. All of the above

7. In a 5-3 vote, the Scranton School Board appointed whom to a seat on the board vacated when Paige Gebhardt Cognetti resigned?

A. Pedro Louis Anes

B. Tom Borthwick

C. Gopal Patel

D. Gayle Thorpe Baar

8. Commissioners on Wednesday raised salaries for Lackawanna County’s top elected offices by how much annually starting in 2020 and 2022?

A. 1.5%

B. 2%

C. 3%

D. 4%

9. The air show set for Memorial Day weekend 2019 was canceled for what reason?

A. The turnpike cannot be closed on a holiday weekend

B. Cost was getting too high

C. Construction on the airport’s runway

D. U.S. Navy Blue Angels were double booked

10. What official criticized the Scranton School Board, saying he’d dissolve the board if he could?

A. Scranton Mayor Bill Courtright

B. Lackawanna County Commissioner Laureen Cummings

C. State Rep. Marty Flynn

D. State Auditor General Eugene DePasquale

Answers: 1. B; 2. C; 3. B; 4. B; 5. D; 6. D; 7. C; 8. D; 9. A; 10. D

75 Years Ago - Area's last Civil War veteran laid to rest in Dalton

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Dec. 23, 1943

Funeral held for Civil War vet

Family and friends gathered to say goodbye to Commander Joseph Chapman of Delaware Street, the area’s last Civil War veteran. Chapman, who had celebrated his 100th birthday in August, died Dec. 20.

A military graveside service was held at the Dalton Cemetery by members of Gen. J.P.S. Gobin Camp 41, Spanish-American War Veterans. Members of Koch-Conley Post 121 were also in attendance.

Chapman served with Company B of the Pennsylvania Volunteers, guarding the southern border of Pennsylvania. He also fought at Gettysburg. After the war, he worked as a telegraph key operator and later a dispatcher for the Lackawanna, the Lehigh Valley and the Delaware & Hudson railroads.

Police spread holiday cheer

The state police at the Blakely barracks spread holiday cheer to children at area orphanages. The officers delivered gifts of oranges, apples, popcorn and hard candy to the 324 children who lived at the orphanages in Lackawanna and Wayne counties.

When the officers arrived at St. Patrick’s Orphanage in West Scranton, the children swarmed them with questions about being a police officer, their equipment and uniforms.

The other orphanages were Home for the Friendless and St. Joseph’s in Scranton, St, Nicholas’ Orphanage and St. Mary’s Villa in Elmhurst Twp., and St. Tikhon’s Orphanage in South Canaan Twp.

Shopping list

Roasting chickens were 45 cents per pound; smoked hams, 35 cents per pound; leg of lamb, 31 cents per pound; 1-pound fruit cake, 32 cents; a dozen eggs, 55 cents; a dozen oranges, 39 cents; 2 pounds of yams, 19 cents; 1 pound of mixed nuts, 43 cents; 2 pounds of coffee, 51 cents; a carton of cigarettes, $1.50; and three large bottles of ginger ale or club soda, 23 cents.

BRIAN FULTON, library manager, oversees

The Times-Tribune’s expansive digital and paper archives and is an authority on local history.

Contact Brian at bfulton@timesshamrock.com

or 570-348-9140.

Article 10

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Clarks Summit

The Abington Lions Club of Clarks Summit recently donated $500 to Leader Dogs for the Blind in Rochester, Michigan.

The money covers the purchase price of a Leader Dog, or guide dog. The dog will go through extensive training for more than a year to become a companion for a blind person.

— CLAYTON OVER

cover@timesshamrock.com; 570-348-9100 x5363;

@ClaytonOver on Twitter

Scranton

The Ritz Theater and Performing Arts Center recently received $52,000 in donations to install a one-story elevator lift to the theater portion of the building downtown at 222 Wyoming Ave.

The Ritz is home to the Creative and Performing Arts Academy of NEPA. The nonprofit sector of the organization, Page to the Stage, received the donations raised by Ambit Energy during a conference the firm held at the theater in November, the theater organization said in announcing the contribution.

Conference attendants identified the need for an elevator to provide disabled-access from the ground-level first floor to the theater on an upper floor, and asked for donations from the large crowd assembled at the conference.

Dallas, Texas-based Ambit Energy provides electricity and natural gas services in deregulated markets across the United States.

— JIM LOCKWOOD

jlockwood@timesshamrock.com;

570-348-9100 x5185;

@jlockwoodTT on Twitter

AROUND THE TOWNS appears each Sunday, spotlighting the people and events in your neighborhoods. If you have an idea for an Around the Towns note, contact the writer for your town, or the Yes!Desk at 348-9121 or yesdesk@timesshamrock.com.

Residents stock up on fish, seafood for holiday feasts

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SCRANTON — With customers packed like sardines inside South Side Seafood in the city Saturday, Louise Wesolowski waited outside and imagined the Christmas Eve feast she and her husband would soon enjoy.

Much of the meal, from haddock and squid to oysters and whiting fish, would come from the busy Pittston Avenue business, where the crowd inside made it difficult at times to even open the door. When matched with pierogies, cabbage soup and other Polish delicacies, the fresh seafood rounds out a traditional menu that’s long been passed down through Wesolowski’s family.

“My husband says this is the best, and he’ll stand in line for this fish,” Wesolowski said of South Side Seafood’s selection. “We’ve been coming here for a long time.”

Whether they were preparing for the Feast of the Seven Fishes or simply stocking up for a holiday fete, seafood fans also packed the parking lot at Schiff’s on North Main Avenue to enjoy another tradition in the area — outdoor fish markets.

At Schiff’s the outdoor fish market sees about 1,800 to 1,900 customers per day looking for shrimp, smelt, crab legs, lobster and other seafood, cash and carry Supervisor Ryan Moritzkot said.

Sharon McPhillips and Dave Ambrose, both of Avoca, weren’t discouraged by heavy traffic Friday on their way to the outdoor market, where they often come to prepare for their annual meatless Christmas Eve meal. McPhillips bought salmon for her daughter to cook.

“It’s nice to be able to come and have the fresh (product),” she said. “I think it’s tastier.”

Contact the writer:

jhorvath@timesshamrock.com;

570-348-9141;

@jhorvathTT on Twitter


Anti-addiction activists supply care packages for area homeless

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SCRANTON — Up an embankment from where the Lackawanna River Heritage Trail serpentines through the city, blankets and sleeping bags bundled together under a bridge belonged to people who call the makeshift camp home — at least for the time being.

The occupants weren’t there Saturday when volunteers with the Forever Sammi Foundation forged through the brush along the trail to reach such camps, leaving care packages of warm winter clothes and information on available resources at each one they came across. For many of the volunteers the camps were a familiar sight, and served as a reminder of where the path of addiction often leads.

Dawn Lee began abusing heroin and alcohol when she was 12 and didn’t stop until age 36, spending nine of those years traversing the American Northwest without a home. Recovery brought her to Scranton, where she now lives in an apartment with others recovering from addiction. As Lee dropped off the care packages, she remembered being on the receiving end of similar compassionate gestures.

“I spent quite a few years incarcerated, but prior to that I came down through Oregon and Washington and Idaho,” Lee said. “I remember in the wintertime near Christmas people would bring down firewood and coats and blankets, and I just thought it was really cool because God knows it gets cold.”

Lee believes society often overlooks the homeless.

“Sometimes I think people don’t see the homeless people as people,” she said. “We’re all human beings.”

Marty and Stacy Henehan started the Forever Sammi Foundation after losing their 23-year-old daughter, Samantha “Sammi” Henehan, to a heroin overdose in 2016. Saturday marked the anti-addiction group’s third annual Christmas clothing drive, something Marty Henehan said his daughter wanted to do before she died.

Volunteers wore pink T-shirts emblazoned with Sammi’s image Saturday. Among them were Ryan Iorio, who’s newly into recovery, and Ken Rohland, who’s been sober since 2009 after his third trip to rehab.

“We’re one drink away from being here,” Rohland said of fellow recovering addicts, referring to the tarpaulin tents and homeless camps often visible from the trail. “People that aren’t sympathetic to it are the people that don’t understand (the disease of addiction) or never really lived it.”

Mark Dennis lived that life until about a year ago. Addiction caused him to push everybody in his life away, leaving him with nowhere to go, he said.

“Last year at this time I was living down here and under a bridge in Clarks Summit as well,” Dennis said while distributing care packages. “I just made the decision to give this a chance. Give my life a chance. I started doing it for my children and for my mother and my brothers, and then I came to understand I had to fix Mark first.”

After seeking treatment that included a sixth-month stay at Sammi’s Safe Haven, a sober living environment in West Scranton that the Henehans launched to honor their late daughter, Dennis now has his own place and plans to keep giving back.

“I basically learned to live all over again,” he said. “It’s definitely a blessing to have people out here to share the message.”

And while Sammi Henehan is gone, those who knew her said the foundation’s work embodies her spirit and values.

“Everything that this foundation expresses is part of what Sammi had in mind for people,” said Leo Vergnetti, a drug rehabilitation counselor who treated Sammi. “That was her spirit, so we’re just expounding on the spirit. ... (There are) lots of people getting help as a result of it.”

Contact the writer:

jhorvath@timesshamrock.com;

570-348-9141;

@jhorvathTT on Twitter

People on the Move

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FNCB Bank

Jason A. Bohenek, assistant vice president, audit manager, was recently awarded the Certified Financial Services Auditor certification from the Institute of Internal Auditors. The Certified Financial Services Auditor designation is a valued specialty certification for audit professionals working in banking, lending and investing services organizations. Bohenek rejoined the bank in June 2016 as audit manager after serving three years as a senior auditor with TMG Health.

Foley Law Firm

Attorney Michael J. Foley has recently been selected by his peers for inclusion in the 25th Edition of the Best Lawyers in America. Foley has been recognized by Best Lawyers since 2010, and his inclusion in 2019 acknowledges his work in the fields of Medical Malpractice Law — Plaintiffs, Personal Injury Litigation — Plaintiffs, and Workers’ Compensation Law — Claimants. Best Lawyers had previously named Foley “Lawyer of the Year” for Medical Malpractice Law — Plaintiffs, Allentown (2017). “Lawyer of the Year” awards are presented annually to a single outstanding lawyer in each practice area. Best Lawyers designates Allentown as the metropolitan area that covers northeast and central Pennsylvania, including Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Stroudsburg and the Lehigh Valley. Last month, he was awarded the highest level of distinction, Diplomate, from the American Association For Justice National College of Advocacy’s Achievement Recognition Program.

Highmark Health

Daniel P. Day, CEBS, has been appointed to the newly created position of chief market officer and senior vice president of the central region, based in Camp Hill. Day joined in 2017 and has led the company’s commercial sales force in central and Northeast Pennsylvania. As part of this new role, Day will oversee the market and brand strategy of Highmark Health and Penn State Health’s partnership. He joined as vice president of large group accounts for central and Northeast Pennsylvania regions before being appointed to senior vice president of central markets for Highmark Blue Shield in central Pennsylvania. He has more than 25 years of experience in the health care industry.

King’s College

Dr. Deb Carr, associate professor of education, co-authored the fourth edition of the textbook “Reading Specialists and Literacy Coaches in the Real World,” published recently by Waveland Press. Carr and co-authors Brenda Shearer and Mary Ellen Vogt document the historical, political and social forces that shape evidence-based practice and incorporate significant developments in intervention, assessment and adolescent literacy. The textbook examines the changing careers of reading specialists and coaches, which has led to an emphasis on increased collaboration and coaching, integration of standards and student improvement initiatives. Carr uses this text in her course, Educ 517 Literacy Leadership & Instructional Coaching, currently being taught at King’s. A resident of Hazleton, she has more than 30 years of experience as a classroom teacher, reading specialist, literacy supervisor, curriculum director, and English as a Second Language coordinator with the Hazleton Area School District.

Misericordia

University

The university and the Conference for Mercy Higher Education recently elected the Rev. Michael Bryant, Sister Mary Ellen Fuhrman, R.S.M., Maureen Metz and Thomas Zesk, retired C.P.A., to the university’s board of trustees. They will begin their three-year terms in October.

The university also thanked retiring board members, John C. Metz Sr. (1988-2018), Dr. Martha Hanlon, R.S.M. (1994-2018), Sherry A. Manetta (2003-18) and Mary Beth McNamara Sullivan (1990-2007 and 2009-18) for their years of service and awarded them trustee emeritus status. Bob Soper (2006-18) and Scott Lynett (2009-18) retired from the board.

Bryant is an accomplished and energetic pastor with a solid history of achievement and service in ministry. A motivated leader with strong pastoral and strategizing abilities, he has been the pastor of St. John Neumann Parish in the Diocese of Scranton since 2008 after serving the university as director of Campus Ministry from 1990-2007. He is the former director of the Ethics Institute of Northeastern Pennsylvania and was a member of the original Founders Council of Nativity-Miguel School in Scranton, where he continues to serve on the board of trustees.

A Religious Sister of Mercy, Fuhrman is the life coordinator at Mercy Center Nursing Unit, a skilled nursing and personal care facility in Dallas Twp. She also previously served as the special assistant to the president for mission integration and strategic planning at Georgian Court University in Lakewood, New Jersey. Fuhrman also completed terms as a trustee at Georgian Court University and Mount Aloysius College in Cresson. In addition, she has held several leadership positions for the Sisters of Mercy, including director of development, community leadership and vice president for the Sisters of Mercy Mid-Atlantic. She is a resident of Forty Fort.

Metz, a resident of Dallas, is the executive vice president for Metz Culinary Management. She oversees and manages the marketing, culinary and merchandising initiatives for the Dallas-based company. During her 17-year career at Metz Culinary Management, she has played a pivotal role in advancing the company’s recognition as a top on-site food service provider. Metz Culinary Management is ranked 14th on Food Management Magazine’s Top 50 Management Companies in the United States. Before joining Metz Culinary Management, she was a sales manager for pharmaceutical giant Sanofi-Aventis Pasteur.

Zesk, a resident of Morristown, New Jersey, previously served on the university’s Parents Advisory Council. A retired accountant and partner of Deloitte LLP of New York City, he served many different roles during his 36 years at the accounting firm. As a staff accountant and senior manager, Zesk oversaw the firm’s largest clients as an audit and tax staff person, manager and senior manager. In addition, he built a specialty group within the New York Office Tax Department that focused on retirement plans for employees. As a partner, he served as the lead partner providing tax and retirement plan services to a number of large Deloitte clients and was the national leader of retirement plan services in the Tax Department. As the northeast leader of a division in the Tax Department, he provided tax services to corporations and oversaw the employees and financial operations of the division. From 2008-14, Zesk served on the Deloitte Retirement Committee, which was responsible for overseeing the investments of the Deloitte Pension Plan.

Talen Energy

Brad Berryman was promoted to the position of senior vice president and chief nuclear officer. In this expanded role, Berryman will be responsible for overseeing all aspects of the company’s Susquehanna nuclear power plant, a two-unit, 2,700-megawatt-facility in Luzerne County. Berryman joined in early 2017 from NextEra Energy Resources, and has since served as site vice president for Susquehanna Nuclear, with responsibilities for all plant operations and personnel. With more than two decades of extensive commercial nuclear experience, he has held positions of increasing importance spanning various technical, operational, training and financial capacities. Prior to joining the company, he served as general manager at Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station (NextEra Energy Resources), Homestead, Florida. Berryman served his country in the Navy.

UGI Corp.

Roger Perreault was appointed to the newly created position of executive vice president, Global LPG, and Robert F. Beard was appointed to the newly created position of executive vice president, natural gas, effective Oct. 1.

In his new role, Perreault will be responsible for the company’s LPG distribution businesses, conducted through AmeriGas Propane LP and UGI International LLC and their subsidiaries. Perreault joined the company in November 2015 as president of UGI International and he will continue to serve in that role. Perreault spent 21 years with Air Liquide, serving in various leadership positions, including in a global role as president, large industries and, before that, in a role with responsibility for Air Liquide’s North American large industries business.

As executive vice president, natural gas, Beard will be responsible for utility operations as well as the midstream and marketing activities of the company, conducted through UGI Utilities Inc. and UGI Energy Services LLC and their subsidiaries. In his new role, Beard will work closely with Joseph L. Hartz, president of UGI Energy Services. Beard will remain president and chief executive officer of UGI Utilities, a position he has held since 2011. He joined in 2008 and previously served as vice president, marketing, rates and gas supply, and as vice president, Southern Region of UGI Utilities. He has more than 20 years of experience in the utility industry, and previously served as vice president of Operations and Engineering of PPL Gas Utilities Corp.

UGI Corp. and AmeriGas Propane Inc., the general partner of AmeriGas Partners LP, also announced that Jerry E. Sheridan has elected to leave the position of president and chief executive officer of AmeriGas. Hugh J. Gallagher, currently AmeriGas vice president, finance and chief financial officer, has been named AmeriGas president and chief executive officer, effective Sept. 18. Gallagher has held the position of vice president, finance and chief financial officer since May 2013. Since joining in 1990, he has served both UGI and AmeriGas in various finance, accounting and operations roles, including treasurer, director of treasury services and investor relations and director, business development. UGI chief financial officer, Ted J. Jastrzebski, will serve as AmeriGas principal financial officer on an interim basis until Gallagher’s successor is named.

University of Scranton

The university has named three individuals to its board of trustees: Jacquelyn Rasieleski Dionne, ’89, Westport, Connecticut; Liz Murphy, Southport, North Carolina; and attorney Vincent R. Reilly, ’80, P’05, ’08, ’11, ’14, Philadelphia.

A native of Scranton and a university alumna, Dionne became a registered nurse upon graduating from Community Medical Center in 1986. She began her career as a trauma intensive care nurse in Scranton and continued as a cardiothoracic nurse in Boston and the New Hampshire Heart Institute. She recently returned to a medical setting, working as an RN with elderly and Alzheimer’s patients. Dionne previously served on the university’s board from 2011 through 2017. During that time, she chaired the advancement committee, served on the executive committee, and on both the presidential and provost search committees. In 2015, she was instrumental in the creation of the Kania School of Management’s Business Wall of Fame. In 2013, she and her husband, John D. Dionne ’86, were co-recipients of the University’s President’s Medal, an honor presented by the President’s Business Council.

Murphy is chairwoman of the board and chief evangelist for CampusWorks Inc., a higher education professional services company. She has more than 35 years of experience in higher education, having first served as an institutional fundraiser for both a university and a community college foundation. For more than 21 years she worked at Datatel, an enterprise software provider to higher education, serving in marketing and professional services leadership roles, before advancing to the position of chief client officer there. She then served as chief executive officer of CampusWorks for more than six years. Murphy serves on the boards of Oohlala, Quality Matters and the Alliance for Innovation and Transformation.

Reilly, who graduated from the university in 1980 and Villanova University School of Law in 1983, has been active in civil litigation in the state and federal courts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. On Jan. 1, 2000, along with Tracey McDevitt, ’93, he founded the law firm of Reilly, McDevitt and Henrich, where he serves as managing partner of the firm with offices in Philadelphia, New Jersey and Delaware. He previously served as a university trustee from 2011 to 2017.

SUBMIT PEOPLE ON THE MOVE items to business@timesshamrock.com or The Times-Tribune, 149 Penn Ave., Scranton, PA 18503.

Cop facing more sex charges

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A part-time police officer accused of blackmailing a woman for oral sex faces additional charges after a second woman came forward to report similar accusations.

Mark E. Icker, 29, of Dickson City, pulled over two women in separate encounters this month while on patrol in Ashley and coerced them into sex acts in exchange for not arresting them, according to criminal complaints.

Icker is suspended from police departments in Ashley, Sugar Notch and Jessup. Efforts to contact Jessup Police Chief Joseph Walsh on Saturday for comment were unsuccessful.

Police charged him late Friday with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and sexual assault, which are felonies, and with other crimes. He is being held on $1 million bail.

Law enforcement is continuing to investigate, said Luzerne County Detective Chaz Balogh. He urged anyone with information or who might have been a victim to contact police by calling 911 and asking for him or Chief County Detective Michael Dessoye. People can also call the district attorney’s office during work hours at 570-825-1674.

Police charged Icker on Thursday with misdemeanor counts of official oppression and using the threat of an official action. A criminal complaint alleges Icker pulled over the victim Dec. 9 in Ashley and told her she was speeding and crossed the center line. The woman gave Icker permission to search her car. When he found a bottle of pills, he warned her she could be arrested for driving under the influence because she was on prescription medications and said she could go to jail for violating release conditions in another case.

“What can you do to help me help you?” Icker allegedly asked her.

According to the complaint, he said he would not arrest her in exchange for a sexual favor.

Icker was released on $25,000 unsecured bail Thursday. During questioning, he admitted that in exchange for the sexual favor, he did not charge the woman with driving with a suspended license, speeding and driving under the influence.

A law enforcement investigation into him continued.

On Friday, county detectives went to Icker’s house. He wasn’t home, but he returned to go with the detectives to the office of Magisterial District Judge Joseph D. Spagnuolo Jr.

The judge read the criminal complaint for another case, which involved an alleged Dec. 2 incident.

This time, Icker was facing felony charges of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and sexual assault in addition to misdemeanor counts of official oppression, criminal coercion and indecent assault.

Icker pulled over a driver while on patrol in Ashley and told her she was driving under the influence and on a suspended license, according to the complaint.

The complaint states that Icker told the victim to get out of her car, handcuffed her, searched her vehicle without consent, found a cigarette pack with some cigarettes and half of a blunt, and then placed her in the back of his patrol car.

“What can you do to help me help you?” the complaint quotes Icker as asking.

The victim told investigators that she then realized the officer may have been insinuating a sexual encounter.

He allegedly drove to Conyngham Street Park and told the victim he was taking her to a police station and was working by himself. He directed her to perform oral sex, then to wash her hands, police said.

As Icker was driving the victim back to her car, he allegedly told her that he’s in his second marriage, has two children and that marriage is boring. As he was dropping her off, he told her, “Sucks this is how we met, hope to see you again,” the complaint states.

Before setting new bail terms, Spagnuolo heard input from Balogh and Icker’s attorney, Bernard John Brown of Carbondale.

Balogh said law enforcement is still investigating other possible incidents involving Icker.

But without evidence, Brown replied, considering other potential incidents was conjecture.

Brown pointed out that his client surrendered himself to police in the previous case and returned to his home Friday night when he learned police were there seeking to speak to him.

He said Icker has no prior record and no addiction to drugs or alcohol, and that his whereabouts can be monitored. Court rulings have held that someone’s position as a police officer cannot be held against them when setting bail, Brown said.

But Balogh said Icker still has a driver’s license belonging to one of the victims, which he did not return when he turned in his police equipment. The two victims whose allegations are detailed in criminal complaints are afraid of law enforcement, Balogh said.

When the discussion was finished, Spagnuolo set the terms of bail: No contact with the victims, including via second or third party; turning in all law enforcement equipment; and $1 million straight bail.

Icker’s preliminary hearing in the felony case is scheduled for 9 a.m. Jan. 2 in Luzerne County Central Court.

Contact the writer:

bwellock@citizensvoice.com;

570-821-2051

Local History: Article on valuable violins back in 1968 led to questions of authenticity

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The Stradivarius madness began 50 years ago with Scranton resident Ruth Smith.

Back in November 1968, she brought an old violin down to the Times Building, hoping to shed some light on whether it could be an ultra-rare, ultra-valuable instrument handcrafted by 17th century Italian luthier Antonio Stradivari.

He designed and built violins for 70 years, moving from “a thick yellow varnish” he used as an apprentice to a darker varnish and “beautifying them in various details, his long patterns (from 1690) representing a complete innovation of the instrument,” according to an undated Scranton Times column.

He “experimented with sound hole shapes, softer varnish, wider purfling (the inlaid border near the edges of the violin’s back and front) and a stronger tone,” according to information on the New York website. “During the 1690s, he worked to perfect a ‘long pattern’ violin, with a longer, narrower body and a darker tone.”

In the early 1700s, he returned to designing shorter, wider violins during a period many call his golden age, according to the Met website. It’s still unknown exactly how Stradivari gave his instruments their distinct red- to orange-colored varnish.

About 650 of his instruments survive. Every so often, a Stradivari violin will come up for auction, with many commanding prices of tens of millions of dollars.

Back in 1969, when the rare instruments were valued at $100,000 and above, Smith told The Scranton Times reporter she believed she may have been storing one for decades in the cellar of her Snyder Avenue home. The instrument belonged to her husband, Philip, and was purchased around 1925, the Nov. 11, 1968, Scranton Times article reported.

After seeing a New York City newspaper article about the discovery of a Stradivarius instrument by a businessman, “I hurried to find the violin and sure enough, there was the name of Stradivari inside,” she told the reporter.

The Times reporter verified the tag, pasted inside the violin, read “ ‘Antonius Stradiuarius Cremonae Faciebat Anno 1726’ with 26 seemingly penciled in and a cross and the initials A.S.,” according to the article.

Ruth Smith said the violin “was purchased from Gypsies by my mother-in-law who wanted Phil to be a musician,” the article reported, using a term that has become considered derogatory. She promised to host a clambake if the instrument turned out to be a real Stradivarius.

After the story was published, The Scranton Times reported being inundated with other calls about possible Stradivari-crafted violins dug out of closets and basements.

“Warren Thompson, Clarks Summit, called and said he had a violin with the same inscription. So did Mary Polish, 133 Ash St., Olyphant. A South Scranton woman said she had a violin that had been in the family for years. Could we identify it,” the Nov. 17, 1968, story reported. “A man in Moscow called. We said to bring it in to the office and he said, ‘Not if it’s worth $100,000, I won’t.’ ”

It seemed too good to be true, The Scranton Times article reported.

“Either seven ... residents possess nine violins handcrafted by the famous Italian violin maker ... or some Gypsy made a fortune a half-century ago selling fakes while passing through the area,” the article began.

An expert agreed that it was unlikely many — if any — of the potential Stradivari violins found in the region would turn out to be authentic.

“For over 200 years many hundreds of thousands of violins, violas and cellos, which are more or less copies of the great Italian masters, have been produced on a commercial basis in Germany, France and Austria and for the most part bear reproductions of their labels,” read a letter sent to one local Stradivari hopeful from New York City violin dealer Rembert Wurlitzer Inc., according to the article. “Since many of these copies are quite accurate, they cannot be identified by measurements, wording of the label, or color of the varnish, etc., but must be examined by an expert. We do not send out representatives for this purpose.”

ERIN L. NISSLEY is an assistant metro editor at The Times-Tribune. She’s lived in the area for more than a decade.

Contact the writer: local

history@timesshamrock.com

Pike County Sentencings 12/23/2018

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Pike County President Judge Gregory Chelak recently sentenced:

■ Christopher S. Vreeland, 36, Milford, to 21 to 42 months in a state correctional facility and a $900 fine for terroristic threats, endangering the welfare of children and simple assault May 11 in Dingman Twp.

■ Willa Ellingsen, 34, Wilkes-Barre, to five to 18 months in the Pike County Jail and a $700 fine for resisting arrest, defiant trespass and possession of drug paraphernalia July 25-26 in Dingman Twp.

■ Kevin Matthew Parkhurst, 29, Dingmans Ferry, to 48 hours to six months in the Pike County Jail, a $1,000 fine and 12-month driver’s license suspension for DUI on Aug. 24, 2017, in Milford.

■ Annessa Elizabeth Vlachos, 45, Shohola, to nine months and 60 days to 24 months in the Pike County Jail, a $700 fine and 12-month driver’s license suspension for DUI and a summary offense July 18 in Palmyra Twp.

■ Keith E. Bauccio, 28, Ding­mans Ferry, to 141 days to 12 months in the Pike County Jail and a $600 fine for possession of drug paraphernalia and a summary offense June 18 in Delaware Twp.

■ Anthony E. Stieb, 53, Ding­mans Ferry, to 72 hours to six months in the Pike County Jail, a $1,000 fine and 12-month driver’s license suspension for DUI on June 6, 2017, in Dingman Twp.

■ William Clifton Braxton, 29, Lake Ariel, to six to 23 months in the Pike County Jail, a $700 fine and 24-month driver’s license suspension for possession with intent to deliver and a summary offense May 26 in Greene Twp.

■ Dale Harold Frisbie, 49, Lake Ariel, to one month to two years in the Pike County Jail, a $2,500 fine and 18-month driver’s license suspension for DUI on May 4 in Greene Twp.

■ Gavin Dale Swearinger, 21, Philadelphia, to 90 days to five years in the Pike County Jail, a $2,700 fine and 18 month driver’s license suspension for DUI and possession of drug paraphernalia April 25, 2015, in Lackawaxen Twp.

■ Lawrence Maurice Speaks, 36, Scranton, to 10 days to 12 months in the Pike County Jail and a $300 fine for possession of drug paraphernalia Nov. 19, 2017, in Blooming Grove Twp.

■ Francisco Ciprian, 26, Wilkes-Barre, to a $750 fine for possession of drug paraphernalia in Dingman Twp.

■ Christopher D. Wienke, 31, Hawley, to a $500 fine for possession of drug paraphernalia May 5 in Blooming Grove Twp.

CHRIS KELLY: New year, same old song

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In a season for singing uplifting hymns, the Scranton School Board mumbled a tired, traditional dirge and buried any hope taxpayers, parents and students had for a happy new year.

Suddenly freed from the smartypants advice of the “Harvard Hippie With Three Names,” Director Bob Lesh and the rest of the school board’s Old Guard circled the buses around the district’s indefensible no-bid contract with DeNaples Transportation.

Less progressive members of the board clearly felt liberated by the departure of Director Paige Gebhardt Cognetti, who brought a Harvard MBA, government experience and Wall Street knowledge to the board. She’s no hippie, but Cognetti does have three names and a mind for numbers.

Cognetti was such a know-it-all, state Auditor General Eugene DePasquale hired her as a “special consultant” with a focus on school district transportation contracts.

DePasquale is the Scranton School District’s most strident critic. He calls the DeNaples contract “the worst in state history.” I asked DePasquale why he plucked Cognetti from Scranton, considering she was the lead crusader against the busing contract.

“I believe she can do more at the state level,” he said.

Cognetti said the same.

“Long-term, this is best for me and my ability to help the district,” she said, adding that she was “sick” over the board’s performance Wednesday night.

In a 5-3 vote, the board filled Cognetti’s seat with Gopal Patel, a Subway restaurant and convenience store owner who was not at the meeting. The vote to appoint Patel clearly violated the state’s open meetings law, the Sunshine Act.

The law requires the opportunity for public comment before a vote, said Melissa Melewsky, media law counsel with the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association. The board also broke its own rules in bypassing interview requirements for potential members.

Patel was the pick. Period. Why? Here’s an educated guess: As a member of the Scranton Sewer Authority, Patel had an opportunity to vote for an invitation to DePasquale to audit the highly questionable and dubiously legal $195 million sale of the sewer authority.

Patel abstained. He later voted to pay a DeNaples-owned trucking firm for the authority’s use of a bulldozer. There was no formal contract for the bulldozer’s use, but Patel voted to pay the DeNaples firm anyway.

Make no mistake. Patel’s appointment is about the preservation of the busing contract — of which no district or DeNaples official has produced a clean copy. To the board majority, the contract trumps the educational fate of the district’s more than 10,000 students. Fire librarians, eradicate the arts, slash educational standards. The DeNaples contract must stand.

Bob Lesh — identified as “BL” in a grand jury report on the state attorney general’s corruption investigation of the district — couldn’t be bothered to show up for three public budget hearings. He was there Thursday night to vote for Patel, a 3.6 percent tax hike and $3.7 million in borrowing to balance the $166 million budget.

Lesh is always present on North Washington Avenue when it matters on Mill Street.

The next day, DePasquale blasted the board. “If I had the authority, I would dissolve this board,” he said. “Since I do not, it is important that state leaders and the great people of Scranton hold this board, and the actions it has taken, accountable.”

Please. DePasquale’s comment betrays his alienation from his audience. Scrantonians voted for Bob Lesh. It’s not that they don’t know any better. They don’t believe better is possible, and don’t accept responsibility for changing that.

When the board violated the Sunshine Act on Wednesday, the lone witness was a Times-Tribune reporter. That vacuum is why “BL” has the gall to say this after DePasquale called foul:

“I feel the man has a very bad Napoleon complex,” Lesh said. “He’s a small man with a small mind ...”

Said the high school dropout who voted to approve a $166 million budget and a 3.6 percent tax increase.

CHRIS KELLY, the Times-Tribune columnist, wishes you and yours a merry, safe Christmas. Contact the writer: kellysworld@timesshamrock.com, @cjkink on Twitter. Read his award-winning blog at timestribuneblogs.com/kelly.

Namedropper 12/23/2018

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Grant helps

medical students

The Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine received a $45,000 grant from the PPL Foundation to support the school’s successful Regional Academy for Careers in Health — Higher Education Initiative.

“We are grateful to the PPL Foundation for supporting our efforts to build a stable pipeline for the region’s future health care workforce,” said Ida Castro, GCSM’s vice president for community engagement and chief diversity officer. “By investing in the region’s youth, the foundation’s grant not only enriches the lives of youngsters, it ensures the entire community will be well cared for in the years to come.”

Castro received the grant alongside current REACH-HEI students including: Syon Bennett, Anastasia Flores, Alexandria Webster and Giselle Rojas.

The community engagement program provides disadvantaged and underrepresented in medicine students with academic enrichment, mentoring and guidance to encourage them to choose health care careers, according to the school.

The PPL Foundation funds will help add a year-long “Girls in Science” initiative that will target girls who are in grades seven and eight and are either economically disadvantaged or diverse, according to the school.

High notes

During the Children’s Advocacy Center of Northeastern Pennsylvania’s Emerald Gala, William J. Browning, executive director of the Lackawanna County Department of Human Services; Lt. Col. Robert Evanchick, acting commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police; and Michelle L. Olshefski, attorney, assistant United States attorney, Middle District of Pennsylvania, were honored with Distinguished Service Awards.

Julianna Bottaro and Laura Webb were the Emerald Gala honorees.

Attorney John P. Moses served as honorary chair of the gala, which celebrated 20 years of the advocacy center’s services to child victims of abuse; Julie Sidoni, of WNEP, was mistress of ceremonies.

Mary Ann LaPorta is executive director of the center.

High scorers

Local middle school students who won honorary scholarships to Scranton Prep for attaining the highest scores on this year’s exam include: Amir Akach, Michael Allardyce, Madeline Bormes, Sam Millett, Theodore Novak, Emma Ratchford and Benjamin Rothwell, all Our Lady of Peace School; Brianna Carrozza, Chase Krawchuk, Caidyn O’Malley and Anthony Ranieli, all Pittston Area; Caroline Grace Gaughan and Aiden McCoy, both All Saints Academ; Raniya Khan, Wyoming Seminary; Ava Forgione, Dunmore Middle School; Gloria Tabone, Holy Rosary School; Anderson Zou, West Scranton Intermediate; and Christopher Adonizio, Abington Heights.

The students were celebrated during a reception in early December.


His company created 100 jobs, now he wants help others make more

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DUNMORE — A third-generation commercial coffee roaster from Newark who moved his company to Dunmore last year wants budding entrepreneurs to have the same coaching he had.

Joseph Fernandes III, the vice president of SoCafe who’s now at the helm of the company his grandfather started, opened a for-profit business incubator in 4,000 square feet of unused space at his plant on East Grove Street.

He spent $60,000 to wall off the area, clean up the plumbing and gas lines and add three offices and a conference room for his incubator clients to use.

“What we do is give them a place to think, a place to develop their ideas, access to phone lines, access to copiers, access to attorneys, access to legal documents that otherwise they’d have to pay someone a ton of money to produce,” Fernandes said.

His executive suite is just off the main floor, putting him in arm’s reach at any time.

He’s also in the final stages of buying warehouse and office space in Plains Twp., where he plans to start a similar incubator.

At 31 years old, Fernandes has helped build and sell more companies, separate from his family’s coffee business, than most people will in a lifetime.

In 2014, he appeared on the Canadian version of “Shark Tank” called “Dragon’s Den,” which led to a successful international marketing campaign for Counting Sheep Coffee, a decaffeinated coffee with valerian root to drink before bed.

Several times during an interview and tour of his plant and incubator, Fernandes said mentors had been gracious, gave freely of their time and steered him in the right direction in his career’s earliest days.

It gave him an edge, now he wants to pay it forward.

There’s no void of available incubator programs in Northeast Pennsylvania.

Economic development groups, universities and chambers of commerce start them so startups can pay lower rent for smaller space and tap a pool of resources and services they otherwise couldn’t afford.

The Greater Scranton Chamber of Commerce has two separate incubators. There’s one in Carbondale for tech and manufacturing companies. Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeastern Pennsylvania has one in Wilkes-Barre. The economic development agency CANDO has an incubator in West Hazleton.

“Joe offers a different skill set,” said Bruce Reddock, an economic development specialist at the Scranton chamber.

Fernandes credits him as instrumental in getting SoCafe to Dunmore.

“Joe’s more boots on the ground as an entrepreneur himself,” Reddock said.

Fernandes’ incubator might look like competition to the agency that brought him here, but Reddock said ties between the two organizations should only strengthen.

“I think he has some resources that we might not be able to offer,” he said. “But at the same time, we can offer the resources that he doesn’t have.”

Fernandes’ model is different than most of the others.

He’s picky on the companies he agrees to support, careful that they’re a good match for what coaching he can offer.

Since he started about four months ago, the open area he calls “the pit” has been used for some light assembly and as a pop-up call center among other things.

Also different from other incubators, clients don’t pay up front.

Instead Fernandes wants a stake in the companies, blending the spirit of “Shark Tank” with the traditional incubator model.

In his client contract agreements, he asks for no more than 9 percent ownership, he said. Then, at some point when the business has a firm footing, the owners agree to buy him out.

“Joe Fernandes is an entrepreneur at heart,” said George Kelly, Lackawanna County’s economic development director who was part of a multi-agency team that helped bring SoCafe to Dunmore.

Kelly’s encouraged to see Fernandes digging deep in Dunmore, “one, for the coffee business, but second for the energy and vitality that he’s bringing to the area,” he said. “He’s a great partner and an economic development driver for this area.”

The young entrepreneur, who recently finished building a home in the Abingtons and moved his wife and two children from New Jersey, said his family is adapting well, and they’re embracing the slower pace.

Beyond that, he sees a deep bank of entrepreneurial enthusiasm that needs a little help on the management side, he said.

“You could have all the opportunity in the world,” he said. “But if you don’t know how to leverage it to your advantage, you can’t go anywhere.”

Contact the writer: joconnell@timesshamrock.com; 570-348-9131; @jon_oc on Twitter

Climate change affecting NEPA

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The second-warmest year on record in Northeast Pennsylvania would have passed with little fanfare in 2016 but for one scorching anomaly. Between late May and early September that year, the high temperature hit at least 90 degrees on 22 days, more than triple the area’s annual average of 6.3 such days. It included an unusually rare stretch in late July when the high topped 90 on nine straight days, the first time that had happened since 1953. Just months later, on March 14-15, 2017, a blizzard pummeled the region with 23.6 inches of snow, the most ever from a single winter storm.

Now imagine a time when such aberrations are the norm, when weather events that now rate superlatives — largest, most, worst, first — become commonplace.

It’s closer than you think.

The Fourth National Climate Assessment, completed last month, reinforced what scientists have long known: Climate change is already making its mark on Pennsylvania, and the state — the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre area included — faces a future that will be warmer, wetter and challenged by all that entails.

“One thing is the extremes get more extreme with climate change,” said Pittsburgh native Brenda Ekwurzel, director of climate science for the Union of Concerned Scientists and a co-author of part of the NCA report.

“So whatever messy weather you don’t like in Pennsylvania, you’re going to get more of that, and it’s going to be more severe. That’s kind of the bottom line with climate change.”

It will slice across nearly every aspect of life in Northeast Pennsylvania:

— Summer temperatures will continue to rise, with heat waves becoming more frequent and intense. Under the worst-case scenario, the average number of days with temperatures over 90 degrees could rise to more than 40 by the middle of the century, with ramifications for everything from human health to dairy production.

— Winter recreation will take a hit as the warmer, wetter conditions lead to a truncated snow season. Even with advances in snowmaking technology, ski resorts may find it difficult to stay viable. Snowmobiling could vanish.

— On the agricultural front, a longer summer growing season will present opportunities, but other factors, including changes in rainfall patterns and more intense heat, could require producers to rethink the crops they grow. Hotter summer temperatures especially could pose problems for dairy and poultry farmers.

— Changing conditions will disrupt existing ecosystems. The optimal habitat for some important tree species will shift to higher elevations and latitudes. Many bird, wildlife and fish species may see their habitats shrink. Invasive species could flourish.

— Not only will more precipitation fall as rain, heavy rain events will become frequent. That will mean a greater flood potential in a region with aging infrastructure, from river levees to storm sewers, that may be inadequate to handle more extreme precipitation.

Turn to page Afor a closer look at some of the most significant anticipated impacts of climate change on Northeast Pennsylvania.

 

Health

Michael Cummings feels the tickle in his throat and knows. He’s in trouble.

The 37-year-old Taylor man has suffered with asthma since he was a child. A dry, scratchy throat typically is the first sign that his seasonal allergies are kicking in, which, combined with his asthma, will soon turn him into a “walking medicine cabinet,” he said.

This past summer, with its extreme heat and excessive rain, produced more airborne irritants that made his life particularly miserable. He dreads reading reports that predict climate change will lead to even hotter and wetter weather in Pennsylvania in the ensuing decades.

“The humidity is what gets me. When the air is heavy, it’s like breathing through a coffee straw,” he said. “It’s getting worse all the time and it’s never going to get better unless global warming is addressed.”

Since the start of the 20th Century, the mean temperature in Pennsylvania has increased by more than 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit and is projected to be as much as 5.4 degrees warmer by the middle of the century, according to a 2015 study by the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

The annual precipitation rate also increased by 10 percent over the last 100 years and is expected to increase another 8 percent by mid-century, the report said.

That spells trouble for residents’ health, particularly the elderly and people with respiratory problems like asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, said Dr. Terry Lenahan, a pulmonologist with Delta Medix in Scranton, and Dr. Tina George, an Avoca physician with Commonwealth Health System.

“Oppressive heat makes people with normal lungs feel sluggish,” Lenahan said. “Can you imagine if you have impaired lungs? It takes it to the next level for those patients.”

Lenahan and George said they treated significantly more people with respiratory problems this past summer and their ailments lasted for a longer period of time.

“People read about climate change and the see a degree or two change,” George said. “That does not seem like a lot, but for the elderly . . . who are more sensitive to heat, those small degrees of change in temperature can make a big difference.”

Health officials are equally concerned increasingly hot and humid weather will result in a higher concentration of deer ticks infected with Lyme disease and mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus.

Northeast Pennsylvania already has a high incidence rate of Lyme disease. In 2010, there were a total of 152 confirmed cases of Lyme disease in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wyoming, Pike and Wayne counties, according to the state Department of Health. That figure skyrocketed to 612 in 2017.

Part of the hike is attributed to more accurate tracking and reporting. Changes in the region’s weather also contributed to the spike, said Erica Smithwick, professor of geography and director of the Ecology Institute at Penn State University.

“In general we have had milder winters and warmer summers,” Smithwick said. “We used to get a hard freeze that would kill ticks over the winter. Now they are able to survive through winter into the next season.”

The changing climate also will impact mosquitoes, which flourish in hot, steamy weather. That increases the likelihood that more of the blood-sucking insects will be infected with West Nile virus that can be transmitted to humans.

The virus was detected in mosquitoes in all but 10 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties in 2018, according to the state’s West Nile Virus Control Program. There were a total of 88 cases of West Nile neuroinvasive disease in Pennsylvania and 1,542 cases in the nation as of Dec. 11 this year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

By 2090 it is projected the number of cases of West Nile neuroinvasive disease in the Northeastern United States will increase by 490 per year, according to the Fourth National Climate Assessment report.

— TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER

 

Ecosystems

By the end of the century, William Penn might not recognize his woods.

A warming planet is expected to bring significant consequences for Pennsylvania’s forestry during the next several decades. The northeast corner of the state is not exempt.

“If we don’t get emissions under control rapidly, things will be drastically different,” said Gregory Czarnecki, the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ climate change & research coordinator.

Researchers from academia and state government forecast that the state’s ecosystems are set to shift to account for warming temperatures.

Suitable habitats for various tree species are expected to move north and to higher elevations while species like sugar maple, aspen and paper birch along the southern edge of their ranges will die off much faster, according to a Penn State Climate Impact Assessment report.

Northeast Pennsylvania, which is along the southern range of several northern species, may see mortality rates of those trees quickly increase, said Erica Smithwick, professor of geography and director of the Ecology Institute at Penn State.

A 2010 analysis of Scranton’s 1.2 million trees by the U.S. Department of Agriculture found the most common species are red maple, gray birch, black cherry, northern red oak and quaking aspen.

When the forests start to reproduce to replace the dying trees, the ones that will flourish under the warmer climate and shifted rainfall patterns will be southern trees, said Bernie McGurl, executive director of the Lackawanna River Conservation Association.

“The forests are going to change their complexity and complexion,” McGurl said.

Smithwick worries that the mortality rate will, for a time, outpace the rate at which southern species move northward while more invasive species take root.

Climate change leads to an increase in the impact of invasive species, pests and pathogens, DCNR has reported. Among those expected to thrive from climate change in Pennsylvania are sudden oak death, anthracnose, beech bark disease, forest tent caterpillars and the hemlock woolly adelgid.

For example, hemlock woolly adelgid, a tiny insect whose feast on a tree’s starch can cause immense damage over time, is typically constrained during winter, Czarnecki said. However, winters are growing warmer and the pest may have more of a chance to thrive.

“These forests have long been subjected to multiple stressors, including pests, disease, invasive species, over-abundant deer populations, pollution and more,” DCNR said in a 2015 report. “Climate change will exacerbate many of these in addition to adding new stresses. As the U.S. Defense Department said in a recent analysis of the impacts of climate change on national security, climate change is a threat multiplier.”

Meanwhile, invasive species like Japanese stiltgrass, commonly found in Pennsylvania forests, are known to change a forest’s soil composition and reduce its capacity to store carbon, the leading driver of climate change.

The warming climate reduces an ecosystem’s resilience to biological invasions while those exact invasions reduce the ecosystem’s ability to resist the effects of climate change.

McGurl expects the changes to be subtle and over a long period of time. Green will still cover the canopy of Northeast Pennsylvania’s forests.

“I expect it will still be forested,” McGurl said. “But it will be a different kind of forest.”

— JOSEPH KOHUT

 

Agriculture

Keith Hilliard has been farming for decades and he’s noticed warmer temperatures mean he can keep his crops in the ground longer.

“Personally, I see the difference in the growing season from when I was a lot younger,” he said.

Is that positive for local farmers?

“It is, for now,” he said. “If it gets too extreme it won’t be good, but it’s not anywhere near that now.”

Hilliard farms 330 acres in Sugarloaf Twp. and is the president of the Luzerne County Farm Bureau.

He knows of a farmer whose bean crop was almost a total failure this year because of too much rain, which climate scientists say could be more common during the next 50 years.

On his land, frequent rains lowered hay production.

Too much moisture is already a leading cause of crop loss in the Northeast. It delays planting and reduces the number of days when farmers can work in the fields.

Rain ruined enough crops in Luzerne County and 13 other counties this year that Gov. Tom Wolf declared a disaster, making farmers eligible for relief funding from the federal government.

The Fourth National Climate Assessment said too much rain could spoil some of the benefits that a changing climate is expected to bring to farmers in Pennsylvania and other Northeast states.

A longer growing season will help farmers, but they will have to adapt to changing conditions.

The frequency of heavy rainfall before the last frost of winter has been increasing, and if that trend continues, it could prevent farmers in the region from taking full advantage of an earlier spring.

And as winters get warmer, livestock productivity is expected to increase, but so is the amount of weeds and pests. That will bring a corresponding increase in the demand for pesticides, which brings a greater risk of human health effects.

A 2015 report from Penn State University said there is a high risk that extreme temperatures may reduce yields of grain crops or fruit crops, such as spring wheat, sweet corn and grapes, as summer heat waves become more frequent and intense.

As farmers prepare for the future and the changing arena in their eternal struggle with the elements, crop science will be their ally.

Part of the adaptation will be the new varieties of crops developed by plant scientists that will perform well in the expected conditions.

The state Department of Agriculture is funding research to answer questions about what crops will be feasible in changing growing conditions.

As the climate changes, the state may see conditions that are more hospitable for plants not commonly grown in Pennsylvania. The department is encouraging growers to look at new crops in an effort to diversify their fields as a cushion against future change, said spokeswoman Shannon Powers.

— BILL WELLOCK

 

Winter recreation

In his 32 years at Elk Mountain Ski Resort near Union Dale, General Manager Gregg Confer has seen almost everything at one time or another.

Cold winters. Warm winters. Wet winters. Dry winters.

The most striking difference these days, he said, is the lack of anything in between.

“Overall, the weather patterns seem to go in extremes anymore,” Confer said. “It’s extremely wet or extremely cold or extremely dry. ... It’s been crazy how the weather has changed.”

In the coming decades, probably no industry in Northeast Pennsylvania stands more at risk from climate change than winter recreation, led by commercial downhill skiing at resorts like Elk Mountain and activities that are dependent on natural snow such as snowmobiling and cross-country skiing.

Overall warmer temperatures and increased precipitation that will fall as rain — not snow — mean traditional winter-like conditions will arrive later in the season and depart earlier.

Even in a best-case scenario, according to climate scientists, shortened winters by mid-century if not sooner could make it next to impossible for most Pennsylvania ski resorts to meet a critical benchmark: an operational season of at least 100 days, generally considered necessary for profitability.

Likewise, a later winter onset could delay the season’s start until after the Christmas-New Year’s holiday period, which is a crucial time for revenue generation.

Confer said he realizes — and he thinks everybody else in the industry realizes — that winters locally are warming and an increase in the average temperature of just a degree or so in the next 10 to 20 years would have a huge impact.

“I keep thinking our snowmaking system gets more efficient every year, and it does,” he said. “But we certainly need cold weather to make snow. I don’t ever see that changing. ... So it’s certainly a concern for us, but do we put a lot of emphasis on it? We have not yet.”

The recent National Climate Assessment suggests some resorts will adapt by offering a greater range of activities, including warm-weather attractions such as zip lines and disc golf.

Elk Mountain has options for development, even if it has no definite plans, Confer said.

“We do have 1,500 or 1,600 acres of land, and I don’t think the owners bought all that land so they can only use 200 acres of it for a ski resort, so it’s certainly something we would like to do in the future,” he said.

As grim as prospects are for downhill skiing, they are even worse for snowmobiling.

With seasonal snow cover in sharp decline across Pennsylvania since the 1990s, snowmobiling conditions — meaning at least 6 inches of snow on the ground — can already be found for only a few weeks or even a few days on average each winter in most areas of the state.

Most experts expect snowmobiling to virtually disappear from Pennsylvania in the next few decades.

Liz Krug, an Erie area resident who is president of the Pennsylvania State Snowmobile Association, said it doesn’t keep her awake at night, but it is concerning.

Her organization has a number of affiliated clubs in Northeast Pennsylvania, where hundreds of miles of public trails are popular with both local enthusiasts and snowmobilers from New Jersey and New York, she said.

“Yes, you really wonder what the future is going to bring,” Krug said. “It’s very unpredictable now. I don’t know how you plan a week’s vacation to go snowmobiling any more — things just change so quickly. People do it and then they have to cancel out.”

Brenda Ekwurzel, director of climate science for the Union of Concerned Scientists, said it is a quirk of climate change that, while there will be less snow on the ground each winter, disruptive storms will become more frequent and intense — “like snowmageddon.”

“We don’t eliminate winter in Pennsylvania,” she said. “It just may be more rare, and when snowfall happens, it’s more likely to be a big snowfall.”

— DAVID SINGLETON

 

Infrastructure

The lessons learned seven years ago during Tropical Storm Lee have not been lost on Chris Belleman, executive director of the Luzerne County Flood Protection Authority.

One is that the Wyoming Valley Flood Risk Management Project, the levee and floodwall system that shields Wilkes-Barre and other communities from high-water events on the Susquehanna River, can indeed withstand a flood equal to the calamitous Tropical Storm Agnes flood that devastated the Wyoming Valley in 1972.

But another lesson — and one with sobering implications as climate change portends storms of increasing intensity and frequency in Northeast Pennsylvania — is the disquieting realization that floods greater than Agnes can and will occur.

When the Lee-swollen Susquehanna crested in Wilkes-Barre on Sept. 9, 2011, the water level stood at an unprecedented 42.66 feet, 21 inches higher than the peak during Agnes and uncomfortably close to the top of the 44-foot-high levees.

“I believe the existing flood protection system will serve the valley for a long, long time, but there could be some event in the future where God throws at us perhaps a larger flood even than Lee and in which case the system could be overtopped,” Belleman said. “I hope to God that will not happen.”

Some climate scientists consider the record-setting flooding associated with Tropical Storm Lee a bellwether for what confronts the region and the state as a whole in the coming decades.

The Fourth National Climate Assessment released last month said extreme weather and other climate-related disruptions will only exacerbate existing issues with the Northeast’s already aging infrastructure — not just flood protection assets but things like drainage, sewer systems and bridges.

In Wyoming County, where flash flooding that caused millions of dollars in public infrastructure damage in August was the third major flood event in 12 years, Emergency Management Director Gene Dziak said the time is past due for a serious conversation about climate change from a preparedness standpoint.

“We are going to have to put effort into it, number one, to understand it and, number two, to know what you do about it. I mean, you can’t stop the rain, but what we can do is more planning, and it has to be long-range planning,” he said.

“Climate change is here. We are living it and seeing it in the emergency management world, but yet I don’t think we are reacting to it the way we should.”

The Wyoming Valley system was primarily constructed in the 1940s in response to flooding in 1936, Belleman said. While it has been improved since, most notably during a $200 million, post-Agnes project that added 3 to 5 feet to the levees, he said, “At the end of the day, you still have a 75-year-old system.”

The authority has launched a project to eliminate three no-longer-used openings along the system where it previously had to throw up temporary closure structures during high-water events, Belleman said. Four other openings that in the past were closed with sandbags will be modified to allow them to be sealed with prefabricated gates.

However, there are no plans to further increase the height of the levees, which would require both money and political will, he said.

In what amounted to a litmus test during the Lee flood of 2011, the flood protection system was “exposed to greater stresses than what it was designed for and it performed very well,” Belleman said.

“That’s important to note,” he said. “It’s going on eight years ago now. I have my fingers crossed.”

— DAVID SINGLETON

Woman turns Nerf battles into a business in Dunmore

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DUNMORE — Anthony Palumbo dodged a barrage of foam darts before ducking into one of the wooden bases at his mom’s borough business and reloading his own Nerf Blaster.

The 5-year-old then took aim and returned fire, shouting “got you!” when his own dart bounced harmlessly off his brother’s back. The scene of the playfully competitive brotherly battle — a roughly 3,500-square-foot Nerf combat arena complete with an armory of plastic blaster guns — was Dart Zone, a new business that Samantha Palumbo opened in early October.

As mother of four Nerf fans with a desire to one day become her own boss, Palumbo started the business at 1033 Reeves St. to address what she sees as a dearth of activities for children and teens in the area. While kids make up much of the burgeoning business’s clientèle to this point, many of them enjoying the indoor battlefield at birthday parties, people of all ages can get in on the action. They can even bring their own blasters.

“There’s nothing in the area that’s like this,” she said. “I see, with the kids that are in here and my own kids, the smiles that they have when they’re leaving and how much fun that they say that they have. That’s what it is that drives it.”

Dart Zone players can participate in 12 different kinds of matches, many of them similar to popular video game modes. Those include capture the flag, freeze tag, team death match and “infected,” a humans-versus-zombies-syle match, among others. In one game, called “tribute,” players start with unloaded blasters and must rush to retrieve darts from the center of the arena when the game begins.

“Everybody that comes here loves shooting at each other,” Dart Zone referee Xander Frable said.

Palumbo, who works as a data analyst during the day, has invested about $25,000 into the entrepreneurial venture and hopes to one day devote all her time to Dart Zone. She’s also embraced some creative marketing, distributing Dart Zone certificates at local “trunk or treat” events this past Halloween and during the popular Santa Train event earlier this month. Palumbo offers a family special on Wednesdays and offers a small but growing arcade at the venue.

One of Dart Zone’s biggest fans, unsurprisingly, is young Anthony, whose friends are fans of his mom’s business, too.

“They tell me, how do you have a Dart Zone?” he said.

For more information on Dart Zone, including hours of operation and pricing, call 570-800-7319 or search “Dart Zone INC” on Facebook.

Contact the writer:

jhorvath@timesshamrock.com;

570-348-9141; @jhorvathTT on Twitter

Business Buzz

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The Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeastern Pennsylvania’s board of directors has approved the investment of $15,000 in support of Mt. Everetts Frozen Creations in Wilkes-Barre, with partner Wilkes University.

The plan will complete the design and layout of new manufacturing space for the production of proprietary new Italian ice, ice cream and other frozen desserts. The design plan will address current and future capacity requirements.

Such early-stage company investments are provided in the form of loans with warrants.

Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeastern Pennsylvania creates and retains highly paid, sustainable jobs by investing in and linking companies with experts, universities, follow-on funding, and other resources to help them prosper through innovation.

Marywood receives recognition for aid

Marywood University was recently notified that it has been recognized by LendEDU as an institution that provides a noteworthy amount of financial aid to international students, placing among the top third of institutions ranked. The university was ranked No. 322 out of more than 1,000 schools that were analyzed for the report. On average, it gave $20,099 to an international student seeking financial aid.

ExxonMobil donates to 21 schools

Liberty Petroleum Distributors, an ExxonMobil fuel distributor in Scranton, in partnership with the ExxonMobil Educational Alliance Program, announced it has awarded 21 grants to K-12 schools in Pennsylvania as part of its commitment to support and strengthen local communities.

“We have a long history of supporting local neighborhood schools and consider it a privilege to invest our time and resources in the communities where we do business,” said Gerald Danniel, chief operating officer at Liberty Petroleum Distributors.

In November, Liberty Petroleum Distributors began working with schools in Northeast Pennsylvania communities to fill out the applications jointly. Schools in turn built a plan on how the funds would be best used to advance their math and science programs.

Recipients include Blue Ridge High School, Dunmore High School, Jefferson Elementary School, MMI Preparatory, Montrose Area High School, Mountain View High School, Lackawanna Trail Elementary School, South Abington Elementary School, Susquehanna Community High School, Tobyhanna Elementary Center, Wallenpaupack North Intermediate School, Western Wayne High School, Wyoming Valley Montessori, Lakeland Junior-Senior High School and Elk Lake Junior-Senior High School.

The ExxonMobil Educational Alliance Program is designed to provide Exxon and Mobil retailers with an opportunity to invest in the future of their communities through educational grants to neighborhood schools. ExxonMobil believes that, as members of the community, local retailers are best qualified to work with local educators to help identify schools and programs most in need of support.

Marywood ranked by state board

The Pennsylvania State Board of Accountancy recently published its Fall Edition 2018 newsletter, in which the university ranked third out of the Top 5 Institutions by Percentage Pass rate for 2017.

To prepare for a career as an auditor, controller or tax account, the university’s students complete a minimum of 66 credits in business courses. Options are provided for the 150-hour CPA requirement and for those interested in pursuing a concentration in forensic accounting. Sample courses include cost accounting, federal taxation, and audition principles.

SUBMIT BUSINESS BUZZ items to business@timesshamrock.com or The Times-Tribune, 149 Penn Ave., Scranton, PA 18503.

Release of natural gas at power plant rattles Midvalley residents

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Noise like a jet engine woke residents this morning when a pressure release valve at the Lackawanna Energy Center power plant sent a plume of natural gas into the air for nearly an hour.

The power plant’s owner and operator, Invenergy LLC, was testing a fuel gas compressor when a stop valve closed, according to a statement from the company.

The closed valve cut off gas flow to the rest of the plant and caused a UGI pressure release valve to open at 8:08 a.m.

UGI, a natural gas utility, delivers fuel to the plant and has a gas yard on site.

The release valve opened to prevent the pipeline from overpressurizing, the statement said. It remained open until 8:55 a.m. creating what some residents say was the loudest noise they’ve ever heard come from the plant.

Emergency workers, police and UGI technicians arrived quickly, said Jessup Councilman Pete Larioni, who also went up to the plant near the Casey Highway.

UGI crews are working to determine specifically what caused the release valve to open, UGI spokesman Joe Swope said.

“It generated a lot of noise,” he said, adding that the valve worked as it should.

Check back for updates.

Contact the writer:

joconnell@timesshamrock.com;

570-348-9131;

@jon_oc on Twitter

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