Wednesday, November 23, 2016

About Town

 Can the republic survive?

 One for the land bank?

 Big sky over bridge?

 Bus stop?

 New sheriff in town?

 Gone but not forgotten?
(House at 1042 Lancaster Avenue)

 Monday it stood. Tuesday it fell. Today it disappeared entirely.

The other town clock?

Autumn road?

Making America great again?

Two transformers installed underground on Locust Street

Two electrical transformers were installed underground on the 100 block of Locust Street today - one on each side of the street.  Abel Inc and JMF Underground, who were contracted by PPL, installed the transformers under the surface of each sidewalk. Resident parking spaces were temporarily unavailable on the block due to the large number of work trucks and personnel. 













It pays more to be a Pa. state legislator in 2017


A 1.34 percent increase in the legislative salary will increase the rank-and-file member's annual pay by $1,140, to $86,478.50 for 2017. This increase will boost legislative leaders' pay to between $98,609 to $134,998, depending on their position.
MORE:
http://www.pennlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/11/it_pays_more_to_be_a_pa_state.html

Monday, November 21, 2016

About Town

Recent pics about town . . .

 Backlit tree at River Park

 Out for a walk

 Ferals of Avenue H

 V


 Path to the gazebo

Too soon?


Ferals of South Fifth . . .

 Stubby cat

 On the run

 Undercover

  Under car


Saturday may have been the last "nice" day of the year . . .


 The day was off to a great start . . . 

but soon went awry as afternoon winds brought rain and sleet.

DA releases map of county drug overdose reports

Lancaster County emergency reports of drug overdose

Lancaster County District Attorney Craig Stedman announced Monday the launch of an online Lancaster County-wide mapping of emergency reports of drug overdose.

The map consists of Lancaster County-Wide Communications data, specifically emergency dispatches/responses to reported overdose incidents, from January 1, 2014 to November 1, 2016. It can be accessed HERE.

The map is presented as an awareness and prevention tool in the ongoing battle against the national heroin/opioid epidemic. The District Attorney’s Office has found through community meetings and forums that the county, as a whole, does not yet realize the epidemic has afflicted every town, borough, and region. The map provides visual evidence that drug abuse has impacted, almost literally, every neighborhood in Lancaster County.

The incident markings on the map are not categorized by incident severity or type of drug involved in the reported overdose incident. Overdose death incidents are not given distinguished markings. Additionally, it is very likely not all of these reports were in fact active overdose incidents when emergency responders arrived at the location.

The map was designed to deliberately exclude and protect the identities of those patients involved and their exact addresses.


Close-up of Columbia

Many individuals worked on the concept, compilation and mapping of an estimated 2,500 incident points, most notably the Lancaster County GIS division, Lancaster County-Wide Communications, and Nicholas E. Good, a research intern at the District Attorney’s Office.

In moving forward, the map will be updated quarterly with new reports.

Source:
Lancaster County District Attorney's Office