Friday, April 17, 2026
White House economists estimate the United States has a shortage of 10 million houses, according to a new report — and say regulatory cuts could lead to more construction to stabilize prices, increase homeownership, and fuel faster economic growth. The analysis is part of the Economic Report of the President, which lays out a blueprint for how more
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Friday, April 10, 2026
PECO Energy has filed for a 12% electric and 11.4% natural gas rate hike with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC), set to take effect Jan. 1, 2027 — after receiving similar increases at the start of 2025. If approved, typical residential customers would pay an additional $20 per month for electricity and $14 per month for natural gas,
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Montgomery and Chester counties picked up about 2,500 and 2,600 residents, respectively, between July 2024 and July 2025, according to new estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. Meanwhile, Bucks County lost around 600 people, and Delaware County lost around 500. Growth in Montgomery and Chester could relate to those counties having more available land and
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Pennsylvania Reps. Lindsay Powell (D-21), Jennifer O'Mara (D-165) and Mary Jo Daley (D-148) introduced H.B. 2303, a bill that would create a statewide regulatory framework for short-term rentals, following two shootings at a rental property in Powell's Allegheny County district. Based on a nonpartisan study by the Joint State Government Commission, the bill
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Friday, March 20, 2026
To sell properties in homeowners’ association communities, mortgage lenders often require documentation showing adequate insurance coverage for common areas. When lenders encounter delays in obtaining the information, real estate professionals are frequently asked to step in. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is working with state and local
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Across the country, as housing and other costs continue to outpace income increases, many middle-class homebuyers are finding they can’t easily scrape together a down payment. That has prompted city, state and nonprofit programs to expand eligibility for down-payment support — with some areas offering loans to people making more than $200,000.
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Friday, March 6, 2026
The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to assess how workers are classified under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The previous independent contractor rule used a totality of the circumstances test, which consisted of several factors to assess a worker’s classification. The new proposed rule rescinds the prior
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Friday, February 27, 2026
A recently released U.S. Census American Community Survey tracked median household income for municipalities across the region. Chester County municipalities claimed six of the top 10 spots and dominated the top 50, reflecting the county’s concentration of high-income towns. While Bucks County has lagged in population growth, adding about 4% from 2010
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Pennsylvania has released its first comprehensive, data-driven Housing Action Plan, a statewide roadmap developed to boost housing supply, improve affordability and stabilize housing outcomes across urban, suburban and rural communities. The plan calls for building 450,000 new units by 2035 to close a projected shortfall of nearly 185,000 homes if
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Friday, February 20, 2026
On Feb. 13, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) on its proposed rule, “HUD’s Implementation of the Fair Housing Act’s Disparate Impact Standard.” The proposed rule would eliminate HUD’s current rule providing guidance for HUD’s
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Friday, February 13, 2026
The national housing crisis is widely acknowledged but fiercely debated, with estimates of the shortage ranging from as few as zero to as many as 20 million homes, reflecting deep disagreements over how to define and measure housing need. Analysts at Moody’s, Goldman Sachs, Zillow, Brookings, Freddie Mac and McKinsey all use different assumptions
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Friday, February 6, 2026
The federal government partially shut down after Congress failed to enact a fiscal year 2026 spending package funding HUD, the Department of the Treasury and other agencies by the Jan. 31 deadline — but that shutdown ended when the House approved a Senate-passed spending package and President Trump signed it into law on Feb. 3. The package represents
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Friday, February 6, 2026
With rents climbing, homelessness rising and homeownership increasingly out of reach, Gov. Josh Shapiro is preparing to release a long-awaited statewide housing plan aimed at addressing Pennsylvania’s severe shortage. The state ranked 44th nationally in new housing construction between 2017 and 2023, adding just 3.4% to its housing stock while
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Friday, February 6, 2026
A new Pennsylvania law, which took effect Jan. 23, ends a long-standing practice that sent the estates of people who died without a will or heirs entirely to the state, a system critics likened to a 100% tax on intestate estates. Act 50 of 2025 amends the state’s Intestate Succession law so that when no heirs can be identified, a decedent’s
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Pennsylvania's Home Improvement Contractor Registration is still grappling with the effects of a cyber attack in August 2025 and cannot process registrations. The registry is intended to protect consumers by screening for registered, accountable contractors. Individuals and businesses who perform over $5,000 in annual home improvements are required to
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Friday, January 23, 2026
A new, statewide program seeks to preserve and expand Pennsylvania’s supply of affordable rental housing for residents at risk of housing instability, including people facing homelessness, or escaping domestic violence or human trafficking. Launched by the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA), the $35 million initiative offers 0% interest,
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Friday, January 16, 2026
Pennsylvania state Rep. Tarik Khan (D-194), of Philadelphia, has introduced legislation dubbed the “Golden Girls” bill to eliminate outdated local laws that restrict how many unrelated people can live together, arguing such rules worsen the state’s housing affordability crisis and contribute to a shortage of at least 265,000 homes.
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Friday, January 9, 2026
Mail delivery could slow in 2026 after the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) changed its postmark rules and raised some shipping costs, potentially affecting time-sensitive mail. Under a new policy that took effect on Dec. 24, 2025, postmarks on mail dropped in collection boxes now reflect the date an envelope is first processed by an automated sorting machine
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Friday, January 2, 2026
County property taxes in Bucks, Delaware and Montgomery counties will increase in 2026, but Chester County taxes will stay level. Property tax rates are measured in millage, with one mill being worth $1 for every $1,000 of assessed property value.
Bucks County commissioners voted 2-1 to adopt a roughly $517 million budget for 2026 that includes a 2.2-mill
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro has signed House Bill 735, creating a Flood Insurance Premium Assistance Task Force to study ways to make flood insurance more affordable and accessible, a move prompted by the deadly July 2023 flash floods in Bucks County that killed seven people. Sponsored by state Rep. Perry Warren (D-31), the bipartisan measure directs the
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Friday, December 12, 2025
Fort Washington-based luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers reported higher fourth-quarter revenue but issued a cautious outlook for 2026, as national housing demand remains soft amid high mortgage rates and broader economic pressures. The company expects 10,300 to 10,700 home deliveries in fiscal 2026 — slightly below Wall Street projections — and
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Gov. Josh Shapiro directed nearly $220 million in capital dollars to SEPTA after the Pennsylvania state budget left out new funding for the beleaguered transit organization. The fresh funding from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation will allow SEPTA to complete necessary safety upgrades, specifically for Regional Rail cars, and ensure the
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Friday, November 28, 2025
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is emphasizing the continued importance of the mortgage interest deduction (MID) following the 2025 tax reform law, H.R.1, which preserved the benefit for qualifying homeowners. The MID allows taxpayers who itemize to deduct interest paid on a home loan — up to $750,000 on a primary or secondary residence
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Friday, November 21, 2025
Philadelphia’s suburban counties are bracing for tight 2026 budgets as stagnant state funding, reduced federal support and a recently resolved Harrisburg budget impasse leave local governments preparing for higher property taxes. County officials in Chester, Montgomery, Delaware and Bucks counties say they face growing human-service needs with fewer
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Friday, November 14, 2025
A new report from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) shows first-time homebuyers made up just 21% of the U.S. market last year — the lowest share since NAR began tracking — while the average age for first-time buyers rose to 40, up from 38. NAR executive vice president Shannon McGahn warned that delayed homeownership can reduce equity
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Friday, November 14, 2025
Federal programs critical to the U.S. housing market are set to resume after Congress approved legislation to fund the government and end the longest shutdown in American history. “This agreement brings programs critical to housing back online and is welcome news for Americans whose home purchases and insurance renewals have been delayed or derailed
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Mayors across the United States say housing affordability has become the defining challenge of their administrations, shaping policies and priorities in cities large and small. More than half of mayors in a recent bipartisan survey expect affordability in their cities to decline over the next year, and nearly all say their residents are dissatisfied with
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Friday, October 31, 2025
Camden-based American Water Works Co. and Bryn Mawr-based Essential Utilities Inc. announced plans to merge in an all-stock deal that would create a $40 billion water and utilities giant serving nearly 20 million customers in 17 states. The merger, expected to close in early 2027, will operate under the American Water name and remain headquartered in
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Friday, October 24, 2025
The Pennsylvania Insurance Department reminds everyone that flood insurance remains available in Pennsylvania despite the federal shutdown, which has resulted in the National Flood Insurance Program’s temporary loss of authority to renew or issue new flood insurance policies. “The current private flood insurance market can provide consumers with
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Friday, October 17, 2025
The ongoing skilled labor shortage is delaying the completion of thousands of new homes and costing the U.S. home building industry an estimated $10.8 billion per year, according to the Home Builders Institute’s (HBI) Fall 2025 Construction Labor Market Report. National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) economists found that the shortage adds $2.66
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Friday, October 17, 2025
Voters in three municipalities in the Philadelphia suburbs will see referendum questions on their election ballots:
West Pikeland Township, Chester County, residents will be asked if they favor raising property taxes by up to 1.5 mills in order to fund and maintain the West Pikeland Township Police Department. Read the full question on the county
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Friday, October 10, 2025
The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) provides $1.3 trillion in flood insurance to 4.7 million policyholders in 23,000 communities across the United States. A lapse in NFIP authority puts an estimated 1,400 transactions a day at risk of moving forward without vital flood coverage. Because Congress failed to meet the Sept. 30 deadline to pass a
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Federal operations may experience disruptions after Congress failed to pass funding legislation by the Sept. 30 deadline. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is closely monitoring the situation and working with Congress, the administration and industry partners to address impacts on NAR members. NAR has outlined eight programs where NAR members may
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Aging malls and office parks across Philadelphia’s suburban counties are being reimagined as mixed-use destinations, blending housing, retail and entertainment to revive prime but underused properties. BET Investments is leading several projects, including a $300 million to $400 million overhaul of Prudential’s former 90-acre office campus in
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Friday, September 26, 2025
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is urging Congress to support long-term reauthorization and reform of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Last month, senators Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Bill Cassidy (R-LA) requested public input on 46 questions covering NFIP reauthorization, mapping, mitigation and other reforms. NAR submitted comments to
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Friday, September 19, 2025
In a significant move to address the growing housing affordability crisis, a bipartisan group of lawmakers has introduced the Saving the American Dream Act. By requiring key federal agencies, including the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of the Treasury, to coordinate and share housing market data and research, the bill aims
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Friday, September 12, 2025
On Sept. 5, President Donald Trump signed into law H.R. 2808, the Homebuyers Privacy Protection Act, bipartisan legislation that prevents homebuyers from being inundated with unsolicited calls, texts and emails from competing lenders offering loans. Representatives John Rose (R, TN-6) and Ritchie Torres (D, NY-15) introduced the bill that seeks to restrict
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Following an executive order designating English as the official language of the United States, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) will transition all operations and programs to English-only communication, effective immediately. HUD will no longer provide non-English translation services, and all correspondence, publications and digital
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Friday, August 29, 2025
Commuters in the Philadelphia area have faced crowded buses and skipped stops this week, following the first round of cuts to SEPTA. The nation’s sixth-largest public transit system, SEPTA is facing a $213 million operating deficit for the 2026 fiscal year, which began July 1. State legislators remain at a stalemate over funding. SEPTA recently
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Friday, August 29, 2025
The term “broadband” is used to describe high-speed internet access provided by various telecommunications technologies, including cable, telephone wire and wireless. Broadband gives users the ability to send and receive data at volumes and speeds far greater than “dial-up” internet access provided over traditional telephone lines. A
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Pennsylvania is one of two states where the typical newly constructed home costs more than twice as much as the typical existing home, according to an analysis by LendingTree, an online lending marketplace. Existing homes in Pennsylvania are valued at a median of $297,831, while new homes are valued at a median of $659,468 — a 121% difference. Price
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Friday, August 15, 2025
SEPTA will move ahead with 20% across-the-board service cuts starting Aug. 24 despite a Pennsylvania Senate bill that would temporarily redirect unused transit capital funds to operations. At a state House Rules Committee meeting, SEPTA general manager Scott Sauer said the Senate plan — $1.2 billion over two years from capital funds plus $43 million
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Friday, August 15, 2025
President Trump has signed into law H.R. 1815, the VA Home Loan Reform Act, which aims to make permanent the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs' temporary policy allowing veterans to directly compensate their real estate agents, ensuring they can participate in the housing market on equal footing with other homebuyers. The National Association of Realtors
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Friday, August 8, 2025
SEPTA needs new state funding by Aug. 14 to prevent a planned round of deep service cuts from taking effect near the end of the month, transit agency officials said. The agency plans to post online new fall schedules that reflect a 20% overall cut in transit service. If the state money doesn’t come through, 32 bus routes will be eliminated and 16
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Friday, August 1, 2025
A bipartisan push is gaining steam in Congress to modernize the outdated capital gains tax exclusion on home sales—an issue that’s keeping much-needed housing inventory off the market. The 28-year-old limit, unchanged since 1997, allows individuals to exclude up to $250,000 in gains from the sale of a primary residence, and $500,000 for married
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Friday, July 25, 2025
The Accelerating Home Building Act (S. 2361) has been proposed to help address the nation's housing affordability crisis through streamlined construction approval processes. The legislation would establish a pilot grant program at the Department of Housing and Urban Development to fund the creation of pattern books — collections of pre-reviewed
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Friday, July 18, 2025
A new report warns the potential impact of tariffs on construction costs could trigger a decline in homebuilding and homeownership across Greater Philadelphia. Proposed tariffs could decrease the number of homes built in the region by nearly 1,600 units per year and drop the homeownership rate below 50%, according to a report from Kevin Gillen, senior
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Friday, July 11, 2025
President Trump recently signed into law a major tax package that includes several provisions affecting the real estate industry. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) successfully secured its top legislative priorities in the final legislation:
Permanent extension of the qualified business income (QBI) deduction (Section 199A), allowing eligible
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Friday, July 11, 2025
For the second time in two years, Pennsylvania lawmakers are weighing legislation that would automatically seal certain eviction records for tens of thousands of renters across the commonwealth. House Bill 1095 is a longtime wish list item for housing advocates, who say it would help tenants struggling to find safe and habitable homes because they were the
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Friday, July 11, 2025
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) issued multiple mortgagee letters on June 27, implementing policy changes affecting FHA-insured, single-family loans. The changes, which took effect immediately, are part of what the Trump administration says is a broader effort to reduce regulatory burden in the housing market. The policy modifications affect
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Friday, July 4, 2025
SEPTA adopted a budget on June 26 that will slash nearly half its transit service as it wrestles with a $213 million annual deficit and little hope for new funding from Harrisburg. The doomsday moment, if that is what it turns out to be, arrived with little drama — in a quick voice vote by the transit agency’s board — after six months of
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Pennsylvania Department of Revenue has released updated common level ratios (CLR), which are county-specific percentages used to convert assessed values into market values. These ratios are primarily used during tax assessment appeals, but also apply to Realty Transfer Tax (RTT) calculations in certain circumstances — for example, when a
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Friday, June 27, 2025
On June 24, more than 200 Pennsylvania Realtors attended more than 120 meetings with legislators at the Capitol in Harrisburg to advocate for the passage of several bills to advance issues important to the real estate industry during PA Realtor Day on the Hill. “It takes a little effort to meet with a legislator and explain our positions on regulation
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Title fraud, or deed theft, is when someone illegally transfers the title or deed of a property without the owner’s knowledge. Often, criminals use fake IDs and/or forged documents to record documents with the county recorder of deeds, transferring the property to themselves, or falsely represent themselves as the owner to list and sell a property.
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Friday, June 20, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance will host a webinar to discuss the role that international trade and tariffs play in shaping the housing market and real estate more broadly. “Tariffs, Trade, and the Housing Market: What You Need to Know” will be held via Zoom on Thursday, June 26, from 10 to 11 a.m. SRA CEO Jamie Ridge will be joined by Drexel
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Friday, June 13, 2025
New research commissioned by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) shows current federal policy on capital gains taxes is steadily and quietly distorting the housing market, locking in older homeowners and limiting inventory. Under current tax law, homeowners can exclude up to $250,000 in capital gains from the sale of a primary residence, or up to
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Friday, June 13, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance will host a webinar to discuss the role that international trade and tariffs play in shaping the housing market and real estate more broadly. “Tariffs, Trade, and the Housing Market: What You Need to Know” will be held via Zoom on Thursday, June 26, from 10 to 11 a.m. SRA CEO Jamie Ridge will be joined by Drexel
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Friday, June 6, 2025
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) released an updated State Flood Disclosure Tracker to reflect recent changes in state laws requiring disclosure of property conditions, including prior flood damage. The update responds to a Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) proposal that would require states to adopt a federal flood disclosure form as a
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Friday, June 6, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance will host a webinar to discuss the role that international trade and tariffs play in shaping the housing market and real estate more broadly. “Tariffs, Trade, and the Housing Market: What You Need to Know” will be held via Zoom on Thursday, June 26, from 10 to 11 a.m. SRA CEO Jamie Ridge will be joined by Drexel
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Congress is taking steps to make permanent a provision that the Department of Veterans Affairs implemented on a temporary basis last year. The U.S. House of Representatives passed H.R. 1815, the VA Home Loan Reform Act, by a unanimous voice vote. The act aims to codify the temporary policy, implemented in June 2024, that allows veterans to directly
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Friday, May 23, 2025
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) has joined 14 other housing organizations in a letter supporting the bipartisan Housing Affordability Act (S.1527), sponsored by U.S. Sens. Reuben Gallego (D-AZ) and David McCormick (R-PA). The legislation updates the Federal Housing Administration’s multifamily loan limits to reflect current construction
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Friday, May 23, 2025
The Philadelphia metro area is in the top 10 metros with the oldest median homes sold in 2024, according to an analysis by the online real estate brokerage Redfin. Homes sold in the region were a median of 61 years old, built in 1963. Only 6% of homes sold last year were younger than five years old. About 78% were more than 30 years old. Nationwide, the
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Friday, May 16, 2025
The Federal Insurance Office at the U.S. Department of the Treasury hosted a roundtable discussion focused on opportunities to address the cost and availability of homeowners insurance. The roundtable included representatives from various sectors, including insurers, reinsurers, state regulators, resilience and consumer groups, and academics. The National
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Friday, May 9, 2025
A new report by Realtor.com reveals that Pennsylvania has some of the highest premiums on new construction in the United States. According to Affordability and Homebuilding: State-by-State Report Cards, Pennsylvania ranks fourth with an 89% premium on new construction, trailing only Kansas, Michigan and Ohio. The state's high new construction costs,
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Realtors are invited to participate in the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors’ advocacy efforts, learn more about key legislative priorities and take the Realtor message to the Pennsylvania General Assembly during the PA Realtor Day on the Hill on June 23 and 24. The highlight of the event will be meeting with legislators at the Pennsylvania Capitol
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Friday, April 25, 2025
SEPTA’s proposal for massive service cuts could lower property values in nearby communities, reduce tax revenues for public services and slow the economy, according to a recent economic impact analysis. On July 1, the transit agency will face a $213 million budget shortfall. Philadelphia-based consultancy Econsult Solutions calculated what it would
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Judge Richard Stearns of the U.S. District Court in the District of Massachusetts has allowed the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to proceed with clawing back 78 fair housing grants awarded to fair housing organizations in 33 states. The grants, which are authorized by statute, support fair housing education and enforcement efforts in
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Home builders are feeling the sting of uncertain trade policies and growing economic concerns that are adding to the challenge of building enough homes to address America’s inventory shortage. Builder sentiment in the market for new homes has been slumping for months and stayed low in April, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells
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Friday, April 18, 2025
The Housing Supply Frameworks Act — whose bipartisan sponsors includes Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) — offers a framework for state and local governments to modernize outdated zoning and land-use regulations that hinder new housing development. “The rising cost of housing is putting the American dream out of reach for working families across
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Southeastern Pennsylvania homebuyers are seeing more competition than buyers across the country. According to Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin, as most of the country is shifting into a buyer’s market, the Philadelphia region is “remaining more of a seller’s market.” The combined market of Philadelphia and Delaware
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Friday, April 11, 2025
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) will investigate cuts to fair housing enforcement at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The investigation follows HUD's attempt to claw back $30 million in grants awarded to local fair housing centers. Four of the groups successfully sued to block the administration from withholding the
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Judge Richard G. Stearns of the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts granted a temporary injunction stopping the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) termination of dozens of Fair Housing Initiatives Program (FHIP) grants. Fair housing groups had filed suit against HUD and DOGE after they terminated 78 HUD fair housing grants for
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Friday, March 28, 2025
In a major shakeup at the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), newly confirmed director Bill Pulte has swiftly restructured leadership at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Pulte removed 14 board members from both entities, appointing himself as chairman alongside new members from hedge funds, real estate and technology sectors. The restructuring extends beyond
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Pennsylvania is one of the states that’s allowed the least amount of housing to be built, and the lack of supply is hiking prices for homebuyers and renters, according to new research by the Pew Charitable Trusts. The state ranked 44th for the share of homes approved to be built from 2017 to 2023, according to a report published this week by Pew, a
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner and Department of the Interior Secretary Doug Burgum announced plans to create a joint task force to identify federal lands where affordable housing could be built. They plan to identify underutilized lands for residential development and streamline the process to transfer the lands for
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Four local fair housing centers — representing a class of federal fair housing grant recipients whose grants were terminated — are suing the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The legal action follows HUD’s termination of grants disbursed under the Fair Housing Initiatives
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Friday, March 14, 2025
The Trump administration has stalled at least $60 million in funding intended largely for affordable housing developments nationwide, throwing hundreds of projects into a precarious limbo. The move is part of a flurry of funding freezes, staffing cuts and contract cancellations by the Trump administration at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
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Friday, March 7, 2025
On Feb. 28, private fair housing organizations reported that the Trump administration had terminated at least $12 million in grants awarded for local fair housing education, outreach and enforcement. Local fair housing centers, funded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Fair Housing Initiatives (FHIP) grant program, are often
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Friday, March 7, 2025
State law requires local governments and school districts to publish public notices in print newspapers of general circulation, giving residents a chance to know what their elected representatives are doing. State Rep. Robert Freeman (D-136), of Northampton County, plans to introduce legislation that would update the nearly 50-year-old Newspaper Advertising
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Pennsylvania Auditor General Timothy DeFoor’s office released the findings of a three-year audit of the state’s cyber charter schools. The audit shows five of Pennsylvania’s cyber charter schools amassed excessive reserves following rapid enrollment during the COVID-19 pandemic. Online charter schools receive taxpayer funding from the
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Deep staffing cuts at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) could derail a federal agency that issues mortgage insurance for hundreds of thousands of homebuyers. The Trump administration has recommended shedding more than 40% of the staff of HUD’s Office of Housing, whose largest agency is the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
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Friday, February 21, 2025
President Donald Trump’s pledge to deport millions of undocumented immigrants has construction-industry watchers concerned about what enforcement operations might mean for the industry’s workforce, laborer working conditions and housing prices. Nationally, foreign-born workers, regardless of legal status, fill an estimated 30% of trade jobs like
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Pennsylvanians can begin applying for Property Tax and Rent Rebates for the 2024 tax year. The rebate program benefits eligible Pennsylvanians who are 65 and older, widows and widowers who are 50 and older, and people with disabilities who are 18 and older. In 2023, the Pennsylvania General Assembly approved a historic expansion of the Property Tax and Rent
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Friday, February 7, 2025
In his 2025-2026 budget proposal, Gov. Josh Shapiro highlighted a six-part plan and $70 million in new funding to expand affordable housing across Pennsylvania, as the cost of homes and rent has increased exponentially. “To meet the need for housing this year alone, we need more than 100,000 new homes and apartments,” he said. Shapiro’s
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Friday, February 7, 2025
Realtors considering a run for a local elected office are invited to sign up for the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors’ (PAR) campaign school. The sessions are designed for candidates, campaign team staff and people interested in the democratic process of elections. View session information and register at the PAR website. Source: PA Realtors;
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Friday, January 31, 2025
According to a new report from public education advocacy group Education Voters PA, Pennsylvania’s largest cyber charter school spent nearly $600,000 at car dealerships and car washes in one year, and $400,000 on entertainment expenses. The advocacy group obtained check registers through right-to-know requests from Commonwealth Charter Academy (CCA).
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Friday, January 31, 2025
In a sign that support for housing policy is building on Capitol Hill, the bipartisan Congressional Real Estate Caucus, which is tasked with developing legislation to address home supply and affordability, relaunched as part of the 119th Congress. The caucus formed last year with just four members and grew to more than 50 members. The National Association
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Friday, January 31, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance staff is updating municipal tax rates in the Municipal Database. The database is an online resource for Realtors that includes local property resale requirements, rental regulations, tax rates and other information relevant to real estate. Municipal governments approved their 2025 budgets and property tax millage rates at the
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Catastrophic disasters across the United States are contributing to the rising cost of homeowners insurance, and some experts believe it will not get better without significant changes in the industry. Gregg Barrett, CEO at WaterStreet Co., which sells property insurance software, said historical data is no longer as accurate to predict future events.
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Friday, January 24, 2025
The Philadelphia metropolitan area ranks fifth on Zillow’s list of the hottest markets for 2025. The affordability of its homes compared to other nearby markets and the shortage of homes for sale compared to demand have made the region one of the country’s most competitive markets. “Philly happens to be one of those markets where buyers
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Friday, January 17, 2025
The median home equity for homeowning households increased by about $47,900 during the COVID-19 pandemic, from $150,146 in 2019 to $198,000 in 2022, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The rise helped to increase the median net worth of U.S. households by about $40,000, from $136,500 in 2019 to $176,500 in 2022 (adjusted for inflation). Among more commonly
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Lung health advocates are striving to teach people about an invisible risk that could be lurking in basements across Pennsylvania — radon. Radon is a radioactive gas that is the second leading cause of lung cancer, after smoking. It comes from decaying uranium, which occurs naturally in soil and rocks, and can enter homes through foundation cracks.
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Friday, January 3, 2025
County property taxes in Chester, Delaware and Montgomery counties will increase in 2025, but Bucks County taxes will stay level. Property tax rates are measured in millage, with one mill being worth $1 for every $1,000 of assessed property value.
Bucks County commissioners approved a $500 million operating budget for 2025 that maintains the 2024 property
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Friday, December 20, 2024
The Real Estate Licensing and Registration Act (RELRA) regulates the practice of real estate and is being amended to clarify that the practice of wholesaling is licensed real estate activity. Anyone who wants to do a wholesale transaction for themselves or represents a wholesaler who is selling a property must have a real estate license. Act 52 of 2024,
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Friday, December 13, 2024
The filing deadline to receive property tax and rent relief in Pennsylvania is Dec. 31. Thousands of dollars of rebates are still available for older adults and people with disabilities who meet the requirements. Eligible applicants can easily submit a rebate application online through myPATH. So far, 550,000 rebate applications have been processed for
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Governor Josh Shapiro recently signed Executive Order 2024-04, creating the Pennsylvania Permit Fast Track Program to streamline the commonwealth’s permitting process for key economic development and infrastructure projects, increase transparency, and accelerate timelines to ensure state government delivers results quickly and efficiently. The program
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Friday, November 22, 2024
National Association of Realtors president Kevin Sears joined national housing leaders for a panel reception hosted by the National League of Cities and American Planning Association. The discussion focused on the Housing Supply Accelerator Playbook, a guide that contains more than 40 strategies for state and local governments to deploy in the fight for
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Friday, November 15, 2024
SEPTA's deficit is fueled by the end of federal COVID relief funding along with a drop in ridership post-pandemic. SEPTA spokesperson Andrew Busch said the agency’s goal in talks with lawmakers is "getting a permanent solution in place" to address long-term annual deficits. Should funding remain flat, the transportation agency is considering fare
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Applications are now being accepted for the state’s Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) for the 2024-2025 season. LIHEAP is a federally funded program administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services (DHS) that helps qualified residents pay their home heating bills during the winter months. Assistance is available for both
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Realtors can prepare for a successful political run and gain a competitive edge over opponents by attending the Pennsylvania Realtor Campaign School offered by the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors (PAR). The sessions are designed for interested candidates, campaign team staff and anyone interested in the democratic process of elections. They are being
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Friday, October 25, 2024
In September, Gov. Josh Shapiro signed an executive order creating Pennsylvania’s first comprehensive Housing Action Plan. It gave the state’s Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) and Department of Human Services one year to create a housing action plan by working with stakeholders to create a road map for building more
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Friday, October 25, 2024
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued Lead and Copper Rule Improvements, which set a 10-year deadline for cities across the nation to replace their lead pipes, finalizing an aggressive approach aimed at ensuring that drinking water is safe for all Americans. Though the dangers of lead pipes have been known for decades, there are more than nine
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Restrictive racial covenants in deeds are no longer allowed or enforceable, thanks to federal law and state protections. But they still exist in the deeds of properties across the region and the country. Many homebuyers and owners are horrified when they find racist language in their own properties’ documents. Pennsylvania passed a law last December
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5. The Pennsylvania Realtors Political Action Committee (RPAC) voter guide has information on RPAC-supported candidates.
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Radnor Township School District has been ranked as the best in Pennsylvania in Niche’s 2025 Best Schools and Districts rankings. Local districts in the top 10 include:
#1 Radnor Township School District #3 Tredyffrin-Easttown School District #4 Lower Merion School District #9 New Hope-Solebury School District #10 Spring-Ford Area School District
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Friday, October 11, 2024
The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) is a federal program launched in 1987 that provides tax credits to developers in exchange for keeping rents low. Since its inception it has pumped out 3.6 million units nationwide. The buildings need to be kept affordable for a certain amount of time — normally a minimum of 30 years. For the wave of LIHTC
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro signed House Bill 1567 into law as Act 93 of 2024 on Oct. 2. The new law amends the Municipal Code and Ordinance Compliance Act (MCOCA) to address and clarify how municipalities may issue certain types of temporary occupancy permits for multi-family properties that are transferring ownership. The bill makes clear that
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Pittsburgh and Philadelphia alone report 29,000 and 25,000 lead pipes, respectively, and a report from the Natural Resources Defense Council noted that its numbers underestimate the problem due to a lack of data. The council report estimated that more than 660,000 service lines in Pennsylvania contain lead. “In a new level of detail, we see a
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Friday, September 27, 2024
Pennsylvania has nearly 100,000 fewer housing units than it needs. Experts say federal policy could help close the gap. Economists — and now both candidates running for president — say it’s critical the country finds a way to build more housing. “It’s supply and demand,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s
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Friday, September 20, 2024
According to data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2023 American Community Survey, just under half of America’s renters are considered cost-burdened. The survey found that 21.1 million renters, out of 42.5 million rental households in the United States, spent 30% or more of their income on housing costs last year. The 30% threshold is commonly used
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Gov. Josh Shapiro signed an executive order creating Pennsylvania’s first comprehensive Housing Action Plan. The executive order gives the state’s Department of Community and Economic Development and Department of Human Services one year to create a housing action plan by working with stakeholders to create a road map for building more
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Lt. Gov. Austin Davis and Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) Secretary Rick Siger announced a new $20 million Main Street Matters program supporting main streets, downtown business districts, small businesses and local communities across Pennsylvania. Main Street Matters funding is available for community revitalization efforts
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Early this summer, the Pennsylvania legislature gave a boost to developers of historic buildings by increasing the annual size of the state's historic tax credit from $5 million to $20 million. The policy is meant to provide resources to developers to renovate buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but its popularity has been limited
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Friday, August 30, 2024
In August, the Biden-Harris administration announced several actions to help increase the supply of affordable housing. Building on the administration’s June announcement — which the National Association of Realtors (NAR) supported, and which awarded $85 million in grants through the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD)
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Fifty Pennsylvania school districts with high property tax burdens will receive an extra $32 million as part of a sweeping effort to overhaul education funding in the new state budget. The supplements, which range from $50,000 to $5 million, target districts with high local taxes compared to the wealth of their residents. Many of the districts that will
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Friday, August 16, 2024
In Philadelphia’s collar counties, the luxury-home market is most competitive in and around the $1 million to $1.5 million range, which has the lowest amount of supply compared to demand, the fastest sales and the highest amounts that buyers end up paying over the asking price. This spring, luxury-home buyers faced strong competition across the
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Friday, August 9, 2024
A new report examines how private, for-profit companies have strategized to take over nonprofit water and sewer systems in Pennsylvania over the years. The findings provide context for any upcoming hearings on proposed water and sewer rate hikes being sought by Aqua — the third such request in the past seven years. In a report issued in July, an
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Friday, August 2, 2024
New research shows Philadelphia remains a city of homeowners but is less affordable than it’s historically been — over the last few years but also over the past two decades — even as the number of homeowners remained virtually unchanged. “The affordability of the city’s market is changing. It’s absolutely changing,”
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Friday, July 26, 2024
A new Pennsylvania will protect homeowners from predatory real estate practices that can strip them of their housing wealth. Act 52 of 2024 — formerly Senate Bill 1173 — will regulate third parties in real estate deals called “wholesalers,” who sign agreements of sale with homeowners and then sell those agreements to someone else.
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Friday, July 26, 2024
A home repair program once passed as a landmark bipartisan initiative failed to receive funding in the new Pennsylvania budget, disappointing county officials and housing and energy advocates. The commonwealth’s Whole-Home Repairs program, championed by state Sen. Nikil Saval (D-1), of Philadelphia, originally received $125 million in funding in 2022
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Friday, July 26, 2024
Thanks to funding in the new state budget, Pennsylvania is now one of six states that will offer free legal representation to low-income renters facing an eviction or another housing-related issue. The budget includes $2.5 million for a statewide right-to-counsel program. The funding will be divided among a network of legal aid programs and organizations.
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Friday, July 19, 2024
With fewer than 2% of insured Pennsylvania properties carrying flood insurance, the Pennsylvania Flood Insurance Premium Assistance Task Force has new recommendations to make it more affordable. The problem is often cost. Families pay hundreds or even thousands of dollars per year on top of their regular homeowners insurance. A report published by the task
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Pennsylvania lawmakers approved a $47.6 billion budget deal nearly two weeks into the new fiscal year that started July 1. Gov. Josh Shapiro signed the main spending bill on July 11 after it passed the House 122-80 and the Senate 44-5. The budget represents a 6% increase over last year’s approved spending, with most of the new money going toward
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Friday, July 19, 2024
The Pennsylvania Association of Realtors (PAR) offers Advocacy Virtual Training to give members the tools they need to be engaged in PAR’s advocacy efforts and help them better represent the industry. Shifting to a virtual format beginning in 2024, members will be able to attend shorter, one-hour sessions, each focused on different aspects of the
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Senate Bill 1173 was signed into law by Gov. Josh Shapiro, making it Act 52 of 2024. A priority piece of legislation of the Pennsylvania Association of Realtors (PAR), SB 1173 was overwhelmingly approved by the state Senate and unanimously approved by the House. The law, which goes into effect on Jan. 9, 2025, requires a real estate salesperson license to
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The U.S. Department of the Treasury has announced new steps to address housing affordability. The plan mirrors many policies also advocated by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) to help lower housing costs and increase housing supply. “Executive agencies have the power to act quickly to promote homeownership. We applaud the Biden
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Friday, July 5, 2024
The Supreme Court ruled that cities can enforce bans on homeless people sleeping outdoors, even in West Coast areas where shelter space is lacking. The case is the most significant to come before the high court in decades on the issue and comes as a rising number of people in the U.S. are without a permanent place to live. In a 6-3 decision along
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Friday, June 28, 2024
More than 440,000 Pennsylvanians will soon see property tax and rent rebates via direct deposit and mailed checks thanks to a push by Gov. Josh Shapiro. In a visit to Upper Darby on Monday, Shapiro announced the rebates would begin flowing into applicants’ bank accounts on July 1 via the Property Tax/Rent Rebate (PTRR) program. The initial
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Friday, June 21, 2024
According to an analysis of a RealtyHop study, homebuying power in the Philadelphia metro area decreased nearly 65% from 1970 to 2022. Homebuying power is defined as the ratio of annual income to average house price. Housing has become 2.83 times more unaffordable for families in Philadelphia, as home values skyrocketed from $10,600 in 1970 to more than
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Friday, June 21, 2024
On April 24, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized revisions to the Buyer/Seller and Landlord/Tenant Lead-Based Paint Disclosure form. The changes will help agents and consumers fill out the form correctly, standardize responses and reduce errors, thereby reducing agent liability. The changes do not alter what information is required of
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Friday, June 14, 2024
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced in April a new product proposal for government-sponsored enterprise Freddie Mac that would allow the agency to purchase certain single-family, closed-end second mortgages. The plan would offer borrowers an alternative way to access their home equity without surrendering a first mortgage with a more
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Friday, June 14, 2024
The Housing Equality Center of Pennsylvania (HECP) has launched a new website. Since 1956, HECP has been working to ensure that all Pennsylvanians have equal access to the housing of their choice regardless of their race, color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, familial status or disability. They assist housing
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Friday, June 7, 2024
On June 5, approximately 250 Pennsylvania Realtors headed to the capitol for more than 110 legislative visits to thank senators for their support of Senate Bill 1173, which they passed on June 4, and to advocate for its passage by the Pennsylvania House. SB 1173 would require a real estate salesperson license under the Real Estate Licensing and Registration
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Over the past two years, home buyers and sellers have been pummeled by three colliding forces: the highest borrowing rates in nearly two decades, a crippling shortage of inventory, and a surge in home prices. People who bought their starter home a few years ago are finding themselves frozen in place by the “rate-lock effect” — they bought
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Gov. Josh Shapiro’s office announced the deadline to apply for property tax/rent rebates has been extended. The deadline for older adults and Pennsylvanians with disabilities to apply for the rebates on rent and property taxes paid in 2023 is now Dec. 31, 2024. Previously the deadline was June 30. Eligible residents include Pennsylvanians 65 and
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Friday, June 7, 2024
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) recently updated its policies by increasing the fees mortgage servicers are allowed to charge — from $900 to $1,800 — when processing an assumable loan. Government-insured mortgages have the unique feature of being assumable to homebuyers. Assumable loans create opportunities for those with FHA-mortgages
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Tens of millions of square feet of warehouse space have sprung up in the Philadelphia region in recent years to meet the insatiable demand for online shopping. It is altering the workforce, reshaping communities by devouring farmland, channeling truck traffic to country roads, creating environmental worries — and, more recently, sparking pushback from
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Friday, May 24, 2024
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) plans to temporarily lift its ban on buyers directly paying for professional real estate representation until the agency deems it necessary to engage in a formal rulemaking process, according to comments from VA deputy director of policy Michelle Corridon. Her remarks were met with relief from the real estate
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Friday, May 24, 2024
A new report shows Pennsylvania’s cyber charter schools amassing a large stockpile of assets. The Education Voters of PA report shows that the four largest cyber charter schools in Pennsylvania in 2018 had net assets and fund balances totaling $566,858; in 2022, that total had grown to $486 million. Cyber charter schools, like brick and mortar charter
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Friday, May 17, 2024
A recent decision by the U.S. Supreme Court could have ripple effects on the types of impact fees levied on new developments across the United States. Supreme Court justices unanimously ruled April 12 in favor of George Sheetz in Sheetz v. El Dorado County, in which the petitioner was required to pay a $23,420 county traffic-impact fee to build a
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Friday, May 10, 2024
With low inventory continuing to plague the Philadelphia housing market, Toll Brothers is making a big push in the region. The Fort Washington-based luxury homebuilder has been aggressively acquiring land in the suburbs and is now in the middle of building more than 1,600 homes in the Philadelphia area. In just the past eight months, the developer spent $86
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Friday, May 10, 2024
Thousands of Realtors from across the country — including members of the Bucks County Association of Realtors and Tri-County Suburban Realtors — flooded Capitol Hill on May 7, advocating for housing inventory and affordability, private property rights, and accessibility to professional representation to help more people achieve homeownership.
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced its finalized Fair Lending, Fair Housing, and Equitable Housing Finance Plans to address barriers to sustainable housing opportunities. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) applauds FHFA's efforts to codify existing practices and programs, which shows a sustained commitment from the agency to remove
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Philadelphia area homeowners may not know they are responsible for the pipes that run between their homes and the water and sewer mains. According to Forbes, water line repairs typically cost between $350 and $1,575, while water line replacement can cost anywhere from $1,500 to $12,000 — with most home insurance policies not covering it. Philadelphia
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Friday, April 26, 2024
As vacancy rates in Pennsylvania malls pile up and mall owners face a vexing real estate problem, state lawmakers are trying to help steer the future of these properties. The Pennsylvania House passed a bill to allow local municipalities to enact a property tax abatement for 10 to 15 years if mall properties are redeveloped with multiple uses, which could
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Friday, April 26, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court will continue to wrestle with major questions about the growing issue of homelessness as it considers whether cities can punish people for sleeping outside when shelter space is lacking. Grants Pass v. Johnson is the most significant case before the high court in decades on the issue, and it comes as record numbers of people are
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Friday, April 19, 2024
The latest Pennsylvania Comprehensive Housing Study, released by the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA) and produced in collaboration with the Housing Initiative at the University of Pennsylvania, explores statewide trends for housing. The 48-page report includes charts, tables and analysis of the latest housing data, and this year added findings on
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Eviction rates are on the rise in Pennsylvania, including in the southeastern region of the state. A report released by the Housing Alliance of Pennsylvania, titled "After The Pause: The Rise of Eviction Filings Post-Pandemic," analyzes eviction flings documented in the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts over a five-year span from July 2018 to
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) along with the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) sent a letter to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Federal Housing Authority, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac seeking confirmation that homebuyers will continue to have access to mortgage credit after the proposed settlement in the Burnett et al and Moehrl et al
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Friday, March 29, 2024
According to late 2023 data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR), suburban Philadelphia counties have some of the most expensive home prices in Pennsylvania and the nation. NAR uses the Census Bureau's American Community Survey of median housing prices for 3,112 counties and county equivalents across the U.S. Home values reflect the overall worth
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Pennsylvania lawmakers on either side of the aisle agree that zoning and building code regulations are strangling the supply of new homes in the commonwealth. State Democrats and Republicans have introduced at least a dozen proposals this legislative session that would loosen these laws to encourage housing construction and reduce prices. State Sen. John
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Housing is often considered a local issue, but there is a growing consensus in Harrisburg that state-level action is necessary to combat Pennsylvania’s persistent shortages and rising costs. That shift can be seen in Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s budget proposal, which would put $80 million toward funding public legal defense against evictions
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Friday, March 15, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor's (DOL) final rule regarding how workers are classified under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), issued in January, took effect on March 11. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) met with officials at DOL’s Wage and Hour Division to discuss the recent rule and its impact on the real estate industry. The meeting
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Friday, March 8, 2024
As Congress continues to negotiate to avoid a government shutdown by March 22, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) is making every effort to secure a long-term reauthorization of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). The program was previously set to expire March 8, but Congress passed a short-term continuing resolution funding the government
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Friday, March 1, 2024
The Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency announced a state mortgage relief program will reopen in March. The Pennsylvania Homeowner Assistance Fund has been closed for more than a year to resolve a backlog of applications and a series of internal problems. The assistance program first opened in January 2022 with $350 million in federal funding to help
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Friday, February 23, 2024
The Philadelphia Water Department (PWD) says that a proposed U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule to increase a clean water standard in the Delaware River would cost it approximately $3 billion to comply — a cost customers would bear. “Without significant financial support from the state or federal government, that cost will be passed
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Making homeownership more accessible has long been one of the top advocacy priorities of the National Association of Realtors (NAR), and Realtors are ensuring it’s top of mind for policymakers too. Since NAR released its groundbreaking report in 2021 revealing America’s underbuilding gap of at least 5.5 million housing units, Realtors have led
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Friday, February 9, 2024
Because of many years of underbuilding and homeowners with low mortgage rates deciding not to sell, not enough properties are available for sale to meet demand from buyers. Single-family home builders looking to fill the need are optimistic for 2024 — thanks to lower mortgage interest rates, which are “a promising sign” for new home sales
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Friday, February 2, 2024
The Housing Alliance of Pennsylvania’s Statewide Eviction Report evaluated eviction filing trends in Pennsylvania from 2018 to 2023, analyzing shifts during pre-pandemic, pandemic and post-pandemic periods, with a specific focus on communities where the changes are prominent. The report provides an in-depth analysis of eviction data, offering insights
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Friday, January 26, 2024
Nearly 175,000 more Pennsylvanians are eligible this year for Pennsylvania's Property Tax/Rent Rebate Program. The income limit has been increased to $45,000 — the first increase in 18 years. Another change is that the maximum standard rebate was raised from $650 to $1,000. The program benefits eligible homeowners and renters age 65 and older, widows
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Friday, January 19, 2024
The U.S. Department of Labor issued the final independent contractor rule assessing how workers should be classified under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) given the department’s concerns with worker misclassification. The FLSA is the law that sets standards for minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping, youth employment standards and other rules
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Friday, January 12, 2024
In Pennsylvania’s school funding dilemma, there’s a little-known mechanism that pits the western half of the state against the east — the hold harmless provision. The provision dictates how 71% of state funding is spent and prevents districts with shrinking student populations from losing funding. Western school districts tend to benefit
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Minneapolis became the first major city to eliminate single-family zoning in 2019, but the city has been chipping away at land-use restrictions for a decade. A new analysis from Pew Charitable Trusts reveals how those efforts are paying off. Between 2017 and 2022, Minneapolis increased its housing stock by 12%, while rents grew at just 1%. Those figures
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Friday, January 5, 2024
County property taxes in Bucks, Delaware and Montgomery counties will increase in 2024, but Chester County taxes will stay level. Property tax rates are measured in millage, with one mill being worth $1 for every $1,000 of assessed property value.
Bucks County commissioners approved a $486.8 million budget for 2024 that includes a 2-mill tax increase
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Pennsylvania’s budget impasse ended after the divided state legislature agreed to send millions of dollars to community colleges and libraries, fund public legal defense, and create a student teacher stipend. Three budget-enabling code bills, plus dozens of other pieces of legislation, passed with broad bipartisan support, marking a sudden end to
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Friday, December 15, 2023
The Schuylkill River Passenger Rail Authority was awarded $500,000 and accepted into the Federal Railroad Administration’s program that provides funding to restore passenger rail services. The approval paves the way for a passenger train with stops in Reading, Pottstown, Phoenixville, Philadelphia and New York. Officials said the earliest the service
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Friday, December 8, 2023
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a rule that would require water systems across the country to replace millions of lead service lines within 10 years. The rule would accelerate progress toward the Biden administration’s goal of removing 100% of lead pipes; lead exposure is linked to significant health and developmental
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Friday, December 1, 2023
Home buyers in the Philadelphia area have been resilient, continuing to purchase homes even as prices rise and buying has become less affordable. Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist at listing service Bright MLS, called the local market’s resiliency “impressive” in the face of elevated mortgage interest rates. In November, the National
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Friday, November 24, 2023
PREIT, a real estate firm that owns the Willow Grove Park Mall, Plymouth Meeting Mall, Exton Square Mall and the Cherry Hill Mall, among others, had a loss of almost $64 million in the third quarter, adding to its negative $1.1 billion balance, according to the Philadelphia Business Journal. PREIT has been negotiating a potential debt restructuring package
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Friday, November 17, 2023
In many Pennsylvania communities, sewer rates have spiked as private water companies have bought up wastewater systems from local governments. The push to privatize sewer services follows the passage of a state law in 2016 that allows the dollar value of water systems to include not just pipes and plants but market factors, such as their worth to the
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Suburban Realtors Alliance (SRA) has launched a newly redesigned website. The site is more mobile friendly, more visually appealing and has new features. “We invite all 13,000 of our shareholder members to explore our new site and get the most out of the SRA as a membership benefit,” said SRA president Jamie Ridge. “Our website, with
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Friday, October 27, 2023
Freddie Mac will adopt the ANSI Z765-2021 (American National Standards Institute) measuring standards as of Nov. 2, following the adoption by Fannie Mae last year. Appraisers will be required to use ANSI standards for measuring, calculating and reporting square footage of properties that require an interior and exterior inspection on loans sold to Freddie
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Friday, October 13, 2023
A massive advocacy blitz by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) helped push Congress to pass a last-minute deal to avert a government shutdown and extend the authority of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). But the bipartisan agreement only funds the government through Nov. 17, meaning a new deadline looms for NFIP and other important
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) is working to protect the real estate economy as a government shutdown appears increasingly likely by Oct. 1 if Congress does not pass stopgap spending measures. Without a deal to fund the government by the end of the fiscal year on Saturday, an array of government services critical to the real estate sector will
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Monday, October 2, 2023
If Congress is unable to agree on the provisions of a continuing resolution (CR) to fund the federal government by the end of September, the result will be a partial shutdown of some government operations. The partial shutdown will include some federal housing, mortgage and other programs of interest to the real estate industry. Essential services, such as
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Monday, October 2, 2023
MV Realty, a national real estate brokerage accused of duping homeowners into 40-year listing agreements, has filed for bankruptcy in 33 states. The company filed bankruptcy in Florida Southern District Court to restructure nearly $60 million in debt following a slew of state lawsuits — including in Pennsylvania — over its marketing practices.
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Monday, October 2, 2023
According to an Aug. 30 report from Redfin, investor home purchases fell 45% in the second quarter compared to a year earlier. Redfin’s report covered 39 of the most populated U.S. metro areas. The decline outpaced a 31% drop in overall home sales and marked the fewest investor home purchases of any second quarter in seven years. Other data sources
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Friday, September 29, 2023
According to an Aug. 30 report from Redfin, investor home purchases fell 45% in the second quarter compared to a year earlier. Redfin’s report covered 39 of the most populated U.S. metro areas. The decline outpaced a 31% drop in overall home sales and marked the fewest investor home purchases of any second quarter in seven years. Other data sources
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Friday, September 22, 2023
Pennsylvania has made two “Top 10” lists of states from which more people move out of than move to. Pennsylvania landed on both the United Van Lines list (No. 5 in 2022) and a list published by Forbes (No. 4 in 2022). The United Van Lines study uses its own metrics and shows that employment is the top reason for leaving Pennsylvania. The Forbes
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Friday, September 8, 2023
Millions of dollars that help local governments manage stormwater runoff are at stake as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considers a lower court’s decision that a state-owned university was not required to pay because of its tax-exempt status. The decision also raises questions about whether the charges are even legal. Commonwealth Court ruled the
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Friday, September 1, 2023
Three sets of bills in the Pennsylvania legislature would amend the governing laws for boroughs, second class townships and third class cities to allow the local governments to hire professional firms as municipal managers. First class townships have had the option since 2020. Under current law, Pennsylvania municipalities can only appoint individuals as
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Friday, August 11, 2023
Philadelphia's suburbs used to have the most housing under construction in the region. Now building is mostly happening in the city. The suburban housing crunch is caused by a shortage of land, campaigns to preserve green space, and a powerful antidevelopment sentiment among incumbent homeowners, say suburban builders and county officials. Those housing
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Friday, June 30, 2023
Source: PlanPhilly
In 2022, the Pennsylvania Homeowner Assistance Fund (PHFA) launched a program to help homeowners clear mortgage and utility debt. The program, dubbed the Pennsylvania Homeowner Assistance Fund (PAHAF), offers individual grants of up to $50,000 to homeowners financially impacted by the pandemic. But of the more than 24,600 homeowners who applied for a grant,
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Bucks County Commissioners have approved a new partnership between the Bucks County Tax Claim Bureau and the nonprofit Credit Counseling Center, aimed at helping struggling homeowners manage delinquent property taxes and avoid losing their homes. The program combines the Tax Claim Bureau's ability to arrange affordable repayment plans with the Credit
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Warwick Township supervisors are considering a draft ordinance to amend Chapter 61 of the township code, making changes to the requirements for obtaining a use and occupancy certificate. Suburban Realtors Alliance staff have reviewed the draft ordinance and sent a letter to township leaders expressing concern that, as currently written, it does not appear
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Wrightstown Township supervisors are considering an ordinance that would require homeowners in the Jane Chapman East and Matthew's Ridge sewer systems to inspect and repair lateral sewer lines before selling their properties, targeting cracks and other defects that allow groundwater infiltration. The move follows the township's expectation of spending more
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Friday, April 10, 2026
The Pennridge School Board approved an elementary school redistricting plan called "Scenario 6" to address projected overcrowding at Bedminster and Seylar elementary schools, which are expected to reach 90% and 99% capacity respectively by the 2030-2031 school year. The population growth in the schools was driven by the introduction of full-day kindergarten
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Friday, April 3, 2026
The Bucks County Herald has tackled housing affordability as part of its Bucks County Health Report series. The paper notes housing affordability in Bucks County has reached crisis levels, with a median home value of $446,700 requiring a typical household to spend nearly five times its annual income to buy. Jamie Ridge, president/CEO of the Suburban
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Central Bucks School District is proposing a 5.7% tax increase for the 2026-2027 school year to address a projected $22.3 million deficit in its roughly $462.9 million budget. The proposed tax increase exceeds Pennsylvania's Act One Index cap of 3.5%, which the district justified through a special education cost exemption — the same rationale it used
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Friday, March 27, 2026
The Doylestown Township Planning Commission voted 4-1 to recommend a zoning amendment that would allow multifamily housing on the historic, 24-acre Hart property along Route 202. The property is owned by the Bucks County Historical Society, which plans to sell it to fund its core mission of operating the Mercer Museum and Fonthill Castle. The proposed
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Solebury Township is hosting the first in a series of housing forums on Thursday, April 9, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Solebury Township Municipal Building, 3092 Sugan Road. The informal community gathering will explore the concept of attainable housing — who it would serve, what it might look like, where it could be located, and what realistic goals for
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Lower Makefield Township is considering an ordinance that would allow residents to keep hens — but not roosters — on properties of at least a half-acre, with limits of five chickens for lots between up to two acres and 10 for lots between two and five acres, all for personal use only. Permit-holders would need to maintain clean, secure coops
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Friday, March 20, 2026
The historic Mill Race Inn at 183 Buck Road in Northampton Township, a gristmill dating to 1787, was severely damaged by a suspected arson fire on the morning of March 15. The building had long been considered a blight and fire hazard by the township — as noted in a 2013 official report — having suffered repeated setbacks, including Hurricane
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Yardley Borough Council is considering enacting a 1% earned income tax (EIT) to address budget shortfalls, as the borough has hit a cap on revenue it can raise through property taxes. Yardley is one of only three municipalities in Bucks County without an EIT, and the proposed tax would apply to active wages — not Social Security, disability payments,
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Northampton Township's board of supervisors has unanimously voted to advertise an ordinance establishing uniform wastewater requirements for properties connected to the Warminster Township Municipal Authority sewer system. The rules will help the township to comply with the federal Environmental Protection Agency’s National Pre-Treatment Program under
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Automated warehouse company Exol has signed a 973,200-square-foot lease to fully occupy the South Penn Logistics Center at 2300 S. Pennsylvania Ave. in Morrisville. It marks one of the largest industrial leases in the Philadelphia region in recent years and the biggest so far in 2026. The facility, completed last year by Chicago-based developer Logistics
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Friday, March 6, 2026
Bucks County's housing market remains deeply challenging for middle-class buyers in 2026, with the median home price sitting at $500,000. A potential buyer earning $75,000 would only qualify for a $250,000 mortgage at a 6.1% interest rate — a price point that is barely represented countywide. Tight inventory, limited available land, rising regulatory
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Friday, March 6, 2026
Lower Makefield Township will begin billing property owners for a new stormwater utility fee around April 1. The fee will be charged to all landowners with more than 299 square feet of impervious surface regardless of tax-exempt status. Enacted in December, the fee is structured in two tiers — $8.50 per month for smaller properties and $2.90 per month
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Friday, February 27, 2026
Pennridge School District is considering its first elementary redistricting in more than a decade to address uneven enrollment, with rising student numbers in areas like Bedminster and Sellersville and declining counts in schools serving communities like West Rockhill. Two draft options are on the table, and a final proposal is expected in March, with
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Friday, February 20, 2026
The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) is seeking public input on a proposed redevelopment of the area around the Langhorne Regional Rail station. The proposal would replace an underused, 1.7-acre parking lot with mixed-use housing and retail as part of its Transit-Oriented Communities program, an effort already underway in Ambler,
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Chadds Ford Township supervisors have reversed an earlier ordinance and gone back to instituting a Business Privilege Tax (BPT). The board voted to drop the $225 per year Business Registration Fee from last year and return to the BPT. The fee applies to “all resident and non-resident persons and entities conducting business or maintaining a place of
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Bensalem Township School District is facing a “severe” financial crisis after overspending its 2024-2025 budget by nearly $4 million. District officials must now consider deep spending cuts or tax increases beyond the state cap. District leaders say bills tied to special education and charter tuition alone exceeded projections by about $7
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Falls Township supervisors unanimously granted preliminary and final land development approval for the construction of a new, 497,000-square-foot Pennsbury High School at the intersection of Hood Boulevard and Queen Anne Drive. The Pennsbury School Board has capped the project’s cost at just under $270 million to avoid a voter referendum, though
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Buckingham Township will invest nearly $5 million in state funding to remove PFAS “forever chemicals” from its public water systems, including a $2.4 million PENNVEST grant to design and install a treatment system at the Furlong Water System’s F8 well. The Furlong system, which serves central Buckingham and was interconnected with the
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Neshaminy Mall ended 2025 largely empty and far removed from its once-bustling holiday shopping heyday, as redevelopment plans for the 91-acre property remain stalled more than a year after its $27.5 million sale to Paramount Realty. Although still anchored by Barnes & Noble and Boscov’s, fewer than two dozen businesses operate in the mall’s
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Friday, January 23, 2026
Solebury Township will receive an $800,000 state grant to help offset the cost of purchasing a 166-acre former quarry that has long been considered a local nuisance. The grant was part of more than $1.8 million awarded to Bucks County communities through Pennsylvania’s Conservation and Recreation Program. The funding supports Solebury’s 2025
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Friday, January 16, 2026
A long-shuttered swim club in Northampton Township could be transformed into Playa Raya, an all-abilities splash and sports park designed to serve individuals with special needs and their families while acting as a potential national model for inclusive recreation. Led by Rabbi Yehuda “Yudy” Shemtov of Chabad Lubavitch of Bucks County, the $6
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Friday, January 16, 2026
Newly elected Haycock Township supervisors voted unanimously on Jan. 5 to reopen the previously approved $805,900 budget for 2026. Officials said the township finished about $155,000 under budget last year due to increased earned income tax revenue, unexpected PennDOT winter weather funds and reduced employee benefit costs, a sharp turnaround from last
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Friday, January 9, 2026
Solebury Township supervisors unanimously approved a 2026 budget with no increase in municipal taxes, keeping the overall rate at 25.91 mills, though 41 property owners in the Carversville area of town will see a $20 increase in their street lighting assessment. During the meeting, the board also announced the township’s annual electronic waste
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Friday, January 2, 2026
Warrington Township officials unanimously approved plans for a new residential development called Valley Ridge, which will bring 32 townhouses to a 4.5-acre site along the 700 block of Easton Road between Georges Lane and Valley Square Boulevard. Proposed by Carlino Commercial Development of Montgomery County, the project includes townhomes built in groups
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Telford Borough Council approved a new rental inspection program effective Jan. 1, 2026, requiring biannual inspections and annual rental license registrations. The program is designed to address issues like broken HVAC systems and damaged windows, with inspections requiring the presence of either the tenant or property owner. Exemptions include
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Bucks County commissioners voted 2-1 to adopt a roughly $517 million budget for 2026 that includes a 2.2-mill property tax increase. The 8% millage rate increase — from the current 27.45 to 29.65 mills — will close an operational budget deficit of more than $16 million, while adding an extra $72 annually for an average property owner’s tax
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Coatesville Area School District is preparing to shutter two elementary schools — Caln and East Fallowfield — at the end of the school year, open a new one, and realign its attendance boundaries. The new Doe Run Elementary — which will open in August on the former South Brandywine Middle School site — will feed to Scott Middle
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Friday, December 12, 2025
Middletown Township is proposing a 2026 budget that would raise real estate taxes by 6.08 mills — from 19.025 to 25.105 — and double the earned income tax (EIT) from 0.5% to 1%. If passed, it would mark the first major tax increase in 16 years and result in an average annual cost increase of nearly $500 per household. Residents discussed the
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Langhorne Borough Council will consider a draft ordinance that would create a Residential Rental Housing Registration Program, set administrative procedures for registering rental properties, and establish fees and penalties for noncompliance. The public hearing and vote are scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 10, at 7 p.m. at Borough Hall, 114 E. Maple Ave. A
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Friday, December 5, 2025
West Rockhill Township supervisors have advanced a 2026 budget that includes a 34% property tax increase — the first increase in 15 years — raising the millage rate from 7.25 mills to 9.75 mills to help cover a significant rise in Pennridge Regional Police Department costs. The increase amounts to an additional $73 per year for the average
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Friday, December 5, 2025
New Britain Township Council will consider ordinances overhauling its sewer and on-lot septic regulations. The proposals would revise Chapter 18 of the township code by deleting two sections, creating a new Chapter 18A with updated discharge standards, sewer connection rules, property-transfer inspection requirements, and regulations for grease disposal and
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Friday, November 28, 2025
The preliminary 2026 budget for Northampton Township proposes a 2.75 mill real estate tax increase to support expanded emergency services and public safety. If approved without change, a home assessed at the township median value of $40,000 will see the 2026 real estate tax bill increase by $110 for a total or $1,410 per year. The budget documents and
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Friday, November 28, 2025
The Borough of Trumbauersville has released its draft 2026 general fund budget for public inspection. Council will hold a public hearing on Thursday, Dec. 4, at 7 p.m. at the municipal building, 1 Evergreen Dr., to consider adopting an ordinance that would establish a fire tax and related regulations to support local fire companies, as well as adopting the
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Friday, November 21, 2025
A nationwide survey compiled by the National Association of Realtors found that the median first-time homebuyer is 40 years old. Although the broader Philadelphia metro area, which includes Bucks County, has a slightly younger median homebuyer age of 38, In Bucks County, census data show that people buying homes are getting older, mirroring the national
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Friday, November 21, 2025
The Nov. 12 Langhorne Borough Council meeting agenda included a motion to advertise a “Proposed Rental Registration Ordinance.” The borough’s current regulations do not require registration of rental properties, only a change of tenant form. Council next meets on Wednesday, Dec. 10, at 7 p.m. in Council Chambers, 114 E. Maple Ave. Source:
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Friday, November 14, 2025
A failing septic system has forced part of the Haycock Township Community Center to close, halting plans by the Haycock Fire Company to use the space as a banquet hall after investing about $400,000 and extensive volunteer work. The Bucks County Board of Health issued a cease-and-desist order, meaning no events can be held in the banquet hall area until the
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Morrisville School District Superintendent Andrew Doster warned families on Nov. 3 that all school operations could be suspended by Jan. 30 if Pennsylvania lawmakers fail to pass a state budget soon. The 850-student district, which depends on the state for over half its funding, has been operating with less than 50% of its annual revenue due to both state
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Friday, November 7, 2025
At its Oct. 23 meeting, the Quakertown Community School Board voted 5-4 to temporarily withhold 25% of payments to charter schools due to the ongoing state budget impasse and subsequent delay in state funding. The board’s resolution argues that charter schools should share the financial burden until the 2025-2026 state budget is enacted and funding
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Friday, October 31, 2025
The Bucks County Association of Realtors’ has posted a recording of its recent webinar — Housing that Works: Smart Growth & Affordable Solutions for Bucks County. The program was hosted by Jamie Ridge, CEO of Suburban Realtors Alliance, with two guests — State Rep. Jim Prokopiak (D-140), sponsor of a new bill (HB 529) promoting smart
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Wrightstown Township supervisors voted to approve advertisement of a proposed ordinance amendment that would require township property owners to maintain trees and vegetation along rights of way. The purpose of the amendment is to prevent trees, vines, shrubs, branches and other landscaping from becoming nuisances or hazards by infringing upon or
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Friday, October 24, 2025
About 5,000 acres of land in Bucks County are enrolled in a state program called Clean and Green that gives large landowners significant tax cuts for keeping their property undeveloped. Land designated as "agricultural reserve" under the law is supposed to be open for public recreation, such as hunting, hiking and snowmobiling — but many land owners
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Perkasie Borough Council unanimously voted to formally oppose a proposed plan to build 75 luxury apartments on a Light Industrial-zoned parcel next to the Perkasie Square shopping center. The developer, Perkasie Place LLC, is seeking zoning variances to allow residential use on the site, arguing the land lacks viable industrial or commercial potential.
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Friday, October 17, 2025
Second quarter sales reports have homes in Levittown selling faster than anywhere else in the Greater Philadelphia region. An analysis of the country’s hottest housing markets from the Business Journals was based on quarterly listing and sales data from ZIP codes with at least 10 sales in the quarter. It shows that the average home in Levittown's
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Friday, October 17, 2025
Solebury Township supervisors recently discussed preliminary budget figures for 2026. Although spending will increase by 1.5%, a 3.7% increase in revenue and a surplus of about $57,000 will allow the township to maintain the current real estate tax rate of 25.9 mills. The supervisors will take up formal budget discussions in November. Supervisors also
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Middletown Township supervisors approved a plan from W.B. Homes for 34 townhomes at the former Knights of Columbus property at 1492 Woodbourne Road in the Levittown section of the township. The development is the first to be approved using an amended zoning ordinance that allows townhomes in the Professional Zoning District when 20% of the proposed homes
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Chalfont Borough Council will conduct a public hearing on Tuesday, Oct. 14, at 7 p.m. to consider the adoption of proposed Ordinance No. 476 that will repeal and replace Ordinance No. 335 — Certificates of Occupancy. The public notice states the change in the ordinance is “to address the changing real estate market within the community.”
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Friday, October 3, 2025
A Pennsylvania program called Clean and Green (Act 319 of 1974), created to help farmers keep their land by lowering property taxes, now largely benefits nonfarming landowners in Bucks County. More than 5,000 Bucks County property owners pay lower property taxes through enrollment in the state program, an amount that totals about $3 million in tax cuts.
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Buckingham Township officials recently announced that the developer of a proposed 150,000-square-foot warehouse near Doylestown Airport is switching gears with a plan to build 40 houses. The warehouse plan has been protested by Buckingham residents and neighboring municipalities, citing truck traffic. Buckingham supervisors rejected the warehouse proposal
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Friday, September 26, 2025
New Britain Borough Council recently voted to advertise a proposed noise ordinance. The council is looking to limit disruptive sounds caused by motorized or power equipment, music, repetitive and sustained sounds from business activities, gas-powered vehicles, incessant barking from dogs, and other sounds from domesticated animals. During the discussion,
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Friday, September 19, 2025
The last countywide reassessment of Bucks County properties was in 1972 — and current county commissioners say there is no movement to authorize a new one. Standard measures show that Bucks County's property taxes are a bit off, with data from 2023 and 2024 suggesting that people with more expensive properties are paying less than they should, while
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Friday, September 12, 2025
The rising cost of housing was the focus of a state House Majority Policy Committee roundtable on Sept. 9 in Bucks County, hosted by state Rep. Jim Prokopiak (D-140). He noted that, since 2017, rents and home prices in the region have climbed 50%, straining families and essential services. “We need to find ways to lower the cost of housing and make
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Friday, September 12, 2025
Morrisville Municipal Authority Resolution #24-06 adds inspections of water service supply lines and sewer service collection lines at point-of-sale. The water line inspection is necessary to check that the supply line is not an older iron or galvanized steel pipe, which are no longer approved materials. The sewer line inspection is a video inspection of
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Toll Brothers recently opened sales for homes in Lyondale Meadows in Newtown. The developer found overwhelming demand for the homes — receiving 21 deposits for 45 available homes in the first week — and shut down sales temporarily. Lyondale Meadows, located just north of Newtown Township's municipal offices, has a starting price point of $1.6
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Friday, August 29, 2025
Doylestown Township officials approved plans to subdivide a property at 405 Edison Furlong Road. Approximately 50 acres will be divided into 11 large residential lots ranging in size from two acres to just over eight acres, and the existing 14,000-square-foot residence will remain on a 17-acre lot. The lots will be sold individually, with the buyer being
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Langhorne Manor Borough Council is considering the enactment of an earned income tax (EIT) that will take effect in January 2026 to bolster township revenues. The borough advertised a notice in error on Aug. 13, and noted that a corrected notice will be advertised shortly. Borough officials have posted more information about the EIT on the borough website.
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Newtown Township officials recently received plans for the Goodnoe property in the heart of the township’s boutique business district. A mix of apartments and retail show a four-story building and 73 one- and two-bedroom units on the 3.3-acre parcel along North Sycamore Street. The development, called Goodnoe Homestead, is comprised of 90% apartments
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Friday, August 15, 2025
Gov. Josh Shapiro visited the Keystone Trade Center in Bucks County to promote the PA Permit Fast Track Program. The program speeds up permitting processes for high-impact economic development projects in the commonwealth and is helping Amazon Web Services rapidly move forward with a data center in Falls Township at the Keystone Trade Center. The $20
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Friday, August 15, 2025
Pulte Homes has purchased the former Eisenhower Elementary property in the Levittown section of Middletown Township from the CIBC Foundation for $4.1 million. Westrum Development Co. secured approval for 66 townhomes on the 14-acre site from Middletown Township, but never acquired the land. Pulte Homes will make good on an original plan to donate $200,000
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Drivers in Bucks County could soon pay more to cross the Delaware River under a proposed toll increase by the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission. The proposal would raise E-ZPass rates for passenger vehicles by 50 cents and toll-by-plate rates by $2 starting in 2026. Larger vehicles would see increases of $2 to $3 per axle, depending on the payment
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Bucks County Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick (R, PA-1) has sent a letter to the head of the nation's Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Lee Zeldin, expressing concern over a proposed development in Lower Makefield and its impact on stormwater and the environment. "As the EPA has jurisdiction over the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) and other
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Friday, August 1, 2025
The Next Step Programs (TNS), a Doylestown Borough nonprofit, recently announced the selection of Union Studio Architecture & Community Design as the lead Vision 2030 architecture firm. Union Studio will help build an inclusive housing and workforce development campus for young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the Doylestown
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Friday, July 25, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance (SRA) has formally requested that Warrington Township revise its process for issuing Use and Occupancy (U&O) certificates during real estate transactions. In a letter sent to township officials, the SRA expressed concern that the municipality is withholding U&O certificates due to unpermitted work, such as HVAC or
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Middletown Township supervisors granted preliminary plan approval for Farms Edge at Shady Brook after developer Fox Lane Homes reduced the density of the project. The latest plan for the age-qualified neighborhood has 129 total homes — 42 single-family detached homes expected to sell for about $1.1 million each, 14 twin homes to be priced around
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Friday, July 18, 2025
A top priority for Tinicum Township officials is the reopening of Headquarters Road bridge — a historic structure closed since 2011. The township sees the span as crucial for reconnecting communities and improving local infrastructure. It took ownership of the bridge from PennDOT and has secured the necessary financing to get the project on track, but
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Friday, July 11, 2025
On July 2, the Centennial School Board voted 5-4 to pass a $151.6 million budget for 2025-2026 that includes a 3.75% tax increase. The new real estate tax rate will increase the bill of a home assessed at the district average by $133. The district missed a June 30 deadline to pass an operating budget for the coming school year. Not having a budget approved
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Friday, July 4, 2025
At a special meeting on June 26, the Centennial School Board failed to pass a proposed $156.4 million budget for the 2025-2026 school year. The proposed budget included a 4% tax increase that would raise the tax bill for the average property in the district by $144. Outgoing Superintendent Dr. Dana Bedden explained the ramifications of not passing the
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Neshaminy School Board approved a final $226.4 million budget for the 2025-2026 school year. The budget includes a tax increase of 4.7%, the maximum allowed under the state Act 1 index, and it cuts an itinerant music teacher position. Students and residents voiced opposition to the cut to the district’s award-winning music program, arguing that
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Bridgeton Township supervisors are considering adoption of a zoning amendment ordinance that would add provisions for the establishment of an accessory short-term rental use in the township, establishing regulations related to the use, permit requirements and other regulations. A hearing will be held on Wednesday, July 9, at 7 p.m., at 1370 Bridgeton Hill
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Friday, June 27, 2025
The Pennridge School Board approved a $163.2 million budget for the 2025-2026 school year that includes a 3.65% tax increase. The real estate millage rate will rise from 135.2555 mills to 140.1892 mills. The board also voted to keep the current 1% earned income tax, 0.5% real estate transfer tax and $5 local services tax. Real estate taxes generate about
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Perkasie Borough has announced the official acquisition of the Kratz family’s garden property, solidifying its place as a permanent part of the borough’s park system. The Kratz family allowed the borough to use the privately owned land for a seasonal community garden since 2007. Managed by the Perkasie Parks and Recreation Department, residents
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Falls Township relies heavily on landfill host fees to support its annual budget — but according to a financial report commissioned by the township but not shared with the public, township officials need to make some tough decisions before that revenue stream runs dry in a few years. The Bucks County Courier Times reviewed the draft financial report
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Two neighboring Upper Makefield Township properties, once the center of a court battle over the proposed development of a house of worship, are again the topic of discussion in the township. The current plan has a property at 1458 Wrightstown Road reduced from 13 acres to three acres, with the neighboring property, under the same ownership, increasing from
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Amazon has announced it will open a data center for its AI and cloud computing technologies in Falls Township. The company will also build a data center in Luzerne County. The plan, confirmed by Amazon and Gov. Josh Shapiro, is part of a $20 billion facilities investment in Pennsylvania that is expected to create at least 1,250 new, high-skilled jobs in the
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Warminster Township has created a new guide for its use and occupancy application process. The guide can be accessed by visiting the township's Residential Use and Occupancy webpage and clicking the link for the "Residential Use & Occupancy Application Process Outline." The new guide includes information on the new sewer lateral inspection requirement
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Middletown Township supervisors granted preliminary and final land development for a 42-unit affordable housing apartment building. The project — called Meadow Brook Apartments — will be constructed on the Woods Services property near Route 1 and South Pine Street (Route 413). Phase One of the development includes 42 units — 29
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Chalfont Borough Council will conduct a public hearing on Tuesday, June 10, at 7 p.m. at Chalfont Borough Hall, 40 N. Main St., to consider the adoption of a proposed ordinance that will allow for the inspection of public sewer connections and set standards for on-lot septic systems. The proposed ordinance will set forth definitions, prohibited discharge
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Langhorne Borough Council has been discussing the enactment of several housing- and building-related ordinances. The first proposed ordinance — a residential rental registration ordinance — looks to be heading to advertisement, which is a required step before it can be considered for enactment. The May 29 work session agenda included a line item
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Ivyland Borough Council will conduct a public hearing on Wednesday, June 11, at 7 p.m. at the Harold S. Hobensack Municipal Complex, 991 Pennsylvania Ave., to consider the adoption of a proposed ordinance to amend established standards for the keeping of domesticated chickens. The proposed amendments will add definitions for “domesticated
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Solebury Township supervisors will hold a hybrid public hearing on Tuesday, June 17, at 6 p.m. to receive public comment and testimony on a proposed tax to support Central Bucks Emergency Medical Services. The hearing will take place at the township building, 3092 Sugan Road. The ordinance would levy an annual tax of 1.2902 mills to fund ambulance, rescue,
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Falls Township supervisors reviewed a sketch plan for the latest version of a development at the corner of Trenton and Tyburn roads. Joy Sill-Hopkins is proposing 54 townhouses on the 4.5-acre group of parcels. Supervisor Erin Mullen characterized the location as “a difficult place to build” because it is one of the busiest traffic corners in
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Area residents gathered at a recent Bensalem Township Planning Commission meeting to express concern about plans for a new 70-home development next to Resurrection Cemetery. The meeting, however, was canceled just a few hours before it was scheduled to start. The planning commission agenda listed a development from Toll Brothers and a sketch plan for
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Friday, May 30, 2025
The Central Bucks school board unanimously agreed to a proposed final budget for the 2025-2026 school year that will raise taxes by 5.9%. If adopted without change, the $432.4 million budget plan will include a property tax increase of about $328 for a market value home of $635,000. It would be the fifth consecutive increase for Central Bucks, having raised
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Fox Lane Homes presented an updated plan for age-restricted housing on 53 acres bordering Shady Brook Farm in Middletown Township. The new plan calls for 150 carriage homes for residents 55 and older, which is down from the 161 units proposed in February. Joe Morrissey, founder of Fox Lane Homes, said the changes came after discussions with the township and
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Friday, May 16, 2025
The Regal Barn Cinema at the Barn Plaza is slated for demolition and redevelopment — but the vision held by municipal planners for outdoor restaurant seating may differ from what developer Brixmor Development Group planned to propose. Three mixed-use buildings totaling more than 40,000 square feet are planned. Judy Hendrickson, chair of the Doylestown
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Langhorne Borough Council is scheduled to vote on the advertisement of a residential rental housing registration program ordinance. Borough officials have discussed the enactment of several housing and building related ordinances since January. Meeting minutes from March 12 have Interim Borough Manager Mary Zimmerman asking council to consider adopting
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Bucks County property records show New Jersey-based Greek Real Estate Partners has purchased a more than 141,000-square-foot warehouse on a 10-acre lot along the Delaware River in Croydon. The site at 120 Phyllis Drive has about 3,000 square feet of office space, 20 tailgate doors, one drive-in door, 36-foot clear height, and 260 parking spaces and 31
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Friday, May 9, 2025
Yardley Borough Council is considering a draft ordinance regulating short-term lodging. The proposed ordinance sets definitions for bedroom, dwelling, dwelling unit, local contact person, rental and short-term lodging; sets forth regulations for the rental of short-term lodging, restricting it to the C-1 (Pedestrian-Oriented Commercial) and C-2 (Vehicular
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Friday, May 2, 2025
About 100 acres of the nearly 300-acre Woods Services campus in Middletown was recently rezoned through an overlay ordinance that includes plans for an affordable apartment building. The rezoning corrects a longstanding zoning error and adjusts the proposal process for the nonprofit’s future developments, according to township officials. The overlay
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Doylestown Borough Council adopted a resolution asking Central Bucks School District to abandon plans to close Linden Elementary School. The resolution also asks the district to ensure that both Linden and Doyle elementary schools remain open and operational at their current locations. Councilman Ben Bell introduced the resolution calling on the district to
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Two open-air shopping centers in Newtown and Bensalem have been purchased for $28.9 million. Goodnoe’s Corner, at North Sycamore Street and Durham Road, sold for $15.3 million, and Village Center, 2363 Pasqualone Blvd., Bensalem, sold for $13.5 million. Palladino Development Group recently sold the properties to a joint venture — ShopOne Centers
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Friday, April 18, 2025
Central Bucks School District has announced that its “Update the Eight” renovation plan has been paused. The district held months of meetings and developed architectural plans for the multimillion dollar renovation proposal for eight of its elementary schools. A letter sent by Superintendent Steve Yanni says the pause is economic: “The
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Bucks County commissioners refuted rumors circulating on social media that they plan to convert a former law library in the Administration Building into a homeless shelter. Commissioners Diane Ellis-Marseglia, Gene DiGirolamo and Chairperson Bob Harvie addressed the claims during a recent public meeting. “The space is going to be used by Human
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Developer Toll Brothers has finalized the purchase of an 8.6-acre property in New Britain Township near the intersection of West Butler Avenue and County Line Road. The homebuilder paid $2.5 million for the land next to a Wawa at 525 W. Butler Ave., facing the New Britain Village Square. The sale closed recently, but the plans for the development have been
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Northampton Township supervisors recently approved plans for the sale and redevelopment of the former police station in the heart of Richboro. The vacant building sits on 1.3 acres between the Bucks County Courthouse and the former Bucks County Courier Times satellite office. Two proposals were received by the Bucks County Redevelopment Authority for the
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Members of the Richland Township Planning Commission recently voted to recommend a zoning change for 140 acres east of Old Bethlehem Pike. The proposal would rezone 115 parcels from Rural Agricultural to Suburban Residential Low, paving the way for a future low-density residential development. The neighboring Twin Lakes subdivision would also be rezoned
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Friday, April 4, 2025
As of March 10, the Warminster Municipal Authority (WMA) is requiring point-of-sale sewer lateral inspections for property transfers. When the requirement was first enacted, WMA documents stated that, in the event of a failed inspection, repairs needed to be made prior to sale — but that language did not comply with state law, and it has since been
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Friday, March 28, 2025
The Warminster Municipal Authority (WMA) is requiring point-of-sale sewer lateral inspections as of March 10. Warminster Township passed an ordinance for sewer lateral inspections to prevent extra water from flowing into the WMA wastewater treatment plant during wet weather. The overflows are believed to originate through inflow and infiltration. Inflow is
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Friday, March 28, 2025
The third phase of NorthPoint Development’s Keystone Trade Center in Falls Township is shifting gears. The developer has approval for distribution facilities at the former U.S. Steel property but is now looking at building data centers. The company plans to build 10 different one- or two-story structures across 247 acres, eventually totaling more than
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Langhorne Borough Council continued discussion of a proposed rental housing and inspection program ordinance at its Feb. 27 work session. The meeting minutes include a discussion of a fire inspection ordinance and registration of rental properties, including a draft rental property registration form, and review of the Residential Rental and Resale
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Friday, March 14, 2025
The Brownsville Road bridge over Neshaminy Creek will close on March 31 to undergo a $12.1 million bridge replacement project. The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation announced the closure, which will affect travelers in Lower Southampton and Middletown townships. The bridge will be replaced with a new structure that is 24 feet longer and nearly 10
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Friday, March 14, 2025
East Rockhill Township granted final approval for a 24-home development off Three Mile Run Road after a settlement agreement between the township and developer Pennington Property Group. The developer reduced the density of the project by half, added road and traffic improvements on Three Mile Run Road, and must install concrete stormwater basin posts.
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Langhorne Borough Council is following the recommendation of a consultant and moving forward with a rental housing registration and inspection program ordinance. The council meeting minutes from Jan. 8 show an approach that requires three new ordinances — the first is the rental housing registration and inspection ordinance, the second would provide
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Hilltown Township supervisors approved the preliminary plan for a 17-single-family-home subdivision along South Perkasie Road. The Weidner Tract subdivision would be built on two parcels with four lots situated in neighboring East Rockhill Township. Developers with the project are now moving forward with final permitting and waiver approvals. Final approval
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Friday, March 7, 2025
A leak in a Sunoco pipeline off Mount Eyre Road continues to dominate discussion in Upper Makefield Township. The leak from a 2.5-inch crack in a petroleum pipeline was described as a “slow drip” by Sunoco officials. It was discovered in January, but reports of water tasting and smelling of gas came from residents as early as September 2023.
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Friday, February 28, 2025
The Solebury Township Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the purchase of the site of the former New Hope Crushed Stone quarry, now 166 reclaimed acres of land with a 75-acre lake. The township plans to offset the $2.4 million purchase price by seeking outside funding. There is a 45-day review period, during which environmental testing will occur to
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Friday, February 28, 2025
The Pennridge School Board curriculum committee recently unveiled a proposal for a full-day kindergarten program at all district elementary schools. The proposal would phase in the program over two years, with a lottery system to select students for the full-day program in the 2025-2026 school year, followed by a universal full-day program in the 2026-2027
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Friday, February 21, 2025
The Newtown Bucks County Joint Municipal Authority (NBCJMA) has proposed the construction of a new wastewater treatment plant near the border of Middletown Township at Newtown Bypass and Lower Silver Lake Road, but a decision on whether to move forward with the plan is not expected until all studies and reports are complete later this year. NBCJMA initially
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Friday, February 21, 2025
Upper Makefield Township residents have reported that two more wells have tested positive for chemical contamination near a recent pipeline leak in Washington Crossing. The wells are outside the boundaries of the area where pipeline operator Sunoco believed an earlier identified leak could have spread. Complaints of strange odors and tastes from well water
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Friday, February 14, 2025
About 75 residents crowded into the Upper Makefield Township supervisors meeting in early February after a jet fuel leak was discovered from a pipeline under Washington Crossing. The meeting was attended by residents and representatives of the township, state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Chalfont Borough has received a $225,000 state grant to help complete a crucial segment of the Northern Neshaminy Greenway Trail, a 33-mile recreational route that spans Bucks County. The money will help complete a section of the trail in the Lindenfield Townhomes development, located off Route 152/Main Street. The completion of the trail was not without
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Friday, February 7, 2025
The Housing Equality Center of Pennsylvania (HECP) and Creekside Apartments in Bensalem Township entered into a conciliation agreement, resolving allegations that the company discriminated against prospective tenants with disabilities who called to request reasonable accommodations. A consumer complaint led to findings of extra fees for emotional support
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Friday, February 7, 2025
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has included a contaminated area of Nockamixon to the state’s Priority List of Hazardous Sites for Remedial Response. The Bucks County Health Department first notified the DEP of trichloroethylene groundwater contamination on properties along Brennan Road in 2009. A former farm, the 77
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Chalfont Borough Council is considering a proposed ordinance that will amend the borough code in response to new regulations required by Chalfont-New Britain Township Joint Sewage Authority. The proposed ordinance will create new Parts 1-8 of Chapter 327, concerning: definitions, prohibited discharge standards, sewer connections, prohibition of encroachment
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Langhorne Borough officials have announced that a revised 2025 budget is available for public inspection at Borough Hall, 114 E. Maple Ave., Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Langhorne Borough Council will consider adoption of the revised 2025 budget proposal at its meeting on Wednesday, Feb. 12, at 7 p.m. Source: Langhorne Borough
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Rhode Island-based Ocean State Job Lot bought the 190,000-square-foot Fairless Hills Shopping Center in Falls Township for $23.6 million, according to Bucks County property records. Ocean State Job Lot, a discount retailer, will act as owner-operator. A Grocery Outlet is planned to open at the shopping center, and other tenants include indoor entertainment
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Friday, January 17, 2025
W.B. Homes president Chris Canavan recently appeared before Middletown Township supervisors to request a zoning “tweak” that would allow the developer to build 34 units — more than what is permitted under current zoning — on the former Knights of Columbus property in the Levittown section of the township. The developer has joined
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Fort Washington-based homebuilder Toll Brothers purchased a 61-acre property at 107 Twining Bridge Road in Newtown. Toll acquired the undeveloped parcel that sits next to All Saints Cemetery from Philadelphia Catholic Cemeteries LLC, which is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. The company plans to build 45 single-family homes at the site that
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Friday, January 10, 2025
YWCA Bucks County was awarded $1.24 million in grant funding to advance its work in assisting the homeless. The gift from the Bezos Day 1 Families Fund is the largest single donation received in the 70-year history of the YWCA Bucks County. YWCA representatives plan to use the money to increase their capacity to serve more individuals and families
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Wrightstown Township supervisors adopted a $4.14 million budget for 2025 that includes a tax increase. The property tax rate for the township will increase from the current 12 mills to 13.5 mills to help cover a deficit in the general fund. The general fund is the portion of the budget that accounts for essential township services like police coverage,
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Richland Township supervisors unanimously adopted a $7.8 million budget for 2025 that does not increase taxes. The tax structure will remain the same as 2024, with 10.55 mills dedicated to support the township general fund and a 3-mill “fire tax” to support fire companies. The township’s open space budget supports land conservation
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Friday, December 20, 2024
Middletown Township supervisors approved a $45.1 million operating budget for 2025 that does not increase the 19-mill tax rate. Homeowners with a property assessed at the township average of $29,410 can expect a tax bill of $560. Township officials are warning that maintaining the real estate tax rate in 2026 may be impossible, with Supervisor Dana Kane
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Friday, December 13, 2024
The Central Bucks School Board approved spending $235 million for renovations to five of the district’s 15 elementary schools. The money will be directed toward improvements including new electrical systems, updated libraries, and new roofs at Barclay, Buckingham, Gayman, Titus and Warwick elementary schools. Discussions continue on the future of
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Bucks County released its preliminary operating budget for 2025 that maintains the current tax rate. The $498.7 million budget includes a 2.4% increase in expenditures; however, revenues are projected to increase at the same rate. The current county property tax rate is 27.45 mills. The average residential property in Bucks County has a tax-assessed value
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Upper Makefield Township supervisors approved the final budget for 2025 that maintains the current 6.45-mill tax rate. A mill is equal to $1 of each $1,000 of assessed property value, so a property assessed at $70,000 will pay $451 in township real estate taxes. The township’s portion is only one component of a property tax bill, along with school and
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Friday, November 29, 2024
The Woods School will appear before the Middletown Township planning commission on Wednesday, Dec. 4, to seek a rezoning of its property in the township to enable the construction of over 200 apartments. Woods wants an overlay zone because the current residential zoning, which allows only single-family homes, “doesn’t make sense,” said an
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Friday, November 29, 2024
Durham Township unveiled a preliminary $752,860 budget for 2025 that does not include a real estate tax increase. The township raised taxes by 2 mills in 2024. One mill is equal to $1 of tax for every $1,000 of assessed property value. A mill is worth about $38, and the average Durham property value assessment is $28,800. Supervisor Kathleen Gentner brought
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Friday, November 22, 2024
According to Bucks County tax parcel data reviewed by the Bucks County Courier Times, a homeowner’s municipal tax bill can range from $35 to almost $1,600 — with the average coming in around $503. The tax rates are based on the average tax-assessed value of residential properties and current millage rates. A mill is a tax of $1 for every $1,000
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Toll Brothers has purchased a vacant 17-acre site in Sellersville. The property is at 716 Lawn Ave., east of Route 309, between Cathill Road and Farmers Lane and just south of the newly expanded Grand View Hospital. The plans for the site include 72 carriage-style townhomes for 55-plus active adults. Named Regency at Rockhill Ridge, Toll Brothers
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Central Bucks School District has announced the six elementary schools where a full-day kindergarten pilot program will launch for the 2025-2026 school year:
Cold Spring Elementary School
Doyle Elementary School
Groveland Elementary School
Jamison Elementary School
Kutz Elementary School
Mill Creek Elementary School
The pilot program will run in two
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Nearly $2 million dollars in state funds have been allocated for projects in Bristol Borough and Bristol Township. Bucks County Technical High School will benefit from a $1 million investment for campus renovations. The funding, which was obtained in partnership with the Bucks County Redevelopment Authority, will be used for extensive structural
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Lower Makefield Township General Election ballots included an open space referendum question asking residents if they approve the township incurring $15 million dollars of debt to acquire and preserve environmental areas and open space. Unofficial results show voters approved the referendum with 69% voting “Yes” and 31% voting “No”.
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Friday, November 8, 2024
New Britain Borough Council will hold a public hearing to consider adoption of a proposed sign ordinance that will repeal and replace current guidelines. The hearing will be held at the meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m., at Burkart Hall, 56 Keeley Ave. The draft ordinance sets the purpose of the sign regulations, the scope and applicability of the
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Friday, November 1, 2024
A century ago, a bridge carried trolleys over Newtown Creek on their way to Doylestown. A stone abutment remains there today. Soon, a pedestrian bridge will be built at the site connecting Newtown Township and Newtown Borough, with the help of a $1 million state grant from the Commonwealth Financing Authority. It came out of a grant application from Newtown
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Lower Makefield Township voters will see a ballot question at the polls on Nov. 5. The ballot question seeks voter approval to spend $15 million for “the preservation of environmental areas and open space for passive recreational purposes and benefits within the township,” according to a resolution approved by township supervisors. Township
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Bristol Borough Council has approved a roughly $286,800 bid from J and B Construction for the Maple Beach Trail and parking improvements project. The borough received a $250,000 grant that will cover most of the project’s costs. The plan is to extend the trail from the new Maple Beach bridge to the waterfront parking lot and add 10 parking spaces on
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Friday, October 18, 2024
The Bristol Fire Company, America Hose, Hook and Ladder Fire Company, Goodwill Hose Company, and Bristol Consolidated Volunteer Fire Company have been moving toward consolidation after the results of a 2021 study by the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development. The study recommended that the borough update its fire code, establish a
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Herring Properties appeared before the Bristol Township Zoning Hearing Board to introduce new plans for 3113 and 3105 Veterans Highway. The properties are vacant and were once home to the former O’Connor Freightliner location. In 2022, a New Jersey developer had looked to build a hotel, fast food restaurant, automotive repair shop and mini-warehouse
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Erin Development Company is planning to build 44 townhomes and six duplex units on the site of the former Oliver Heckman Elementary School, which closed in 2016. The 8.2-acre property spans Middletown Township and Langhorne Borough. Preliminary plans were recently shared with Langhorne Borough officials. The plans include two stormwater basins and about two
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Friday, October 11, 2024
The Falls Township Police Department has announced the initiation of a new outreach program to support the homeless population in Bucks County. The program is named Direct Appeal to Support Bucks County’s Homeless (DASH) and it has placed donation boxes in businesses, faith-based entities and civic organizations that have partnered with the police
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Friday, October 4, 2024
East Rockhill Township supervisors are considering a proposed ordinance that creates a new Part 5 to Chapter 18 of the municipal code, entitled “Individual and Community Sanitary Sewage Disposal Systems.” The proposed ordinance sets the requirements for permits and maintenance, provides for the right of entry and inspections, establishes proper
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Friday, September 27, 2024
The Neshaminy School Board approved a two-phase redistricting of its elementary schools. Superintendent Jason Bowman sent a letter to parents explaining that the redistricting will occur in two phases. The first phase will see nearly 600 students from Pearl S. Buck Elementary School in Levittown move into the new, $51 million Core Creek Elementary School
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Friday, September 20, 2024
At an Oct. 7 meeting, Penndel Borough Council will consider proposed Ordinance No. 2024-03, which will create a residential rental inspection program. If adopted, all residential rental properties will be required to register with the borough and be inspected. According to the proposed ordinance, inspections will include electrical components, plumbing,
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Bensalem Economic Development Corp. (BEDC) recently met with the new owners of the Neshaminy Mall. Paramount Realty closed on the purchase of the mall in Bensalem Township in mid-July. The BEDC found the new owners are “dedicated to working with community members as plans develop for the space.” Paramount Realty has ties to Bucks County —
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Developer J.G. Petrucci Co. filed an appeal with the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas after Buckingham Township supervisors denied an application to build a 150,000-square-foot warehouse. The company wants to build a warehouse with 30 truck bays, two parking areas, an access drive for trucks and another driveway for employees on land known as the
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Friday, September 13, 2024
West Whiteland issued a reminder in its summer 2024 newsletter that “for sale” and “open house” directional signs may only be placed on the property for sale. No off-premise signs are allowed. No feather signs are allowed, as they create a hazard if they are caught by the wind. Businesses wishing to display temporary signs to promote
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Friday, September 6, 2024
In July and August, New Britain adopted changes to the borough’s residential resale and residential rental laws. Ordinance 428 created a program requiring occupancy permits upon sale of residential properties, with an inspection prior to issuance. The ordinance is in compliance with the Pennsylvania Municipal Code and Ordinance Compliance Act, as
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Bucks County Treasurer Kristian Ballerini was elected to her post in 2020, and in the fall of that year, the county commissioners moved to make Ballerini the director of the tax claim bureau as well. The tax claim bureau had previously answered to the county finance department. The bureau is the county agency responsible for tax sales of properties with at
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Dublin Borough is considering a proposal to amend Chapter 4, Buildings, of the municipal code to require street numbers and business names on nonresidential buildings. The proposed ordinance requires owners of new and existing commercial buildings to have the street number and business name displayed and visible from the right of way. In addition, for
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Friday, August 30, 2024
Middletown Township supervisors approved two separate development plans that will bring a total of 177 new townhomes to the municipality. The first plan for 111 townhomes on 15 acres near the Woodbourne train station has been on the radar since 2006 when a developer succeeded in getting the land rezoned for multi-residential use. The plans stalled but were
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Friday, August 30, 2024
Springfield Township supervisors approved the purchase of a decibel reader that will give a provision of the township zoning ordinance some teeth. The move comes after a loud wedding at Kirkland Farm, a township agribusiness. The business had previously been served notice of violation by the township in 2023. The township zoning board denied the same type
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Better Living Homes has proposed building 104 townhomes in Richland Township beside a Superfund site. The proposed development would be on about 54 acres at 860 E. Pumping Station Road. The proposal notes that Better Living Homes plans to sell the property to another developer that will build the townhomes. Part of the land sits on the former Watson Johnson
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Residents of Middletown Township will pay more for fewer trash collection days next year. Supervisors voted 3-2 to approve a new $28.4 million contract with its current hauler, Waste Management. The new contract will change the current twice-a-week manual collection to once-a-week automated collection. Weekly bulk pickup will change to a monthly bulk
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Two developers have proposed new housing along Route 313 in Dublin Borough that — if approved as planned — could add about 205 new homes. Nehemiah Development Company has proposed 127 new homes on the former Moyer Farm, beside the Dublin Town Center, which also was developed by Nehemiah. The plans are in the land development approval process and
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Richland Township supervisors heard a proposal from David Caracausa of Cornerstone Premier Homes and Brian Seidel of Seidel Planning and Design to rezone 80 acres of land to build 165 single-family homes. The developers are asking that the parcel be rezoned from a Residential Agriculture District to a Suburban Residential Medium District, with 14 acres left
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Richland Township supervisors moved to recommend against a 50-foot height variance for a proposed Quakertown area warehouse. The supervisors will make their recommendation in a letter to the township’s zoning hearing board. Residents urged the supervisors to oppose the variance, saying a larger warehouse would mean more traffic, pollution, noise and
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Lower Makefield Township supervisors adopted amendments to the township’s existing short-term rental regulations at their Aug. 7 meeting. The changes tighten requirements for township residents who want to rent out their homes to short-term visitors. Changes to the existing ordinance include requirements that short-term rentals must be licensed and
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Doylestown Township will receive $4.4 million in funding from the Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority to help remove toxic PFAS chemicals from some of its water supply. According to state Sen. Steve Santarsiero (D-10) and state Rep. Tim Brennan (D-29), the money will be used to build a water treatment facility to mitigate two PFAS-contaminated
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Newtown Borough Council will consider adopting Ordinance No. 801 at its meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 13, at 7 p.m. at the Chancellor Center, 30 N. Chancellor St. The proposed ordinance will regulate the keeping of chickens in the borough and sets forth guidelines for proper care, management and control for the safety of borough residents. A copy of the
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Friday, August 2, 2024
Bensalem Township council member Michelle Benitez recently called attention to two state House bills that could impact local zoning decisions if they are passed. House Bill 1976 would revise zoning laws to allow multi-family housing and mixed-use development in urban areas zoned for office, retail and parking with existing water and sewer systems. House
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Friday, August 2, 2024
Trumbauersville Borough Council passed a resolution that creates a code of conduct at borough council meetings. The intent of the resolution is to enable a municipal meeting to proceed in an orderly fashion. The code of conduct requires borough council members to act in an ethical manner in order to create public trust. Council members cannot act as if
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Friday, August 2, 2024
In 2000, East Rockhill Township instituted a street parking ban on sections of several township roads, including Blue Rock Drive, Boulder Drive, Ridge Run Road, and Stone Edge Road – a ban that was never enforced. Recent complaints about traffic and pedestrian safety prompted the township to send a letter to residents about the parking ban prior to
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Friday, July 26, 2024
The new owners of the Neshaminy Mall — Paramount Realty and Edgewood Properties — have big plans for the 108-acre property. The owners acquired the mall for a reported $27.7 million in July from Brookfield Properties. According to the Philadelphia Business Journal, there are plans to demolish about half of the 1 million square feet of retail
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Friday, July 26, 2024
Bristol Township Council approved both preliminary and final land development plans from developer JRZ LLC for the construction of six new townhomes in the township’s Croydon section. A zoning change was also approved for part of the property, from commercial to residential. Two existing homes on the property will be demolished, however a two-car
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Friday, July 26, 2024
The Bucks County Parks and Recreation Department is in the process of developing a comprehensive recreation, parks and open space plan. To help the department understand how people use the park system, what works well and what can be improved, the department is seeking feedback from residents on the county-owned sites. The county park system spans more than
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Friday, July 19, 2024
A 35-acre development site in Bensalem is slated for sheriff’s sale after its owner filed for bankruptcy. The property at 2201 Street Road, formerly the Armstrong Middle School, has been eyed for a large-scale, mixed-use project. It was purchased from the Bensalem Township School District in 2020 for $6.3 million by 2201 Street Rd LLC — a
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Friday, July 19, 2024
The Bucks County Opportunity Council (BCOC), the leading anti-poverty agency in the county, recently announced the results of its latest Community Needs Assessment. The needs assessment is conducted every three years to find out what services those in low-income communities need most. The survey determined that 71% of respondents named affordable housing as
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Friday, July 19, 2024
The Bucks County Home Repair Program (BCHRP) began accepting applications on July 1. BCHRP is a resource available to low-moderate income homeowners that provides qualifying households with up to $50,000 for home repairs and modifications. Common eligible repairs include roofing, plumbing, electrical systems, heating, and accessibility modifications like
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The Bucks County Water and Sewer Authority (BCWSA) has successfully utilized innovative treatment technology to remove toxic PFAS, known as forever chemicals, from its drinking water. The new treatment system was recently piloted at two water supply locations that had slightly elevated PFAS levels above the state Department of Environmental
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Bucks County Court recently approved the sale of three parcels of land owned by the Quakertown Community School District to developer D.R. Horton. The three parcels along West Pumping Station Road were acquired in 2015 by the district for $1.75 million to be used as a future elementary and middle school. Stagnant enrollment caused the district to scrap the
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The annual Point-in-Time (PIT) Count shows the number of Bucks County residents sleeping in emergency shelters, transitional housing or outdoors increased 27% over the previous year. The federally mandated count is conducted by the Bucks County Housing and Community Development Department in the last week of January. For the eighth consecutive year, the PIT
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Friday, July 5, 2024
New Britain Borough Council is considering two proposed ordinances that would affect real estate. The borough council will consider the draft ordinances at a public hearing during its meeting on Wednesday, July 10, at 7:30 p.m., at Burkart Hall, 56 Keeley Ave.
The first proposed ordinance adds a new Chapter 336, Residential Resale Occupancy Permits, in
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Friday, July 5, 2024
The Bucks County Home Repair Program (BCHRP) began accepting applications on July 1. BCHRP is a resource available to low-moderate income Bucks County homeowners that provides qualifying households with up to $50,000 for home repairs and modifications. Common eligible repairs include roofing, plumbing, electrical systems, heating, and accessibility
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Friday, July 5, 2024
Newtown Township is considering a zoning change for certain defined residential development in areas of the township currently set aside for light industrial, office and related uses. Officials are considering creating a zoning overlay district in the Newtown Business Commons that would permit mixed-use buildings where commercial and residential uses could
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Friday, June 28, 2024
A November 2023 report to Falls Township officials by PFM Group Consulting projected that the township faces a progressive annual revenue decline of more than $20 million due to the impending loss of landfill host fees. The report projected Falls should anticipate seeing annual deficits as soon as 2030 and the financial outlook would only worsen from there.
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Friday, June 28, 2024
The Central Bucks School Board adopted the 2024-2025 school year budget that includes a 5.3% tax increase, the most allowed by Pennsylvania Act 1. A homeowner with a home assessed at the district average of $40,000 will see an annual tax increase of $278. The tax increase is the fourth consecutive hike for the district — and the largest in those four
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Friday, June 28, 2024
In a 6-3 vote, the Council Rock School Board voted to approve implementation of full-day kindergarten for the 2025-2026 school year. District administrators and board members spent the past six months researching full-day kindergarten and its impact on the community. They held a public forum, issued a community interest survey and visited nearby districts
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Bensalem Economic Development Corp. announced Paramount Realty will purchase the Neshaminy Mall. Opened in the late 1960s, the Neshaminy Mall was a popular shopping destination. Current owner Brookfield Properties put the 1-million-square-foot mall up for sale last February — “as is.” No purchase price was given, nor were Paramount’s
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Construction of luxury apartments continues at the Oxford Valley Mall in Middletown Township, with move-in dates available as soon as early July. Applications are now being taken for units at Atlee Square, the 391-unit complex now under construction on the site of the former Boscov's. Several apartment designs are available, including a single-bedroom
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Friday, June 21, 2024
The existing Orchard Square Apartments in Middletown Township were built in the 1970s. A plan recently approved by supervisors will allow for the expansion of the complex, located at 1801 Old Lincoln Highway near Neshaminy High School. The plan includes 36 one-bedroom, 28 two-bedroom and eight three-bedroom apartments, as well as a clubhouse and pool. As
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Representatives for Heritage Properties appeared before the Hilltown Township Board of Supervisors to discuss a sketch plan for a 24-unit townhouse development. The proposed project is off East Walnut Street near the subdivisions of Orchard Hill and County Road, and the township border with Perkasie Borough. The smallest townhome would be about 3,490 square
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Last month, Doylestown Borough’s zoning hearing board voted unanimously to allow a developer to exceed current zoning in the central commercial district to build a fourth floor on a proposed “boutique hotel.” At the same time, the board rejected developer Larry Thompson’s application for a parking variance that would allow 61 spaces,
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Data recently released by the Bucks County Planning Commission show a decline in proposed residential developments but an increase in nonresidential projects for 2023. The Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code (Act 247) mandates that the county planning commission reviews all land development proposals before local municipalities can approve them. The
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Friday, June 7, 2024
State legislators joined Bristol Borough Council members in a tour of ongoing demolition of several row homes along Chestnut Street. The demolition followed the borough’s acquisition of the last privately owned property on the street in a partnership with the Redevelopment Authority of Bucks County that is supported by $1.3 million in state funding.
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Bucks County hired a consultant in April 2023 to study blight in the county, and a report was released in February. The first phase report of the Bucks County Comprehensive Blighted Property Study, created by The Gulotta Group, draws on a variety of sources to examine blight and draws conclusions about the levels of blight risk in individual municipalities
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Solebury Township supervisors voted unanimously at a May 21 meeting to use open space funds to acquire the former 80-acre Roeser tract at Upper Mountain and Street roads, and several parcels along Route 202 near Reeder Road, the largest adjacent to the former New Hope Diner. The land was purchased under the Open Space Act, which states it cannot be disposed
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Doylestown Township supervisors voted 4-1 on May 21 in favor of banning single-use plastic bags. Supervisor Nancy Santacecilia cast the lone dissenting vote, voicing opposition to the 5-cent fee businesses would be required to charge for a recycled or reusable bag, if one is needed. The ordinance includes several exemptions: packaged bulk items, such as
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Friday, May 24, 2024
Richland Township supervisors recently gave approvals for two different warehouse proposals to move forward. The first approval will change two properties totaling 1.7 acres from Rural Agricultural (RA) zoning to Planned Commercial (PC). The developer had originally requested a zoning change of seven properties at the location to enable a
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Friday, May 17, 2024
The 2023 Neshaminy School District Property Tax Assistance Program, also known as the Irene Boyle Senior Citizen Tax Assistance Program, is now open for applications. The purpose of the program is to provide property tax relief to senior citizens. The program is available to homeowners who reached the age of 65 by Dec. 31, 2023. The program will provide tax
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Friday, May 10, 2024
Buckingham Township planners reviewed a revised preliminary land development plan for a proposed 150,000-square-foot warehouse in a PI-2 planned industrial district. Developer J.G. Petrucci Company, of Asbury, New Jersey, outlined the redevelopment of the DiGirolamo Tract for a warehouse with 30 truck bays, two parking areas, an access drive for trucks at
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Friday, May 10, 2024
The Bucks County Planning Commission will hold a public open house on Tuesday, May 21, at 6 p.m. at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 89 Pinewood Drive, Levittown, to discuss the Levittown Trail. The multi-use trail is a little over a mile long, but it impacts several municipalities, making resident input a necessity. The county intends to develop a 10-foot-wide
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Solebury Township supervisors have scheduled a hearing to receive public comments on a proposed ordinance regarding short-term lodging facilities. The proposed ordinance will amend a short-term lodging ordinance enacted in 2022 by clarifying certain sections to add the words “primary residence” and specific terms, including “single family
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Friday, May 3, 2024
A digital billboard at the corner of East Lincoln Highway and South Flowers Mill Road in Middletown Township has been dismantled. The billboard was installed in early 2021 by Premier First Media after the Middletown Township supervisors approved a 25-year lease agreement with the company for the small tract of municipal land. The owners of a nearby auto
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The opening of Bridge Street Crossing in Morrisville Borough has filled one of Pennsylvania’s “Top 10 Trail Gaps” and completely connected the 75-mile uninterrupted trail that runs from Bristol Borough to Allentown. The 0.1-mile crossing means trail users will no longer have to take detours to continue their travels. Claire W. Sadler,
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Upper Southampton Township supervisors are considering an amendment to the township’s nuisance ordinance. The amendment would add regulations “pertaining to and prohibiting roosters and peacocks within the township,” according to a public notice. A public hearing on the proposed amendment will be held on Tuesday, May 14, at 6:30 p.m. in
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Falls Township supervisors rejected a plan to turn the old Lincoln Garage site on Lincoln Highway into a three-story, age-restricted condominium development. It is the second time the supervisors have rejected the plan, for the same reason — supervisors feel the property is too small for the scope of the builder’s plans. Builder Bryan Brzezinski
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Pennsbury School District Superintendent Thomas A. Smith announced that the school day at Pennsbury High School will begin at 8 a.m. instead of the current 7:20 a.m. beginning with the 2025-2026 school year. Smith cited “an increasing body of research” that recommends a later school start-time for adolescents. Middle school times “will
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Bucks County commissioners recently voted to approve about $20 million in construction contracts for the new Lower Bucks County Government Services Center in the Levittown section of Bristol Township. The project is a culmination of years of planning to replace the current 8,600-square-foot annex that has been in use for 30 years. The new
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Springfield Township used Zoom during the pandemic to allow public access to meetings. The practice continued well after pandemic restrictions were lifted — until September 2023, when the Zoom broadcasts were canceled by the township due to cost and minimal online attendance. Several residents opposed the change, and the township now plans to make
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Friday, April 19, 2024
Toll Brothers has purchased the 168-acre Stone Meadow Farms property in Middletown Township for $40.5 million from developer Foxlane Homes. A statement issued by Toll Brothers said it will construct homes designed for residents age 55 and older at the Stone Meadows Farm site but did not confirm how many homes are planned. Foxlane Homes had Middletown
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Friday, April 19, 2024
Richland Township supervisors are considering a warehouse proposal in the township’s Planned Commercial district just one month after rejecting a proposal for rezoning parts of the Rural Agricultural district to accommodate another proposed warehouse. Supervisors conducted a conditional use hearing for a 167,500-square-foot warehouse on a vacant site
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Pennsylvania Senior Judge Richard A. Lewis of Dauphin County has granted an injunction to bar further mulch manufacturing, and to ban continuation of festivals and carnivals, on a 112-acre property on York Road known as Froehlich Farm. The injunction was sought jointly by Buckingham Township and Bucks County, which purchased an agricultural easement from
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Friday, April 12, 2024
The Bucks County Housing Group (BCHG), in partnership with Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, recently gave a presentation on the county’s homeless population and how to help families and individuals attain permanent housing and food security. According to BCHG executive director Erik Clare, there are about 313 county residents who are homeless on any
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Friday, April 12, 2024
The Newtown Township Planning Commission is slated to review two projects that, if approved, would expand local preschool capacity. Discovery Preschool on Blacksmith Road has a plan to expand its operations into a 2,800-square-foot basement in its current location, add an elevator, and increase the size of an outdoor recreation area. The expansion would
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Friday, April 5, 2024
Bristol Township officials announced a groundbreaking ceremony for the Villas at Greenbrook on April 5. The complex will take over much of the Firefighters and EMT Park at the site, which will be reduced to about one acre. Developer DeLuca Homes and Bristol Township officials worked out a land swap — the developer will install new park equipment at
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Friday, March 29, 2024
Lower Makefield Township officials repealed an existing Registration of Vacant Properties ordinance and replaced it with a new ordinance, titled Registration of Foreclosure Mortgages and Vacant Property. Township officials believe the new ordinance more fully addresses the negative impact and conditions that occur because of vacancy, absentee ownership, and
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Friday, March 29, 2024
Bristol Township is continuing its focus on blighted properties, and the township council voted to approve blight declarations for five more homes. All of the properties are vacant, some for a number of years, and several have safety violations that the township has stepped in to address. Most have delinquent taxes and liens. Since its inception in 2016,
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Friday, March 22, 2024
A construction project at the Oxford Valley Mall in Middletown Township is progressing. Developer CornerstoneTracy is working to rejuvenate the former space that once housed a Boscov’s department store and the surrounding parking lot. The development includes more than 600 high-end apartments with a host of amenities. The project is divided into two
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Friday, March 22, 2024
The Bristol Township School Board voted 8-0 to approve a letter of intent to sell the vacant Franklin D. Roosevelt Middle School off Veterans Highway. The school has been closed since March 2023 after the opening of the renovated Benjamin Franklin Middle School. The board has agreed to sell the 31.7-acre property to Crystal Window and Door Systems for an
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Friday, March 15, 2024
Bristol Borough’s renaissance will continue with the renovation of the former Fidelity Savings & Loan building on Radcliffe Street into a nine-unit boutique hotel. Bristol real estate manager Bernard Mazzocchi is leading the renovation of the 1700s-era historic brick mansion that in the early 19th century was the home of the Spanish ambassador to
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Friday, March 8, 2024
Residents that live near the site of the former Levittown Lanes bowling alley received a letter informing them that the property owners are moving ahead with plans for a three-story, 24-unit apartment building. The site, at New Falls Road and Orchard Drive, was left vacant after a fire in 2022 destroyed the bowling alley and bar. The property owners will
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Friday, March 8, 2024
Bristol Township voted to rescind its per capita tax in December 2023. Council President Craig Bowen described the per capita tax as a nuisance tax that was a “frequent source of resident complaints.” Even after its repeal, the tax is still a source of complaints and confusion. The township’s tax collection firm, Berkheimer, was not
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Friday, March 8, 2024
The Feb. 7 meeting of the Lower Makefield Township supervisors included a short discussion of a proposed ordinance to regulate foreclosed and vacant properties. Township Manager David Kratzer said he expects the final draft will be available shortly. The item is not slated for discussion at the March 6 meeting. Check the township website for upcoming
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Friday, March 1, 2024
A slow and gradual decline in Bristol Borough led to a practically dead main street in 2000. According to Borough Council President Ralph DiGuiseppe, “We had over 50% vacancies on Mill Street.” It was around that time borough officials began a concerted effort to repair, renovate and upgrade the town. In 2017, a pair of 250-foot docks opened on
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Friday, March 1, 2024
Bucks County plans to build a solar energy farm on land it owns in Bristol Township. The solar energy farm is planned for a piece of open land behind the soon-to-be-constructed, 39,000-square-foot, two-story Lower Bucks County Government Services Center. The solar farm is proposed for an area that was once part of the Morton Thiokol operation at the
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Friday, February 23, 2024
Bedminster Township continues its land preservation efforts with the addition of another 17.7 acres of land on Log Cabin Road. The agreement for the sale and purchase of an agricultural conservation easement for the property followed approval of a resolution authorizing the township’s portion of the cost at $8,860, or about 4% of the total cost. The
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Friday, February 23, 2024
A boutique hotel has been proposed in Doylestown at the former site of borough hall and the Central Bucks Regional Police station. The property was purchased in 2021 for $2.3 million by borough resident and developer Larry Thompson. The plan submitted by ALOK Investments LLC includes a 41,385-square-foot, four-story building that will house a hotel with 32
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Friday, February 23, 2024
Middletown Township supervisors recently approved a plan to consolidate three Jefferson Avenue lots into two. The consolidation will allow the construction of two homes at the site. The homes will connect to the public water and sewer systems, and the developer will contribute a “fee-in-lieu-of” for the cost of sidewalks. In a separate vote, the
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Democrat Jim Prokopiak won the special election on Feb. 13 to represent the 140th District in the state House of Representatives by a 67-32 margin. He will serve the final year of the term of former Rep. John Galloway, who resigned to become a magisterial district judge. Prokopiak, a lawyer and Pennsbury School Board member, previously served as a Falls
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Buckingham Township residents recently packed a planning commission meeting to speak out against a proposed warehouse plan. Over 150 people attended the meeting to oppose an application submitted by J.G. Petrucci Company proposing the redevelopment of a 58-acre property on Cold Spring Creamery Road. The developer's representatives went over the site plans,
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Middletown Township supervisors have reached an agreement on an appeal to a zoning hearing board decision. The agreement will allow the supervisors to settle a zoning appeal with Westrum Development Company. Last year, Westrum proposed developing the former Dwight D. Eisenhower Elementary School into a 70-unit, age-targeted townhome community. The
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Friday, February 9, 2024
A special election to select a new state representative for parts of Lower Bucks will be held Tuesday, Feb. 13, and has statewide implications in who controls the Pennsylvania legislature. The balance of the Pennsylvania House, currently tied at 101-101, is on the line for a fourth time in less than a year. Pennsylvania’s 140th Legislative District
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Friday, February 9, 2024
The Bucks County Planning Commission recently announced that a Levittown trail project has received a $2 million grant through PennDOT’s Transportation Alternatives Set Aside Program. The trail will be just under a mile and will run along Levittown Parkway, Mill Creek Parkway and Lakeside Drive in Bristol Township, Falls Township and Tullytown
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Friday, February 9, 2024
The Neshaminy Mall, located in Bensalem Township, has struggled to retain tenants following the 2017 departure of Macy’s department store. Over half of the stores in the mall are currently vacant. The mall’s current owner, Brookfield Properties, has placed the property for sale “as is,” according to a real estate listing. The 1
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Friday, February 2, 2024
The Langhorne Borough Zoning Hearing Board voted down a proposal by Toll Brothers to build 60 townhomes at the 14.7-acre Woods Services site between Pine Street and Bellevue Avenue. The development proposal has been discussed at zoning hearings for two years. Toll requested the zoners consider the townhomes as structures, not buildings, because the zoning
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Bridgeton Township is considering a short-term rental ordinance to regulate AirBNB type properties. The draft ordinance is currently under review by the planning commission. The commission has proposed future discussion of the draft ordinance for the February and March meetings. Detailed information is available on the township website. Source: Bridgeton
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Friday, January 26, 2024
The Bucks County Water and Sewer Authority (BCWSA) has placed 13 municipalities on notice — they must present the authority with the status of development projects and corrective plans for sewer infrastructure repairs or face a potential moratorium on construction. The letter was sent to Bensalem, Langhorne and Middletown — where the sewer
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Friday, January 26, 2024
Tullytown Borough Council approved an earned income tax (EIT) late last year, with the tax becoming effective Jan. 1, 2024. The EIT is set at a rate of 1% and impacts both residents of Tullytown Borough and nonresidents who are employed within the borough. The tax applies to earned income and net profits, but it exempts individuals earning $12,000 or less
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Friday, January 19, 2024
A Doylestown developer appeared before the Doylestown Borough zoning board seeking several zoning variances to build a 32-room hotel, 70-seat restaurant and 120-person event space to replace the town’s former borough hall and police station at 57 W. Court St. Developer Larry Thompson has already received permission to raze the old building in the
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Friday, January 19, 2024
A major Pennsylvania Department of Transportation project is set to reconstruct two busy intersections in Middletown Township — Bridgetown Pike and Langhorne-Yardley Road, and Langhorne-Yardley and Woodbourne roads. Expected to cost $12.9 million, the project is designed to improve traffic flow and safety. The T-intersection at Langhorne-Yardley Road
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Bensalem Township Mayor Joseph DiGirolamo issued a seven-page message about the township’s 2024 budget — a budget that includes the first tax increase in 30 years. Township officials attribute the 1.5 mill increase in the tax rate to the need to help fund park improvements during a time when “demand for these programs and facilities is at
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Friday, January 5, 2024
Doylestown Township supervisors voted 4-0 to approve a revision to the township’s limited industrial zone that will allow an affordable housing project for seniors and market-rate townhouses to move forward. Township officials were able to reach a deal with the developer and neighboring Doylestown Borough over the plan. The township and borough had
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Friday, December 22, 2023
In a series of votes on Dec. 20, Bucks County commissioners approved a $487 million budget for 2024 and raised taxes by two mills. The budget includes $486.8 million in expenses and $487.05 million in revenue, leaving a $250,000 surplus. The two-mill tax increase, from 25.45 mills in 2023 to 27.45 mills in 2024, is expected to raise nearly $17 million
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Doylestown Borough Council approved a 2024 budget that includes a three-mill tax increase to fund an increase in police costs to the Central Bucks Regional Police Department. The police department’s budget request was for additional funding to hire two new full-time officers. The tax increase will cost the average borough homeowner about $90. Although
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Dublin Borough Council is considering a proposed Ordinance 337 related to the borough’s intention to organize a municipal authority for the purpose of “undertaking improvements and related administrative services for the benefit of the Borough of Dublin.” The ordinance names the authority as the “Dublin Borough Regional
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Friday, December 15, 2023
Bristol Township’s proposed $68.3 million budget will maintain the current property tax rate of 23.98 mills. The last time the township raised real estate taxes was 2010. The trash and recycling fee will remain at $340. Bristol Township plans to eliminate its $10 per capita head tax in 2024. Council President Craig Bowen said the tax is a frequent
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Friday, December 8, 2023
A groundbreaking is scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 19, at 3 p.m. for improvements to Central Park in Doylestown Township. The project has been years in the making. The plan calls for construction of a community recreation center, the installation of new outdoor sports courts, and the addition of a comfort station, including bathrooms. The township expects the
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Upper Makefield Township supervisors unanimously adopted the $9.1 million general fund budget for 2024 that maintains the current tax rate of 6.45 mills. A mill is equal to $1 of every $1,000 of a property’s assessed value, so a residential property assessed at $70,000 will pay about $451 in township real estate taxes in 2024. Upper Makefield also
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Friday, December 1, 2023
A $61 million refurbishment of the Cornwells Heights Train Station at 799 Station Ave. in Bensalem Township is expected to begin in 2026. Plans include the installation of 600-foot-long, high-level platforms and a pedestrian overpass with elevators to make the site safer and more accessible. Project funding includes $30.5 million from the Department of
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Friday, November 24, 2023
Durham Township supervisors announced a 2-mill tax increase as part of the proposed $635,775 budget for 2024. If the draft budget is finalized without change, it will be the first time in seven years the township has raised taxes. Supervisors Chair Bartley E. Millett said the tax increase will cost the average property owner an additional $77 in taxes next
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Friday, November 17, 2023
The owners of Shady Brook Farm plan to sell 80 acres to a development partnership. The Fleming family said they will keep 50 acres of land to move into a more event- and entertainment-focused business model while continuing to lease farmland to some neighbors. The property is currently 130 acres, of which the majority is in Lower Makefield Township with a
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Friday, November 17, 2023
Wrightstown Township supervisors will consider a proposed ordinance amendment that would zero out the additional tax for open space purposes for 2024. If adopted, the open space tax rate will be set to 0%. The move to zero the tax was made because the township has satisfied its open space debt. The supervisors will consider the proposed ordinance at a
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Friday, November 10, 2023
A Montgomery County judge ruled in favor of CBSD Fair Votes, a grassroots organization that petitioned for a new voting map for the Central Bucks School District. The decision means the election maps for the 2025 election in Central Bucks will contain three regions, rather than the nine it currently has. In the ruling, Judge Cheryl Austin called Fair
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Friday, November 10, 2023
Bristol Township officials have announced plans to designate seven additional vacant properties as blighted. The program is part of an ongoing collaboration with the Redevelopment Authority of Bucks County to address issues of delinquent taxes, abandonment and property deterioration. Issues with the properties include vacancy, unpaid taxes, squatters and
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Upper Makefield Board of Supervisors recently gave preliminary approval to a 2024 municipal budget that calls for keeping the local millage rate at 6.45. A mill is equal to $1 of every $1,000 of a property’s assessed value. A residential property assessed at $70,000 would pay about $451 in township real estate taxes in 2024 if the millage rate
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Bristol Township recently signed a new five-year municipal waste contract with Waste Management. The $34.58 million contract is more than 40% higher than the $24 million paid by the township under the last deal approved over five years ago. The new contract will keep once-per-week trash and recycling pick-up, reduce bulk pickup to once per month, keep yard
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Friday, November 3, 2023
A developer has withdrawn its application connected to a three-building, 16-unit townhouse development at a former dance studio in Middletown Township’s Levittown section. Developer Zafar and Arshad Inc. was scheduled to present before the township zoning hearing board on Oct. 25. Proposed plans involve razing the existing building to construct
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Friday, October 27, 2023
Hulmeville Borough Council recently gave Superior Holdings LLC permission to develop 45 acres on the Hulmeville Hill. Council approved by a 4-to-2 vote a conditional use to build on the property. Superior Holdings developer Eugene Lorenzetti agreed to 37 conditions as part of the agreement, including that the historic Black farmhouse on the property will be
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Friday, October 27, 2023
The Bucks County Association of Realtors (BCAR) received a $7,500 placemaking grant from the National Association of Realtors, which was used for the installation of a shade canopy at Quakertown’s Park at 4th. The new canopy stands over the bike rest area at the corner of Fourth and Mill streets. Incoming BCAR president Stephanie Garomon cut a
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Friday, October 27, 2023
The Wrightstown Township Board of Supervisors is considering a reduction in the township’s earned income tax rate for 2024. A final decision has yet to be made, but if it were to occur the rate would likely drop from 1.15% to 1%. The township earmarked 0.15% of the EIT for open space preservation — essentially paying back debt taken on to fund
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Richland Township supervisors held a conditional use hearing for a proposal to redevelop a 200-acre shopping center on West End Boulevard (Route 309) as a mixed-use development. First introduced at the end of 2022, the proposal calls for the 206,500-square-foot Richland Plaza Shopping Center, zoned in the Planned Commercial and Arterial Corridor Overlay
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Falls Township supervisors recently approved a resolution that would remove Keystone Opportunity Improvement Zone (KOIZ) benefits from 112 acres at the former U.S. Steel property and add benefits to 105 acres, effectively placing about 7.5 acres back on the tax rolls. The KOIZ removal would take effect if Bucks County commissioners, Pennsbury School
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Fort Washington-based Toll Brothers bought 21 acres of undeveloped land near Quakertown Borough from Feasterville-based developer Trinity Realty Companies for $3.9 million. A spokesperson for Toll Brothers said site improvements are planned to begin “very soon" for the property along East Paletown Road in Richland Township. Plans submitted to the
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Bucks County breaks ground on Lower Bucks Government Services Center in Bristol Bucks County Commissioners recently broke ground at the future site of the updated Lower Bucks Government Services Center, just days after Bristol Township Council approved the project. The two-story, 39,000-square-foot facility is on New Falls Road in the township’s
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Patterson Farm was purchased by Lower Makefield Township in 1998 for $7 million to preserve open space. Since then, the Patterson farmstead and the nearby Satterthwaite farmstead, along with barns and other outbuildings, have fallen into disrepair. On Sept. 26, the public got its first look at possible reuses for the buildings in a presentation at the
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Bedminster makes changes to zoning ordinance Bedminster supervisors approved a variety of changes to the township’s zoning ordinance, following a review that went on for more than a year. Among the more significant changes, “Commercial Solar Energy Facility” was added to permitted uses, with regulations and criteria applicable to “a
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Nockamixon Township voted 3-2 to adopt a new groundwater preservation ordinance. The new ordinance is focused on helping to assure adequate groundwater supplies for all local wells, as individual property owners propose any changes in their use of the common groundwater resource or sell their property to successors. Township officials have emphasized that
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Montgomery County Judge Cheryl Austin granted Central Bucks School District’s request to amend its original petition for one that includes a plan that the school board approved Sept. 12. Austin is hearing the case after the Bucks County judiciary recused itself to avoid a conflict of interest. Last month, Austin issued an order stating that she would
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The Trenton-Mercer airport in New Jersey sits just over the state line from Bucks County. In May 2022, the FAA approved a project to modernize facilities first constructed in 1975. The airport plans to quadruple the size of its existing terminal and build a parking garage for approximately 1,040 cars and trucks. The FAA forecasts a 51% increase in flights
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Friday, September 29, 2023
Nockamixon Township voted 3-2 to adopt a new groundwater preservation ordinance. The new ordinance is focused on helping to assure adequate groundwater supplies for all local wells, as individual property owners propose any changes in their use of the common groundwater resource or sell their property to successors. Township officials have emphasized that
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Friday, September 22, 2023
New Hope Borough officials are considering changes to the residential zoning district that would split the district in two. Different rules would dictate what is permitted closer to the center of town from areas to the north and west. According to a draft of the proposed ordinance, the idea behind the move is to ensure development “retains the
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Friday, September 15, 2023
Two separate projects will soon be presented to the Falls Township Zoning Hearing Board. In the first, developer Brian Brzezinski is seeking variances to construct two four-story residential apartment buildings, containing a total of 96 units, at 654 Lincoln Highway in the Fairless Hills section of the township. The requested variances include apartments at
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Monday, September 11, 2023
Warminster Township is having quite the turnaround on the financial end for a municipality that was “on the verge of bankruptcy,” according to Board of Supervisors Chairman Kenneth Hayes. Hayes and supervisors said the stability over the past year has come from holding the line on finances and putting together an administrative team that is
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Friday, September 8, 2023
Aquinas Realty Partners, Bensalem Township, police and fire officials, and the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament recently met to discuss security measures to protect the former Shrine of St. Katharine Drexel as it awaits redevelopment. The 44-acre historic property is under agreement of sale to Aquinas, which plans to redevelop the area into townhomes and a
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Friday, September 1, 2023
New Hope officials have been working on a proposed parking garage since 2020, after a consulting group’s 2018 report said that inadequate parking was the top threat to businesses and residents in the tiny borough. The multi-level garage was proposed at a site just north of the Union Square complex, and the idea was reportedly supported by business and
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Tuesday, August 15, 2023
Perkasie Borough approved Ordinance 1054 on Aug. 7, amending provisions of Chapter 135 of the borough code to adopt the ICC International Property Maintenance Code, First Edition, 2018, as the borough’s property maintenance code. Source: Perkasie Borough
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Friday, August 11, 2023
Lower Makefield supervisors recently delayed a decision on a developer’s plans to build six new homes at Buck Creek Drive and Newtown-Yardley and Creamery roads. The project involves demolishing two existing houses and putting up two new dwellings in their place, constructing four other new houses and preserving an old stone farmhouse. Supervisors
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Thursday, July 20, 2023
The New Hope-Solebury School Board approved the final budget for the district’s 2023-2024 fiscal year that includes a 2% property tax increase. The $48.4 million budget includes a roughly $402,800 deficit that will be covered by the district’s fund balance. The new millage rate is 111.4187, which translates to about $111 for each $1,000 of
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Thursday, July 20, 2023
About 600 upscale apartments are under construction at Oxford Valley Mall in Middletown. The first of two large apartment buildings is taking shape on a 20-acre plot of land that was a mall parking lot built 50 years ago. The “Oxford Valley Mall Apartments” are being built by developer CornerstoneTracy, who reports on its website that the first
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Kennett Square Borough Council considered but voted against a motion to advertise a draft ordinance that amends the borough’s zoning code to permit multi-family development by conditional use in the OI-2 office and industrial zoning district. The ordinance would enable housing to be built on the former NVF site. Lexi Gambs, codes manager for the
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Friday, April 17, 2026
For the second time in as many months, the East Vincent Township Planning Commission voted unanimously against recommending approval of the proposed data center at the former Pennhurst hospital site. As in February, the developer, Penn Hurst Holdings DE LLC did not show up for the meeting. Commission member Lawson Macartney said, “The deficiencies are
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Friday, April 10, 2026
As public pushback continues to grow over a proposed 1.6-million-square-foot data center in East Whiteland, officials there will undergo a process to declare the township’s zoning ordinance regarding data centers invalid, and begin the process to revise it. The “curative amendment” process, which allows municipalities to alter past zoning
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Hankin Group continues to develop its Keva Flats apartment community in West Whiteland Township. The real estate company has broken ground on what will be the seventh apartment building in the complex. The five-story building will feature a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom units ranging from 795 to 1,570 square feet. When it’s completed next
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Supervisors in Charlestown Township are considering an ordinance that would amend the township’s zoning code to add a formal definition for “data center” and permit the use by conditional approval within the I/O/B industrial, office and business districts. The proposal defines a data center as a facility primarily used for housing and
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Friday, March 27, 2026
The Uwchlan Township Planning Commission will hold a special meeting on Wednesday, April 15, to consider a recommendation for a Tentative Planned Residential Development and PRD Ordinance for Rockwell Downingtown LLC - Lionville Preserve for the properties located on Lionville Station Road. Application documents posted on the township website, including one
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Friday, March 27, 2026
West Chester Borough’s website now features a rental license tracker. The tracker features a map of all rental properties in the borough, and includes a descriptor for each rental noting whether the property allows student renters. The tracker also shows the license status for each property. Source: West Chester Borough; 3/2026
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Chester and Montgomery counties are working to get ahead of a growing surge in data center proposals by developing model zoning ordinances. The urgency stems from the rapid expansion of hyperscale data centers driven by AI demand, with facilities that can consume as much electricity as a small city and millions of gallons of water per day — raising
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Friday, March 20, 2026
Severe weather caused a postponement of the conditional use hearing for a controversial proposal to build a 1.3-million-square-foot data center at the former Pennhurst state hospital in East Vincent Township. The township announced that the hearing will be rescheduled for Monday, April 20, at 6:30 p.m. at East Vincent Elementary School, 340 Ridge Road,
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Friday, March 20, 2026
South Coatesville Borough Council will consider an ordinance that would disband the South Coatesville Police Department and transfer full responsibility for police protection to the Pennsylvania State Police, citing potential cost savings and increased efficiency. The proposed measure follows an existing cooperative arrangement between the borough and state
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Friday, March 20, 2026
The deteriorating West Goshen house in “imminent threat of danger” that has been at the center of a preservation fight will be demolished, a Chester County judge has decided. Chester County Court Judge Anthony Verwey found that “rehabilitation of the buildings is not feasible” and approved the demolition of the property. The
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Wilmington-based 9th Street Development is set to purchase two downtown office buildings in Kennett Square for $6.6 million and redevelop them with about $34 million in additional investment. The plan would convert the 100,000-square-foot building at 128 E. State St. into 60 apartments, while retaining the 80,000-square-foot 101 E. State St. for office and
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Friday, March 13, 2026
The East Whiteland Township Planning Commission stopped short of fully recommending that the township’s board of supervisors approve an amended plan that would increase the footprint of a proposed data center to more than 1.6 million square feet. The commission said the plan is in compliance with local ordinances, its waivers were supported by
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Friday, March 13, 2026
French and Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust has announced the completion of a voluntary conservation easement to permanently preserve Hugh and Sally Willig’s 18-acre property along Sycamore Lane in Charlestown Township. The easement is another success in the longstanding partnership between French and Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust and
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Friday, March 13, 2026
The Unionville-Chadds Ford School Board is reviewing an updated plan for the proposed new middle school, and the price will be going up. The new estimate for just the school is now believed to be about $153.3 million, with a completion date of May 2034. In January, the projected cost was $139.5 million. Superintendent Tim Hoffman said then that the timeline
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Friday, March 6, 2026
Suburban office-to-residential conversions remain rare compared to projects in Philadelphia, as remote locations, restrictive zoning and outdated building designs complicate redevelopment efforts, industry leaders say. One exception is the 162-unit conversion of an eight-building complex at 435 Devon Park Dr. in Tredyffrin Township, where developers Love
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Friday, February 27, 2026
The developer of a “boutique data center” will look elsewhere after public outcry and a preemptive board of supervisors vote showed no appetite for the facility in North Coventry Township. The data center, informally proposed by Envision Land Use, would have been situated adjacent to Route 100 at 299 W. Schuylkill Road, in an industrial lot
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Friday, February 27, 2026
A 48-unit affordable housing development called The Phoenix at Oxford has been proposed for 651 Lincoln St. in Oxford Borough, as Church Housing Corp. and New Jersey-based Walters Group presented initial plans to borough council. The project would include two 24-unit buildings with amenities like a gym, a playground, a picnic area and a basketball court,
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Parkesburg Borough Council will consider adopting a new Contractor Licensing Ordinance aimed at establishing a formal licensing process to ensure only qualified and responsible contractors operate within the borough, with provisions covering application requirements, fees, insurance, enforcement authority, exemptions, penalties, and procedures for denial,
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Fire departments across southern Chester County are facing growing financial and staffing pressures as emergency calls rise and the cost of equipment continues to soar, even as demand for reliable service remains high, local fire chiefs said. The three departments in the Kennett Fire and EMS Regional Commission responded to more than 5,000 calls in 2024, up
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Friday, February 6, 2026
The opening of the Pennsylvania Turnpike’s all-electronic Exit 320 to Route 29 in East Whiteland Township in 2012 dramatically reshaped Chester County’s Great Valley, cutting travel times and helping spur billions in commercial and residential investment, including major office expansions by firms like Vanguard and pharmaceutical companies. More
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Friday, February 6, 2026
A developer wants to increase the size of its proposed data center on a remediated Superfund site in East Whiteland Township, stoking ire from nearby residents who worry about the increased scope stressing the power grid and driving up costs, along with environmental and health risks. The facility — which would exceed 1.6 million square feet in the
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Natural Lands announced the permanent preservation of a 23.4-acre property in East Bradford Township, Chester County. The land, now protected under a conservation easement held by Natural Lands, is connected to hundreds of acres of open space, offering important contiguous habitat to wildlife. An easement is a legally binding agreement that keeps land in
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Twelve infrastructure projects to improve stormwater management and water quality in nine Chester County municipalities were recently awarded state funding. The funds, approved by the Commonwealth Finance Authority, come through the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development’s Small Water and Sewer Grant Program. The awarded funds
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Phoenixville Borough officials are reviewing a preliminary proposal by Audubon Land Development Corp. to build 14 twin homes on 2.7 acres at the corners of Vanderslice and Gay streets near the Gay Street Bridge. The project, known as the Station Hill Subdivision, would feature porches, garages and three parking spaces per unit. Audubon Land Development
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Friday, January 23, 2026
A developer has closed on its acquisition of an initial tract of land for a sprawling $300 million, mixed-use project in New Garden Township, and local officials say it represents a chance to add much-needed housing to the area. Baltimore-based Stonewall Capital plans to add 622 residential units, 115,000 square feet of commercial space, a Wawa and office
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Friday, January 16, 2026
Investors have turned one of Great Valley’s vacant office buildings into a suburban rarity: 24 studio apartments and eight single-bedroom apartments. The units, located north of the Exton Mall site in West Whiteland Township, are equipped with kitchens, bathrooms and washer/dryers, and they’re being marketed as months-long hotel accommodations
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Friday, January 9, 2026
Several factors in West Bradford Township led to residents seeing a reduction in their property taxes in 2026, as other communities in the state see hikes. Township Manager Justin Yaich said the tax reduction was made possible because of “substantial savings” created by the township refinancing debt during the pandemic at record-low interest
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Friday, January 9, 2026
A fully occupied Phoenixville shopping center has sold for $7.35 million. Tenants at the 33,093-square-foot retail property at 785 Starr St. include Labcorp, NovaCare Rehabilitation, State Farm, Benchmark Federal Credit Union, Habitat for Humanity and Fresenius Kidney Care. Starr Street Partners, a private investor based in Pennsylvania, sold the property
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Friday, January 2, 2026
A largely vacant office building at 52 E. Swedesford Road in Malvern, East Whiteland Township, is slated for demolition and redevelopment into a 10.3-acre, mixed-use campus featuring 250 apartments and about 6,700 square feet of retail and dining space, under a proposal by Downingtown-based TriPoint Properties. The project, which would include a small
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Friday, December 19, 2025
The East Coventry Township Planning Commission voted 4-0 Thursday to recommend the rejection of a request by Constellation Energy to amend the zoning code to allow for a data center on Route 724. That recommendation will be forwarded to the board of supervisors, who could vote on it as soon as the February meeting, said Township Manager Eugene Briggs.
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Friday, December 12, 2025
The Pennsylvania House Majority Policy Committee convened a roundtable discussion in Phoenixville hosted by state Rep. Paul Friel (D-26) to talk with housing advocates and experts about what can be done to put more Pennsylvanians in homes. "The stark reality of today's economy is working families can no longer afford to buy a home in Chester County, and
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Friday, December 12, 2025
A lawyer representing Pennhurst Properties, the company that wants to build a data center at the former Pennhurst Asylum site, told East Vincent Township supervisors that a proposed data center ordinance, in its current draft, would essentially prevent the construction of a data center on the property. He said because a submission to the township has
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Friday, December 12, 2025
The West Brandywine Township Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to seek community input on using open space funds to acquire a $385,000 conservation easement and a $12,565 trail easement on the Dyson Tract, a property in the township’s R-1 Residential/Agricultural Zoning District at 153 Gabel Road. The hearing, conducted under the
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Friday, December 5, 2025
A Baltimore-area developer is planning a massive, $300 million, mixed-use development on former farmland in New Garden Township. Developer Stonewall Capital will begin work next fall on White Clay Point, a 235-acre project that will include 622 residential units, a grocery store, a Wawa convenience store and additional retail space, according to Stonewall
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Chester County commissioners unveiled a $778.6 million preliminary county budget for fiscal year 2026 that holds the real estate tax rate steady while projecting a 4.7% increase in operating revenues to $666.3 million and a capital budget increase of 19.8% to $112.2 million. The proposal zeroes out any new tax hike, keeps the overall property tax rate at
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Friday, November 28, 2025
On Sept. 2, the West Goshen Township supervisors approved the filing of a conservatorship petition under the Abandoned and Blighted Property Conservatorship Act for the property at 905 Westtown Road. The petition said the property was unsafe, dilapidated and negatively affecting its neighbors. On Nov. 13, Common Pleas Judge Anthony Verwey granted the
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Friday, November 21, 2025
East Coventry Township entered the region’s widening debate over data centers as Constellation Energy asked officials to amend zoning rules to allow the facilities, prompting skepticism from planners and residents during a Nov. 13 meeting. The request follows months of local study and comes as Constellation has quietly purchased five parcels along
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Friday, November 21, 2025
Uwchlan Township officials unveiled a 2026 draft budget that proposes the community’s first real estate tax increase in nearly two decades, citing an $854,000 projected deficit driven largely by a steep drop in earned-income tax revenue from one of the township’s biggest employers. The plan raises general, hydrant and utility rates, adds a new
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Friday, November 14, 2025
The Oxford Area Recreation Authority unveiled an ambitious master plan for its multi-municipal park, detailing new amenities and upgrades across three 20-acre parcels serving more than 30,000 residents in five local municipalities — East Nottingham, Elk, Lower Oxford and West Nottingham townships, and Oxford Borough. Landscape architect Chuck
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Coatesville City Council will consider an ordinance creating the HND Hilltop Neighborhood Development Overlay LERTA District, which would authorize real estate tax exemptions for qualifying properties in designated deteriorated areas under Pennsylvania’s Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance Act. The measure outlines eligibility requirements, a
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Upper Uwchlan Township officials will consider adopting a new ordinance to establish a local services tax (LST). The proposed $52 annual tax, authorized under Pennsylvania’s Local Tax Enabling Act, would apply to anyone employed within the township starting Jan. 1, 2026, with exemptions available for individuals earning less than $12,000 annually.
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Friday, October 31, 2025
Coatesville City Council has approved an ordinance raising the city’s real estate transfer tax from 2% to 2.5%, effective Jan. 1, 2026, to generate an estimated $180,000 in additional revenue for general operations in next year's budget. A half-percent of the 2.5% that will be collected by the city will continue to go to the Coatesville Area School
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Friday, October 31, 2025
Developer Peter Abrams said he plans to take legal action after the West Whiteland Township Board of Supervisors voted 2-0 to reject his master plan to redevelop the Exton Square mall into a mixed-use project called Exton Town Centre. Supervisors cited density, stormwater and sewer capacity concerns in denying the 75-acre proposal, which includes
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Oxford Borough officials shared updates on rebuilding efforts following the devastating 2023 fire that destroyed six properties on South Third Street, announcing plans for a mixed-use development called King’s Cross featuring shops, apartments and public gathering spaces. The project, led by property owner Wilson King and developer Cathy Martin, will
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Upper Uwchlan Township, in partnership with the Penn State Extension office, is offering a 2025 Septic System Webinar series. The fourth session in the series is titled “Real Estate and Septic Systems.” Participants will explore what buyers and sellers need to know about septic systems during property transfers. It will take place on Tuesday,
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Friday, October 17, 2025
Oxford Borough Council finally approved the land-development plan for the Moran Farm, which will add 91 homes in the borough. Another 39 homes will be going in on the piece of the property that is in East Nottingham Township. The plan has changed over the years from a 55-plus community to now 91 single-family homes. The cost of a home is expected to start
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Friday, October 17, 2025
A new plan to convert Pennhurst in East Vincent Township into a massive data center has outraged and mobilized local residents, as well as people in neighboring communities in an area known for rolling hills, farms and an overall rural character. An online petition urging Chester County neighbors and East Vincent Township officials to “work together
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Malvern Borough Council will hold a public hearing to consider zoning amendments that would define and regulate short-term rental units and update rules for fences and walls throughout the borough. The proposed ordinance would amend the borough’s zoning code to establish a formal definition of “short-term rental unit” and specify which
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Chester County has taken the first step in establishing a human relations commission. The new body will be dedicated to protecting all residents from discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations. Ordinance 2025-3 was approved in a two-to-one vote, with Commissioners Josh Maxwell and Marian Moskowitz voting in favor and Commissioner Eric
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Friday, October 3, 2025
A municipal planner has asked the Coatesville Area School District to consider a property tax exemption for a planned housing development on the city’s last large undeveloped tract. At a Sept. 9 school board finance committee meeting, consultant David Babbitt said the 75-acre site at 320 Adams Drive is approved for 266 apartments, with a second phase
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Friday, September 26, 2025
The redevelopment of the 75-acre Exton Square mall property could begin by late spring 2026. The first phase of the project, which will start before demolition begins on the mall, will be construction of a 50,400-square-foot freestanding Main Line Health building, according to Abrams Realty & Development owner Peter Abrams, allowing an existing Main
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Friday, September 26, 2025
New Garden Township purchased the 137-acre property formerly known as Saint Anthony’s in the Hills for $1.5 million in 2018 with plans to convert it into a community park and recreation area called New Garden Hills. The project was originally estimated to cost $18 million, but more thorough estimates later raised the figure to $32 million, far above
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Friday, September 26, 2025
East Vincent Township supervisors have delayed the adoption of a new ordinance regulating data centers. Township solicitor Joe Clemente explained that so much feedback had been provided on the draft from consultants, local group East Vincent Advocacy and the office of state Sen. Katie Muth (D-44), that they chose to continue refining the proposed ordinance
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Friday, September 19, 2025
The Chester County Board of Commissioners will consider adopting a countywide human relations ordinance that would prohibit discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations. The proposal, Ordinance 2025-03, would bar discrimination based on race, religion, ancestry, national origin, sex, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation,
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Friday, September 19, 2025
East Vincent Township officials are rushing to adopt a zoning ordinance for data centers before a formal plan is filed to redevelop the former Pennhurst State Hospital property. According to solicitor Joe Clemente, the property owner recently submitted a sketch plan that includes a data center, offices and a plant that would burn old tires to produce black
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Friday, September 12, 2025
The London Grove Township Board of Supervisors will consider acquiring a 2.8-acre portion of land on Wickerton Road for open space preservation. The property, located at 805 Wickerton Road, is part of Chester County Tax Parcel No. 59-11-20. Township officials said the purchase would be funded through the Open Space Earned Income Tax in accordance with the
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Friday, September 5, 2025
An office park spanning 111 acres is up for sale in Malvern, East Whiteland Township. The Malvern Green complex includes three office buildings and a data center building that total about 759,900 square feet at 51 Valley Stream Parkway. The four buildings are occupied by tech giant Oracle but are being marketed for mixed-use redevelopment. The campus has a
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Upper Uwchlan Township supervisors will consider an ordinance that would revise zoning rules for signs and establish new regulations for short-term rentals. The proposal would update multiple sections of the township’s sign code by amending, deleting or consolidating existing provisions. It would also add three regulations for short-term rentals and
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Friday, August 29, 2025
West Chester Borough wants to hear from the public about the stormwater system and how to best protect the water quality and prevent high water levels during flooding, primarily at Goose Creek. In accordance with Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) regulations, the borough is updating its strategies to reduce phosphorus and sediment
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Friday, August 22, 2025
The Hankin Group has 373 units set to come online in Chester County by the end of 2026 as part of the second phases of three projects in Downingtown and Exton. In Downingtown, Hankin is building its River Station complex around the future location of the Downingtown SEPTA station, and recently broke ground on the project’s 160-unit, $45 million second
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Friday, August 22, 2025
At a recent New Garden supervisors meeting, Stonewall Capital LLC, of Maryland, unveiled its plans for White Clay Point in Landenberg, a 220-acre mixed-use development project consisting of 263 single-family detached homes, 90 20-foot-wide townhomes, 200 24-foot-wide townhomes, 112 stacked townhomes, civic spaces and park land, and 75,000 square feet of
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Friday, August 15, 2025
Parkesburg Borough Council is set to consider two proposed ordinances later this month that could affect rental properties and landlords. The first measure would replace the borough’s existing rental ordinance, No. 492, and establish annual licensing and biannual inspections of rental units. It also outlines application requirements, inspection
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Friday, August 15, 2025
East Goshen Township officials are reminding residents that solicitation without a permit is prohibited under the township’s peddling and solicitation ordinance. According to Ordinance 169, a township-issued permit is required for anyone selling goods or services, soliciting donations, or distributing printed materials. Permitted solicitors receive a
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Chester County commissioners unanimously approved $5 million in 2025-2026 Community Revitalization Program (CRP) grants at a recent meeting. The CRP grants will fund 12 projects in urban centers. The largest grant recipients include:
$600,000 to the Borough of Spring City for improvements to Boat Launch Park
$550,000 to the Borough of Phoenixville for the
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Friday, August 8, 2025
ChristianaCare will open a new 24/7 emergency care facility in mid-August at the former site of Jennersville Regional Hospital in Penn Township, marking the return of localized emergency services to southern Chester County for the first time since 2021. The new ChristianaCare Hospital – West Grove Campus, a $21.6 million investment, will offer a
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Plans for a warehouse in East Nottingham Township are drawing questions from bordering municipalities and residents concerned with possible increased truck traffic. Oxford Borough Manager Pauline Garcia-Allen said officials in the borough and nearby West Nottingham Township have concerns. Oxford’s engineer, Pennoni, performed a traffic impact study.
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Friday, August 1, 2025
Downingtown Borough Council is set to consider a proposed amendment to its Neighborhood Blight Protection ordinance. According to the public notice, the proposed ordinance would amend Chapter 114, Section 114-13, of the Borough Code by expanding the list of exemptions to include properties that have been actively marketed for sale over the previous 180
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Friday, August 1, 2025
Spring City Borough Council plans to adopt a new ordinance aimed at regulating and monitoring vacant commercial properties. The proposed ordinance would establish a regulatory framework for the registration and inventory of all commercial units in the borough. It would also require the registration, inventory, inspection and monitoring of vacant commercial
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Friday, August 1, 2025
Kennett Square Borough Council is set to consider three proposed amendments to the borough’s zoning and municipal codes during a public hearing on Aug. 4. The public hearing will take place on Monday, Aug. 4 at 7 p.m. on the third floor of Borough Hall at 600 S. Broad St. The proposed changes include:
Short-Term Rentals: outlining regulations for
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Friday, July 25, 2025
Honey Brook Township supervisors passed a pair of ordinances impacting properties. The on-lot sewage management ordinance requires mandatory inspections and pump‑outs every three years. Guidance from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and Act 537 implementation requires local governments to adopt ongoing operation and maintenance
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Sadsbury Township supervisors at their May 6 meeting approved an ordinance creating a registration and inspection program for rental properties. The cost of an inspection is $100, and a reinspection is $50. The ordinance was scheduled to take effect at the beginning of July. Information relating to the application, as well as a checklist of inspection
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Chip maker Herr's is under agreement to sell nearly 123 acres in East Nottingham Township to a Malvern developer planning 940,640 square feet of industrial space. Eli Kahn of E Kahn Development Corp. is looking to build three warehouses on vacant land near the intersection of Baltimore Pike and Graves Road. The preliminary land development plan, dubbed
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Friday, July 11, 2025
Having a mix of housing options is important to West Whiteland Township, said John Weller, the township’s director of planning and zoning. The township wants to attract residents with good-paying jobs no matter whether they buy or rent, since the township’s principal revenue stream is the earned income tax. “Property tax is a big chunk,
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Honey Brook Township Board of Supervisors will consider a proposed ordinance to define and regulate short-term rentals. Short-term rentals will be allowed on lots that are at least two acres in size. The ordinance also requires one parking space, a contact person who lives within 35 miles of the property, and an up-to-date ledger. The ordinance will be
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Board of Supervisors of East Marlborough Township is considering a proposed ordinance for the purpose of “codifying a complete body of legislation for the township.” Codification is the process of organizing a municipality’s ordinances into a logical structure that is easier to understand and reference. A public hearing will be held on
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Friday, June 27, 2025
The Uwchlan Township Planning Commission held an informational public meeting on June 17 to discuss the proposed development of 237 acres of land commonly known as the Lionville Station Farm property. According to the township website, in October 2024, Downingtown Area School District (DASD) announced it had entered into a sales agreement with Rockwell
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Friday, June 27, 2025
West Chester University has received its largest ever donation through a unique land partnership with East Whiteland Township. In 2024, the university received a donation of 52 acres of farmland in the township from an undisclosed donor. In the recently announced partnership, East Whiteland will pay $4.7 million to the school to acquire the land. West
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Spring City Borough Council will consider a proposal to regulate vacant commercial properties. According to a public notice, the draft ordinance will “create a regulatory scheme for the registration and inventorying of commercial units and the registration, inventorying, inspection and monitoring of vacant commercial units,” as well as
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Friday, June 20, 2025
A Chester County jury has awarded a total of $3.25 million to three pairs of homeowners in East Brandywine Township who sued their builder over defects. The families bought houses for between $600,000 and $800,000 in a single-family development called the Estates at Hideaway Farms, constructed by Chester County builder Southdown Homes. In their lawsuits,
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Friday, June 20, 2025
East Marlborough Township’s supervisors will hold a work session to discuss a possible earned income tax (EIT). The meeting will be held on Wednesday, June 25, at 6 p.m. at the township building, 721 Unionville Road, Kennett Square. Read the township’s overview and FAQ on the possible EIT here. Source: Daily Local; 6/17/2025
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Property taxes are going up in Tredyffrin and Easttown townships with the approval of the Tredyffrin/Easttown School District 2025-2026 final budget. The budget has $190.3 million in revenues, $6.1 million in fund balance allocation, and $196.4 million in expenditures. Officials addressed an $11 million deficit with expenditure reductions, tapping into
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Friday, June 20, 2025
The Kennett Consolidated School Board unanimously approved an annual operating budget of $108 million, an increase of $3.5 million over last year. The tax bill to the average property owner will be $6,414, compared to $6,168 last year. The budget numbers presented by district CFO Mark Tracy reflected major increases in salaries, contracts, and expenditures
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Landscapes3 was adopted as the comprehensive plan for Chester County in November 2018. Since then, the county planning commission has been tracking 18 metrics to assess implementation of its six goals. Long-term changes in the housing market are also reflected in the metrics. The percentage of new housing units that are apartments continues to be notably
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Friday, June 6, 2025
West Sadsbury Township supervisors are considering a draft ordinance that would loosen zoning restrictions regarding the construction of accessory dwelling units (ADUs). The proposal would “provide for accessory dwelling units in all zoning districts to provide for additional housing opportunities in the township.” The ordinance defines an ADU
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Friday, June 6, 2025
East Whiteland Township supervisors will consider a draft ordinance to create a new Section 200-13.1 of the municipal code, titled Workforce Housing. It will establish a process for the development of housing in zoning districts where apartments are “permitted specifically designed and subsidized for middle- and moderate-income households.”
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Friday, May 30, 2025
The Trestle Bridge, which stands high above the East Branch of the Brandywine Creek at the border of West Bradford and East Caln townships near Downingtown Borough, has a new owner. On May 21, Chester County commissioners unanimously approved the transfer of the bridge structure and its right-of-way from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation to the
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Kennett Township supervisors adopted Ordinance 311 that amends Chapter 232 of the township code regarding the growing of bamboo grasses. Under the ordinance, exterior bamboo shall not be planted, maintained or otherwise permitted to exist within 40 feet of the edge of a property, and all existing bamboo within 40 feet of the edge of a property must be
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Lori Diefenderfer, director of business administration for the Coatesville Area School District, recommended the board pass a 3.5% tax increase to balance the 2025-2026 budget. The proposed spending plan in the preliminary budget shows $242 million in expenditures and $230.1 million in revenue. Diefenderfer said the $11.9 million gap between income and
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Each year, the Chester County Planning Commission analyzes assessment data on sales and construction to understand housing trends in the county. Among the key points and trends from the 2024 Housing Report are:
Both raw and inflation-adjusted housing prices have been steadily rising in the county, up to $525,000 in 2024.
The number of annual sales in 2023
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Abrams Realty and Development, the owner of the 75-acre Exton Square property, has submitted a master plan for redevelopment of the mall property. The plan proposes multiple uses of the land, including retention of Boscov's and the east parking garage at current locations, and relocation of Main Line Health. It adds new office space, commercial space for
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Friday, May 16, 2025
London Grove Township supervisors are considering acquiring a property at 200 East Avondale Road for open space. According to Chester County property records, the land — identified as Tax Parcel No. 59-11-19.1 in the township’s legal notice — is nearly 0.66 acres and is adjacent to township-owned land. The township scheduled a May 14
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Friday, May 9, 2025
East Marlborough residents packed the township meeting room on April 23 for a preliminary discussion about a possible earned-income tax (EIT). Jayson Lawson, a representative from Keystone Collections, said that 70 of the 73 municipalities in Chester County already collect an EIT, which can be up to 1% of a resident’s or employee’s income. East
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Sadsbury Township supervisors will hold a public meeting to discuss proposed Ordinance No. 2025-04, which aims to regulate residential rental units within the township. The ordinance will require rental occupancy permits. Inspections of residential rental units will be performed by the code enforcement officer. Landlords will be required to file reports
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Suburbia Shopping Center, a 154,000-square-foot retail property in North Coventry Township, has been sold. The shopping center, located at Glocker Way and Pottstown Pike (Route 100), has been sold by Gambone Management Co., which was represented during the sale by JLL Capital Markets. It was purchased by a High Real Estate Group affiliate earlier this
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Downingtown Area School District (DASD) has announced a public hearing regarding the potential sale of district-owned property in Uwchlan Township. The 240-acre property is located along Lionville Station Road and is currently home to three dilapidated homes and four deteriorating farm structures. The property is divided between two zoning districts, with
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Friday, April 18, 2025
The West Vincent Township Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to consider draft Ordinance 213-2025, amending the Part 1, Chapter 6, Antidiscrimination, of the township code. The ordinance would amend certain definitions and authorize meetings of the Human Relations Commission for the purpose of education, outreach and training. The hearing will
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Friday, April 18, 2025
The POWER Interfaith organization will sponsor town hall presentations focusing on fair school funding and fair housing, and their impact on local taxes. According to a press release from the group, the state’s underfunding of schools leaves students in under-resourced districts without the tools they need to thrive. “The PA General Assembly is
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Friday, April 11, 2025
The West Nottingham Township Board of Supervisors held a conditional use hearing to consider the application of West Nottingham CSG 1 LLC and West Nottingham CSG 2 LLC for solar generating arrays at 10 State Line Road. The property is located in the township’s industrial zone, but is currently used for agriculture. Hayley Effler, the senior project
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Oxford Borough officials have long discussed upgrades for the wells, water lines and sewer lines for Mt. Vernon Street. Traffic on the street has also greatly increased as the borough continues to grow as an urban center, and a proposed traffic calming bio-retention bump-out project will be located on the north side of the street. The project includes
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Friday, April 4, 2025
U.S. Census estimates of Pennsylvania’s total population as of July 1, 2024, show that Chester County is once again leading the state in population growth. The figures reported by the Pennsylvania State Data Center in Harrisburg showed that Pennsylvania experienced an overall population increase of just over 75,800 between 2020 and 2024. Among the 28
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Friday, April 4, 2025
A New York real estate firm has added to its suburban Philadelphia holdings with the $96.5 million acquisition of an 18-month-old Main Line apartment building, Chester County property records show. Pantzer Properties purchased the 250-unit Ember at Berwyn from developers Bozzuto and Echo Realty. The deal is believed to be the largest publicly recorded
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Friday, March 28, 2025
Abrams Realty & Development closed on its acquisition of Exton Square Mall on March 18, paving the way for a major redevelopment of the struggling retail center. Abrams Realty paid $34.25 million to purchase the 75-acre property in West Whiteland Township from PREIT. Abrams plans to preserve the Boscov’s department store and part of Round 1 arcade
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Friday, March 28, 2025
Tower Health sold the campus of its shuttered Brandywine Hospital in Caln Township to Regal Builders for an undisclosed price. Regal Builders, based in Dover, Delaware, said it didn’t have anything to share yet about its plans for the 67-acre property in Caln Township. The campus is located near the Route 30 bypass a few miles north of Coatesville.
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Main Line Health is seeking to build a 145,000-square-foot, three-story medical center at the corner of Lloyd and Manor avenues in Caln Township near Downingtown Borough. Services provided would include primary and specialty care, imaging and laboratory services, outpatient surgery and urgent care. Downingtown Health Center would sit on a 14.5-acre site, on
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Friday, March 14, 2025
Tredyffrin Township supervisors will hold a hearing on proposed Ordinance No. HR-488 to use eminent domain to acquire a portion of property at 355 Chase Road in Tredyffrin Township for a public park. If passed, the ordinance will go into effect 31 days after passage. The hearing will take place on Monday, March 17, at 7 p.m. at the township building at 1100
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Friday, March 7, 2025
West Caln Township supervisors are considering a draft ordinance that would allow for domesticated chickens. The draft ordinance lays out definitions and regulations for residents to keep “a small number of female chickens on a noncommercial basis while limiting the adverse impacts on the surrounding properties.” Supervisors will hold a public
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Schuylkill Township announced the successful acquisition of the Sedgley Farm property, located at 930 Valley Forge Road, Phoenixville. The $17 million purchase, finalized in December, marks the culmination of nearly two decades of proposed land development plans. The acquisition of 64.7 acres of Sedgley Farm represents the fulfillment of efforts that began
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Friday, February 28, 2025
West Whiteland supervisors unanimously voted recently to approve an ordinance that limits the number of units per acre, and the type of housing units allowed, at the 75-acre Exton Square property. But the new ordinance might be too late to prevent the plans of the equitable owner of the mall property, which call for the construction of 375 apartments and
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Friday, February 28, 2025
A land conservation agreement to preserve a 20-acre property on Honeysuckle Lane was announced by the French and Pickering Creeks Preservation Trust. The land sits within the high-quality Pickering Creek watershed and features a mixture of homesteads, steep slopes, agricultural fields and woodlands. Under current zoning, three additional lots could be
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Tredyffrin Township proposes to take over Picket Post Swim Club’s former pool-and-racquet facility on Chase Road, a 4.8-acre eyesore, and turn it into a public park. How the park will be used is yet to be announced, but racquet sports seem likely because the property already has six pickleball courts and four tennis courts. At the same time,
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Friday, February 21, 2025
The West Whiteland Township Board of Supervisors unanimously approved an ordinance to limit the number of units per acre, and type of housing units, at the 75-acre Exton Square property. The dilapidated mall is located in a 643-acre Town Center zoning district (TC) around the intersection of routes 30 and 100, at what is known as the Exton Crossroads. The
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Friday, February 14, 2025
East Goshen Township supervisors are considering a draft ordinance replacing Chapter 182, “Rental Property Requirements.” The new ordinance will require an annual report of the names of tenants, a responsible agent for property within a 50-mile radius of the township, and a rental certificate every three years. East Goshen currently requires
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Friday, February 14, 2025
A new development has been proposed at the site of the Phoenixville Area School District's former kindergarten center, potentially bringing 93 new residential units to the borough, according to the developer and borough documents. The proposal, from Toll Brothers, would develop the school's land at 100 School Lane, as well as the nearby Phoenixville
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Friday, February 7, 2025
As of Feb. 1, East Goshen Township has reinstated a requirement for point-of-sale inspections. The application for a Residential Property Transfer Application can be found here. The cost of the resale inspection is $150. There is also a separate sewer or septic certification ($15) and trash certification ($15). Applications must be complete, and 15 business
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Friday, February 7, 2025
Chester County permanently protected more than 1,200 acres of land in 2024, officials said in a review of their open space programming last year. The county runs two preservation initiatives — Open Lands and Agricultural Preservation — that target at-risk farmland, vital ecological land and areas of public interest for recreation. The investment
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Friday, January 31, 2025
West Chester Borough is short a reported $75,000 in rental permit revenue and is looking for a way to recoup. The borough’s Building and Housing Department is tasked with inspecting 4,290 apartment and house rentals. A permit is issued for both new and existing rental units. Borough Manager Sean Metrick said that about 15% of rental units, owned by
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Westtown Township inked a deal in December to buy 208 acres of the 319-acre Crebilly Farm from the Robinson Family for $20 million. Four separate properties will cover the rest of the mostly open space. A master plan formulated by stakeholders will define the layout of a preserve. Westtown supervisor and Westtown-East Goshen Police Commission Chairman Dick
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Friday, January 24, 2025
French and Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust and the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church have announced the completion of a voluntary land conservation agreement to preserve Camp Innabah’s 130-acre property along Pughtown Road. The trust worked with the camp to obtain more than $1.36 million in funding, including $861,000
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Friday, January 24, 2025
West Chester University professor, Lorenzo Cena Ph.D., who leads the school’s Environmental Health program, delivered his final air quality report to New Garden Township supervisors. The 83-page report measured ammonia, methane and hydrogen sulfide emissions from outdoor fresh mushroom production facilities throughout the township in order to
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Friday, January 17, 2025
In late December, the West Chester Borough Zoning Hearing Board started accepting applications for special exception approval to regulate the use of short-term rental properties in the Town Center zoning district. Applications are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis, and only 20 will be approved. More information can be found here. Source: West
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Friday, January 17, 2025
Phoenixville Borough announced it is among a select group of municipalities to receive a bronze certification through the Sustainable Pennsylvania program, which is managed by the Pennsylvania Municipal League. The program is designed to recognize municipalities that are working to save money, conserve resources and serve vibrant communities. Source:
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Upper Uwchlan Township will consider an ordinance enacting a tax credit for township real estate tax and earned income tax for residents who work with a volunteer fire company or nonprofit medical emergency companies. A hearing on the ordinance will take place on Tuesday, Jan. 14, at 4 p.m. at the township building, 140 Pottstown Pike, Chester Springs.
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Chester County residents will see a 13.4% increase in the county portion of their property taxes in 2025. The board of county commissioners voted 2-1 along party lines to approve the 2025 budget, including the tax increase, after roughly an hour of public comment from residents urging commissioners to cut costs elsewhere to avoid the hike. County officials
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Friday, January 3, 2025
New Garden Township supervisors passed a 2025 budget with an 18% increase in property taxes, from 2.77 to 3.27 mills. A key component of next year’s budget will be to focus on township priorities as spelled out in its 2018 comprehensive plan — including stimulating economic development, investing in infrastructure, addressing the rising costs of
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Friday, December 20, 2024
Kennett Township supervisors approved a 2025 budget, which includes a 0.1-mill real estate tax increase. The increase is expected to raise about $82,500 and represent an average $22 per year increase to taxpayers. “The reality though is that many of our expenses are actually increasing greater than our revenue is growing,” Township Manager
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Friday, December 20, 2024
Birmingham Township supervisors approved the township’s 2025 budget with a slight millage increase in township property taxes, as anticipated. The increase, from 1.6 to 1.9 mills, is the first increase since 2010, according to Township Manager Quina Nelling. She said during the November meeting that the increase would cost the average property owner
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Friday, December 13, 2024
North Coventry Township supervisors will hold a meeting on Friday, Dec. 20, to formally adopt a $7.1 million 2025 budget that will increase property taxes by 5%. According to information provided by Township Manager Erica Batdorf, the budget would result in a 0.16-mill increase, from 3.28 mills to 3.44 mills. For a property assessed at $200,000, the
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Friday, December 13, 2024
Westtown Township has closed on the purchase of Crebilly Farm. The $20 million sale was completed on Dec. 9, according to a press release. The closing secures the largest portion of the approximately 308-acre farm. Westtown Township solicitor Patrick M. McKenna, a partner at Gawthrop Greenwood, administered the closing with Westtown Township and the
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Friday, December 13, 2024
North Coventry Township has begun the process of designing a new municipal building in a new location. According to information provided in the township’s budget presentation, the current plan is to locate the new building at Hanover Meadows, the 22-acre property the township owns off Lenape Way, between Route 100 and South Hanover Street, where the
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Penn Township supervisors approved an increase of 0.25% to the earned-income tax at their Nov. 19 meeting. In previous meetings, the supervisors discussed the needs expressed by the fire company and Medic 94 for more support because of the rising costs that those important organizations face. In addition to the material fees, they considered the need for
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Friday, December 6, 2024
East Bradford Township supervisors at their Nov. 7 meeting approved Ordinance 04-2024 to amend the township code — Chapter 99, "Taxation," Section 99-17, "Earned Income Tax" — to add a new article IV, titled "Real Estate Tax Credit to Qualifying Volunteers," and other miscellaneous provisions provided herein. Source: East Bradford Township;
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Friday, November 29, 2024
After two years of public discussion, West Chester Borough Council passed an ordinance to regulate short-term rentals. Short-term rental use would be limited to the TC-Town Center District, or mostly within the downtown business district. The total number of rentals is limited to 20, borough-wide. When the 20 units are established, prospective renters will
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Friday, November 29, 2024
Chester County taxpayers could see an average increase in their county taxes next year of about $60 a year per each $100,000 of their property’s assessed value if a preliminary budget is approved next month. If adopted, taxes would rise by 0.605 mills, about 13%, from 4.551 to 5.156 mills. The county’s chief financial officer, Julie Bookheimer,
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Friday, November 29, 2024
Uwchlan Township will consider an ordinance to authorize the imposition or an additional earned income tax at the rate of 0.25% for the purposes of acquiring open space. A public hearing will take place on Monday, Dec. 9, at 7 p.m. at 715 N. Ship Road, Exton. Source: Daily Local; 11/18/2024
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Easttown Township's proposed and preliminary budget features a reduction in the overall real estate millage rate, meaning lower property taxes than in 2024. According to officials, the 2025 real estate tax rate of 5.4 mills is a 10% decrease compared to 2024, when it was 5.99 mills. If the 5.4 millage rate is approved, a property valued at $300,000 would
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Friday, November 22, 2024
State Rep. Melissa Shusterman (D-157) said $1 million has been awarded in Community Conservation Partnerships Program funding to Willistown Conservation Trust. The grant will be used to secure the acquisition of 90 acres of green space in Willistown Township to establish the Kestrel Hill Preserve. The preserve will offer hiking, running and horseback trails
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Exton Square Mall in West Whiteland Township is under contract to sell to a local developer with plans to overhaul the struggling property, according to sources familiar with the deal. Elkins Park-based Abrams Realty & Development's plans include tearing down a portion of the mall and adding residences along with a variety of other uses to the retail
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Kennett Square residents learned about developers’ vision for the old National Vulcanized Fibre Company (NVF) site at a forum held at Kennett Library on Nov. 7. Plans for the 22-acre site along West Mulberry Street call for construction of 294 “for rent” and “for sale” residential units. The complex will include 246
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Friday, November 15, 2024
The Penn Township Board of Supervisors will consider increasing the earned income and net profits tax to 0.75%. The estimated revenue to be derived from the tax increase during 2025 is $355,000. If adopted, the tax ordinance will be effective on Jan. 1, 2025. A public hearing will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 6 p.m. at the Penn Township Municipal
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Ballot measures to increase taxes in Uwchlan and East Whiteland townships for the purposes of open space preservation won. Approximately 57% of voters in Uwchlan Township voted for an increase in the earned income tax — raising it from 1% to 1.25% — for securing open space. The new tax will be paid by township residents only, and the township
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Friday, November 8, 2024
A Trader Joe’s grocery store is coming to the former CVS/Acme space in Berwyn, Easttown Township. The new store will be about 10,000 sq. ft., slightly smaller than the nearby locations in Tredyffrin and Ardmore. A new Trader Joe’s is also opening in King of Prussia, at the old Bed, Bath & Beyond store. Read more at Savvy Main Line. Source:
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Friday, November 8, 2024
West Chester Borough Council will consider a short-term rental ordinance, amending Chapter 112, Zoning Code, and, Chapter 66, Property Maintenance Code, of the borough code. A hearing will take place on Wednesday, Nov. 20, at 6:30 p.m. at 401 East Gay St. Source: West Chester Borough; 11/2024
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Friday, November 8, 2024
A historic, 24-acre farm has been preserved as the result of a voluntary conservation agreement between Raymond and Kathleen Nester and the French and Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust. The property, located along Halteman Road, boasts a mature hardwood forest and 1,200 feet of Pigeon Creek. Chester County granted French & Pickering $128,300 for the
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Voters in Uwchlan Township will have a referendum question on the ballot to determine whether the township should impose an increase in the earned income tax at a rate not to exceed 0.25% for securing open space benefits. If approved, the tax will rise from 1% to 1.25%. The new tax would be paid by township residents only, and the township estimates it
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Friday, November 1, 2024
East Marlborough Township supervisors are looking at raising the township’s general real estate taxes for the first time since approximately 1997. It is one of three separate tax increases the township is considering in its 2025 budget. One possibility is for the supervisors to raise the general fund tax to 1.75 mills, from its current 1.05 mills.
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Hankin Group has completed the first phase of its $150 million, 360-unit residential community in Chester County and has begun leasing for its newest building. Hamilton Passive House, opened to residents last week, is a 32-unit, net-zero, luxury apartment building that caps the initial 10-building, 150-unit phase of development. It is part of Hankin Group's
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Friday, October 25, 2024
East Whiteland Township is considering a blended tax increase — adding 0.05% on residents' earned income tax and 0.45 mills on the property tax. The funds would be used for open space preservation, acquiring properties, ensuring wildlife habitat protection and maintaining recreational lands. Residents will be asked on Nov. 5 to vote on a ballot
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Downingtown Borough Council will consider for adoption an amendment to the violations and penalties section of the property maintenance and housing standards for rental housing. The draft ordinance states: “Any person who fails to comply with the provisions of this chapter or who fails to carry out an order made pursuant to this chapter or who
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Elk Township will consider an ordinance to reduce its open space tax from the current rate of 0.5% on earned income down to 0.01%. The estimated revenue to be derived from the open space tax during 2025 is $47,500. The proposed ordinance would be effective Jan. 1, 2025. All other provisions of the existing Earned Income Tax Ordinance No. 2007-07 would
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Friday, October 18, 2024
The Kennett Township Board of Supervisors recently reviewed a 2025 budget presentation that raises taxes 0.1 mills, equaling a 2.86% increase. The current millage rate in the township is 3.5 mills. In 2024 the two biggest sources of revenue for the township were the earned income tax (44% of revenue) and property taxes (32%). The real estate millage rate
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Westtown Township’s 2021 Master Park Plan called for improving the most utilized area of Oakbourne Park, which provides active recreational opportunities. On Oct. 1, after three years of planning, grant applications, engineering and construction, township supervisors held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the completion of $6 million of
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Oxford Borough has been awarded a state grant for more than $854,000 that will ensure completion of strategic improvements to Niblock Alley, a rebuilding effort that followed the devastating fire in Oxford’s downtown in September 2023. The money comes via PennDOT’s Multimodal Transportation Fund Program and also provides funds to rehabilitate
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Friday, October 4, 2024
On Aug. 26, the North Coventry Township Board of Supervisors adopted a peddling and solicitation ordinance to establish new standards and enhance regulations for solicitors. The purpose of the ordinance is to repeal the existing, older provisions, and enable improved measures to protect the safety and privacy of residents by regulating the behavior of
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Friday, September 27, 2024
Chester County commissioners and staff from the county Department of Community Development attended the official opening of The Willows at Valley Run in Caln Township, the county’s newest and largest affordable housing development. Chester County invested $2.4 million in The Willows, which has 120 one-, two- and three-bedroom rental units that are
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Friday, September 20, 2024
The Chester County Planning Commission is hosting a free, virtual roundtable series for leaders and residents of homeowners associations (HOAs) that will feature examples, guidance and discussion on how to make their communities more sustainable. “Creating a Sustainability Action Plan for HOAs” is the theme on Thursday, Sept. 26, at 6:30 p.m.
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Friday, September 20, 2024
In summer 2022, New Garden Township responded to complaints about odors being emitted from nearby mushroom composting facilities by commissioning a scientific study. The one-year study conducted by Lorenzo Cena, Ph.D., of West Chester University, measured the air quality near the mushroom farms — specifically whether ammonia, methane and hydrogen
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Easttown Township supervisors voted on Aug. 19 to enact an earned income tax (EIT) of 0.5%. The tax will be levied on earned income or net profits derived from individual residents of the township, and from nonresidents of the township from any business done in the township. The EIT will take effect in 2025. The 0.5% rate equals about $925 per year for a
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Friday, September 6, 2024
In December 2021, after several years of negotiation, New Garden Township acquired 305 Penn Green Road to be preserved in perpetuity and be accessible to residents. Shortly after the acquisition, a “no trespassing” sign was placed across the driveway, and the open space has remained inaccessible to the community. The property, which encompasses
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Friday, August 30, 2024
As Hankin Group opens a new 113,000-square-foot life sciences building at 240 Sierra Drive to tenants, the developer is planning its next lab building as part of its massive master-planned Eagleview development in Exton. Hankin Group is scheduled to break ground on a 63,000-square-foot life sciences building this fall at 100 Arrowhead Drive in Upper Uwchlan
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Friday, August 30, 2024
According to the Economic Policy Institute’s Family Budget Calculator, Chester County is the most expensive place overall to live in southeastern Pennsylvania — and housing is at the top of the list. It costs residents $10,738 every month to maintain a modest standard of living. The Family Budget Calculator was used to determine the local cost
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Friday, August 30, 2024
The court-appointed receiver for the City of Chester, Michael T. Doweary, plans to solicit bids for monetization of the water, wastewater and stormwater operations. “I am excited to propose an innovative approach that, if done properly, could not only help Chester address its financial situation, but also result in a publicly owned regional entity
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Oxford Borough Council held a public hearing to adopt Ordinance No. 965-2024, updating Chapter 27, Zoning, of the municipal code of ordinances to change the maximum building height in the PD-1 and R-1 zoning districts for lot clustering. The decision doesn’t affect how many houses would be allowed under the guidelines, just the maximum height.
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Friday, August 23, 2024
More than 200 Chester County residents filed into a public hearing in New Garden Township on Aug. 8 to voice opposition to Aqua Pennsylvania’s proposal to increase its water service rates by nearly 19% and its wastewater rates by more than 20%. Aqua filed the request with the Public Utility Commission (PUC) on May 24, which ordered an investigation to
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Friday, August 16, 2024
West Chester Borough Council will consider amending Chapter 112, Zoning, to add a short-term rental as a permitted use in the town center district by conditional use. It also adds a requirement for one off-street parking space per bedroom in a short-term rental. The ordinance will be considered for adoption at a public hearing on Wednesday, Aug. 21, at 5:30
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Friday, August 16, 2024
The North Coventry Township Board of Supervisors will consider for adoption draft Ordinance No. 02-2024, which would repeal and replace Chapter 259, Peddling and Soliciting. The draft ordinance establishes regulations for transient retail businesses requiring licenses, including relevant definitions, regulations regarding the conduct of transient retail
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Friday, August 16, 2024
The Suburban Realtors Alliance recently heard from a Realtor whose client was given 30 days to complete repairs as a condition of receiving a temporary certificate of occupancy in Spring City Borough. The Realtor provided the borough with information about Act 133 — which mandates a minimum of 12 months for the completion of repairs — and the
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Friday, August 9, 2024
About 30 Penn Township residents attended a July 24 planning commission meeting to express fears that a patch of rural open space was in danger of having its zoning changed. Environmental scientist Dennis Newbold said he was concerned because the land is owned by the Catholic Archdiocese and is up for sale. Citing the township’s comprehensive plans,
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Friday, August 9, 2024
The Oxford Borough Water Department is responsible for providing potable drinking water to the borough’s residents, which is no small task these days. The borough sources its water from a combination of the Chester Water Authority and local wells and owns a water treatment plant and a transmission, production, storage and distribution system serving
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Friday, August 2, 2024
East Coventry Supervisors voted to take the first step required to file a lawsuit against the North Coventry Municipal Authority (the Authority) and North Coventry Township in connection with the township’s efforts to sell its sewer system to Pennsylvania American Water for $7 million. At issue is the fact that East Coventry does not own a sewer
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Friday, August 2, 2024
A recent West Chester University analysis calls for spending a minimum of a half billion dollars to build a new residence hall and renovate several others. Jeffrey L. Osgood, Jr., WCU executive vice president and provost, said that students have shifted priorities, and many would now prefer to live on campus rather than nearby. The university would like as
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Friday, August 2, 2024
The Board of Supervisors of West Sadsbury Township will hold a public hearing to consider the adoption of the West Sadsbury Township Comprehensive Plan of 2024. The draft comprehensive plan is available here. The plan describes the community as one “that takes pride in its agrarian history and promotes a rural quality of life while balancing the
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Friday, July 26, 2024
Natural Lands announced the permanent preservation of the Painter farmstead in Warwick Township. The 14-acre property is now protected by a conservation easement that will ensure its meadows and woodlands will remain forever. The easement — which is a voluntary, legally binding and permanent land protection program — allows the farm to stay in
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Friday, July 26, 2024
East Caln Township recently completed an update to its comprehensive plan. The township was awarded an in-kind grant of $37,000 — 60% of the project cost — through Chester County's Vision Partnership Program to update the 2011 comprehensive plan. The plan update process began in 2022 and the final update was adopted in March. The plan is divided
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Friday, July 26, 2024
West Vincent Township supervisors voted unanimously to adopt a plastic bag ban for businesses that has been under discussion for more than two years. In previous discussions, the most unpopular aspect was the requirement that merchants charge customers for providing a paper bag. Supervisors Chair Dana Alan said the board decided to keep it in, but lowered
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Friday, July 19, 2024
A Fort Washington homebuilder purchased a 73-acre undeveloped property in Chester County for nearly triple what it sold for last year and plans to build dozens of single-family homes. Foxlane Homes recently bought the four parcels in Glenmoore, Wallace Township, for $6.8 million — 15 months after the land sold for $2.3 million, according to property
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Upper Uwchlan Township has been drafting a short-term rental ordinance that would amend the zoning section of the municipal code. The proposal would delete the definition of “Hotel/Motel/Motor Inn” to add definitions of hotel, motel and short-term rental. It would amend section 200 of the code to allow a short-term rental in the R-1 and R-2
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Friday, July 19, 2024
A public hearing on the future of the Big Elk Creek watershed drew more than 160 people to the auditorium of Avon Grove High School on July 9, along with local, county and state elected officials. The event was organized by the Republican Policy Committee of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Many residents called for the 1,800 acres of state-owned
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The East Goshen Township Board of Supervisors approved new sewer rates that took effect on July 1, with a fixed rate of $60.61 and $12 per thousand gallons. It’s an increase over the old rates of $55.61 fixed and $9.70 per thousand gallons. Residents should expect to see a change in the July 2024 bill. To calculate sewer consumption for any given
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Friday, July 12, 2024
New Chester County homeowners have reached out to the Chester County Recorder of Deeds (ROD) office with concerns about potential scam mail. Potential victims receive a letter in the mail that offers a fee of around $100 dollars to receive a copy of their deed. The tone of the letters implies a sense of urgency for new homeowners to quickly pay the fee so
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Friday, July 5, 2024
West Chester Borough now has an online service to make it easier to apply for new rental licenses and renew existing licenses. Visit the borough’s new permitting and licensing portal for more information. Source: West Chester Borough; 6/2024
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Friday, July 5, 2024
United Way of Chester County offers assistance to mobile home owners in Chester County to file for property tax reassessment appeals. The fees are paid by donors on behalf of the homeowners in the program. Since 2019, the United Way Mobile Home Tax Reassessment Program has assisted in 1,014 successful appeals and saved each mobile home owner an average of
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Friday, June 28, 2024
West Chester Borough Council voted to change the rules on how many parking spaces a builder should incorporate into new housing developments. Builders will need to supply more spaces than were required in 2021, the last time the ordinance was changed, but not as many as were required by zoning ordinances set prior to 2021. Councilwoman Nicole Scimone said
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Unionville-Chadds Ford School District directors passed a budget with a tax increase levied on property owners in the district. Unlike most years, however, the vote wasn’t unanimous. The lone “no” vote came from School Board Member Brian Schartz, who motioned to approve the 2024-2025 academic year budget. The budget calls for revenues of
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Friday, June 21, 2024
The millage rate in Tredyffrin-Easttown School District will be 28.3372 mills in the 2024-2025 school year, up 1.5788 mills from the current rate, after the school board adopted its budget. The budget includes $181.1 million in revenues, $185.7 million in expenditures, and a $4.61 million fund balance allocation. Source: Tredyffrin-Easttown Patch;
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Natural Lands announced the preservation via easement of a 95-acre forested landscape in East Nantmeal Township. The Keen property represents the last, largest remaining unprotected woodland tract surrounding the historical Village of Nantmeal. The dense forest provides essential habitat for songbirds and other wildlife and helps to filter rainwater before
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Friday, June 21, 2024
The Uwchlan Township Board of Supervisors has approved an ordinance to hold a referendum on introducing an open space tax. The referendum question will be included in the November general election ballot. If voters approve it, the open space tax would add 0.25% to the earned income tax (EIT), raising it from 1% to 1.25%. The new tax would be paid by
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Friday, June 14, 2024
East Whiteland Township supervisors, after a public hearing on May 8, approved an ordinance placing a referendum question on the November ballot. The question asks residents if they favor the imposition of a tax on earned income at a rate not to exceed 0.05% and an increase in the real property tax at a rate not to exceed 0.45 mills ($0.45 per $1,000
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Overnight from Jan. 24 to 25, the Chester County Department of Community Development conducted its annual Point-in-Time Count of homeless people. The department just released the results, which revealed that 213 people were experiencing homelessness in Chester County that night — a significant reduction compared to the 2023 figure of 436. Several
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Friday, June 7, 2024
The Kennett Consolidated School District broke ground on its upcoming New Garden Elementary School in a ceremony on May 24 that took place behind the existing elementary school. The original building, which opened in 1957, is destined for demolition, with the opening of the new structure planned for 2026. The new building will cost $58.2 million. New Garden
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Nearly $6.7 million in open space preservation and park improvement grants were announced by the Chester County commissioners. The grants are made available through Chester County’s Preservation Partnership Program, which offers funding to municipalities and nonprofit land preservation organizations. A total of 16 grants are included this year,
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Friday, May 24, 2024
West Chester Borough Council authorized solicitor Kristin Camp to rewrite a borough ordinance that will loosen the rules for keeping chickens in backyards. The borough has issued two permits to residents who are currently raising chickens. Camp will craft language that will allow a five-foot setback from a property line, rather than the current 10 feet.
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Friday, May 24, 2024
The Uwchlan Township Board Of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to receive comment and public testimony regarding a proposed ordinance to add a new Article V, “Open Space Tax.” The ordinance would authorize a referendum pursuant to the Open Space Lands Acquisition and Preservation Act, known as the Open Space Act. If passed, the ballot
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Friday, May 17, 2024
Downingtown Area School District (DASD) will host a community meeting on Wednesday, May 29, at 6 p.m. to discuss the future of the Siemens Property, also known as Lionville Station Farm. All DASD residents are invited to hear about potential uses for the property and share their thoughts. The district purchased the property in Uwchlan Township from Siemens
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Friday, May 17, 2024
The Tredyffrin/Easttown School Board voted to adopt a $185.7 million proposed final budget for 2024-2025. The budget proposal would increase the property tax rate by about 6.3% from the current 26.7585 mills to 28.4472, according to the April 29 school board agenda packet. The district successfully filed for state approval to exceed its Act 1 cap of a 5.3%
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Friday, May 17, 2024
Unionville-Chadds Ford School District’s proposed final budget for 2024-2025, which will be up for a vote on June 17, calls for revenues of $105.81 million and expenditures of nearly $105.84 million. It also calls for property tax increases of 2.07% for Chester County property owners and 11.06% for property owners in Chadds Ford Township, the only
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Friday, May 10, 2024
As of April 1, East Goshen Township changed its requirements for the issuance of a Certificate of Residential Re-Occupancy. An inspection is no longer required, and the fee was reduced from $100 to $50. The township will review the property for open permits, open violations and any change of use. A signed affidavit is required for automatic garage door
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Friday, May 10, 2024
The Phoenixville Area School Board held off on a scheduled adoption of a $113 million proposed final budget, deciding instead to review it one more time with an eye toward raising the new tax rate higher than the 1.89% being proposed. School Board President Susan Turner said the planned opening of the Seven Stars Elementary School in the 2025-2026 school
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Friday, May 10, 2024
A nonprofit advocacy group for the area's homeless is opening up a new brick-and-mortar location in Phoenixville at 145 S. Main St. The group, Better Days Ahead, distributes food, clothing and survival gear directly to area homeless and at-risk individuals. The group has been in operation for the past five years, active in Phoenixville, Pottstown and
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The Suburban Realtors Alliance was recently made aware that West Vincent Township has started conducting point-of-sale inspections of existing residential properties. The Alliance requested a copy of the enabling ordinance and was referred to the building permit section of the zoning chapter in West Vincent’s municipal code, which mainly concerns new
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Toll Brothers has acquired 22 acres in East Brandywine Township with plans to build 89 townhomes, further expanding the company’s presence in the Philadelphia suburbs. The Fort Washington-based homebuilder paid $6.23 million for the parcels at 1130 and 1136 Horseshoe Pike, according to property records. Toll bought the land, which is located two miles
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Friday, April 26, 2024
West Chester Borough Council continues to discuss whether and where to allow short-term rentals in private homes. The public conversation has been ongoing for about a year. Councilwoman Lisa Dorsey said there are already 60 operating short-term rentals in the borough, and she favors allowing short-term rentals, such as Airbnbs, in all neighborhoods.
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Oxford Borough Council continues to discuss who should pay for improvements to sidewalks and curbing — individual property owners or the borough itself. Seeking grant funding is one possibility, but such funding is very competitive. A planned project on Mount Vernon Street will not include sidewalks, but it does have curbing, which could cost upwards
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Friday, April 26, 2024
At a West Chester Borough Council work session, residents and officials alike rejected a plan to bring affordable housing to a parking lot that hosts the West Chester Growers Market. After a long discussion on the agenda item “Consider entering into a housing development proposal agreement with Pennrose Properties on Lot 10 Chestnut and Church
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Friday, April 19, 2024
A proposed affordable housing development is stirring controversy in West Chester Borough, as community members say it would impact the site of an ongoing farmers market. The proposal would bring a building of anywhere from one to five stories to the corner of Church and Chestnut streets, and would include the parking lot where the West Chester Growers
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Friday, April 19, 2024
The Avon Grove School Board voted to approve Fair Funding Resolution #24-10 in support of constitutional funding of public schools and opposed to funding of nonpublic schools. The resolution follows recent statewide developments related to school funding. Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court in February 2023 decided that the state’s method of funding
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Friday, April 19, 2024
The Londonderry Township Board of Supervisors adopted the 2021 International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) at its March 12 meeting. The full ordinance can be accessed here. The IPMC applies to all buildings within the township. Source: Londonderry Township; 4/2024
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Friday, April 12, 2024
The Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PREIT), owner of several malls in the Philadelphia suburbs, is emerging from its second bankruptcy in four years after a private company controlled by a small group of investment firms purchased its debt. In recent years, the company identified Exton Square Mall as a potential redevelopment site, and it remains
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Honey Brook Community Library recently held a groundbreaking ceremony for an expansion project that will nearly double the size of the library. The project, funded in part by a $1.14 million state grant, will expand programming and community space, improve ventilation, and add additional dedicated learning space for children, teens and adults. Construction
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The Kennett Township Board of Supervisors gave approval at a March 20 meeting to the preliminary-final land development plan for the Parkside real estate project in the township, with six conditions. The project, which will be developed by North Walnut Holding Company L.P. will be 16 acres and located on Walnut Road just to the south of Route 1. The
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The Willistown Township Board of Supervisors will consider amendments to the peddling and soliciting ordinance. The changes will eliminate the curfew for peddling and soliciting and amend the rules of conduct. The amendments will be considered at a public hearing on Monday, April 8, at 7 p.m. at Sugartown Elementary School, 611 Sugartown Road, Malvern.
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Friday, March 29, 2024
West Nantmeal Township supervisors will consider amendments to Chapter 140 of the township code, Property Maintenance Code and Use and Occupancy Certification. The township has had a property maintenance code, rental inspection and point-of-sale inspection ordinance in place since 2010. The changes incorporate language from Act 133, the state Municipal Code
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Friday, March 29, 2024
The City of Coatesville will receive a grant of nearly $960,00 to implement the Ash Park Master Plan Phases I and II. The 9.3-acre park is situated between Walnut and Kersey streets. U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D), partnering with U.S. Rep Chrissy Houlahan (D, PA-6), helped procure funding for 14 projects through the Community Project Funding grant, which
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Friday, March 29, 2024
In 2021, New Garden Township supervisors authorized the $1.4 million purchase of the 106-acre Loch Nairn Golf Club site from the Smedley family. At a township meeting in March, Kate Raman, a conservation project manager at Natural Lands, spelled out the future for the park that will include forests, trails and pathways, restored streams and acres of meadows
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Moody’s Investor Service, S&P Global (formerly Standard & Poor’s), and Fitch Ratings recently verified that Chester County‘s financial picture had allowed it to maintain its top-level AAA ratings. The county is the only one in Pennsylvania with three AAA ratings — the “triple-triple” — and is one of just a
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Ann's Heart, a nonprofit organization in Phoenixville, has received a grant of more than $977,000 that will allow it to purchase and renovate its existing downtown campus. The nonprofit provides numerous critical services, including shelter, housing case management and food programs to vulnerable populations. The grant money comes via the recent Community
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Friday, March 15, 2024
Under Chapter 145 of the Municipal Code of East Whiteland Township, property owners are required to file a "Rental Occupancy Report" within 30 days of becoming a landlord of any business unit or dwelling unit by agreement of sale, deed or by any other means. Under the code, a "business unit" is a parcel of real estate or any unit thereon, utilized by any
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Friday, March 15, 2024
The Chester County Recorder of Deeds office often receives questions from submitters about how to re-record a deed or mortgage that was recorded with mistakes. Mistakes can range from forgetting to attach a legal description to the mortgage or misspelling a grantor or grantee’s name. A re-recorded mortgage, re-recorded deed or deed of correction can
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Friday, March 8, 2024
In August 2023, the New Garden Township Board of Supervisors adopted Ordinance #261 authorizing inspection of all rental properties, effective Jan. 1, 2024. The ordinance provides the ability for the township to inspect residential rental units, requiring landlords to file reports listing all residential rental units, and authorizing the code enforcement
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Friday, March 1, 2024
The Chester County Department of Community Development was recently awarded more than $2 million in fiscal year 2023 Continuum of Care (CoC) Competition Awards by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The funds are allocated for projects focused on ending homelessness. The Chester County commissioners applauded the funding, saying,
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Friday, February 23, 2024
Tredyffrin Township announced in its February 2024 newsletter that it will no longer send street light bills to residents. “By upgrading our street lights to more efficient LEDs, we reduced costs dramatically,” the newsletter said. Tredyffrin also recently posted a comprehensive roadway report. Last year, the township contracted engineering firm
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Plans for a new Greenwood Elementary School moved a step closer to reality after the Feb. 7 Kennett Township supervisors meeting. The supervisors approved the conditional land development plan to build a new 105,000-square-foot building on the same property as the current school at 420 Greenwood Road. The township’s planning commission voted to
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Friday, February 9, 2024
East Coventry’s plan to sell its sewer system has prompted opposition from North Coventry Municipal Authority. In August 2023, the East Coventry Board of Supervisors voted to sell the sewer collections system to Pennsylvania American Water for $7 million. The decision was prompted by the urging of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
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Friday, February 2, 2024
With local inventory at historically low levels, homebuilders are eyeing Greater Philadelphia's most affluent and land-rich county for new construction homes, which now account for nearly half of the properties currently available in Chester County. In 2023, applications to build 4,366 new single family, apartment and townhome units were filed with the
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Penn Medicine has canceled plans to buy the Brandywine Hospital campus in Caln Township near Coatesville from owner and former operator Tower Health. The proposed acquisition was intended to be part of Penn Medicine's efforts to work with the Department of Veterans Affairs to improve health care delivery to military veterans. “After an intensive due
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Friday, February 2, 2024
West Chester Borough will now collect its own property taxes instead of having the Chester County Treasurer’s Office do it. “The borough will save cash and receive tax income sooner by collecting property taxes on its own,” Borough Councilman Bernie Flynn said. The county treasurer is currently contracted to collect property taxes for 23
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Friday, January 26, 2024
Tredyffrin Township was awarded a $112,842 state grant to help fund a bike/skills pump park, state Rep. Melissa Shusterman (D-157) said. The supervisors applied for a $250,000 grant following several meetings in which residents in the Chesterbrook community expressed an interest in having a bike track in the township. The proposed location for the bike park
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Property owners in the Kennett Consolidated School District will face a 4.8% tax hike for the 2024-2025 school year if the preliminary budget is approved as is. The numbers, calculated by district CFO Mark Tracy and announced by board treasurer Michael Finnegan, reflected an increase from the current $98 million operating budget to $104 million. Finnegan
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Unionville-Chadds Ford School District’s preliminary 2024-2025 budget estimates revenues and expenditures of approximately $106.7 million, with a $12,000 deficit between them. The budget proposes millage rates of 33.17 mills for Chester County property owners and 18.89 mills for properties in Chadds Ford, the only Delaware County municipality in the
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Friday, January 19, 2024
On Dec. 27, 2023, Westtown Township supervisors voted to deny Fox Clearing LLC’s conditional use application to construct 85 single-family detached homes on the Stokes estate on Shiloh Road. The Stokes Estate 2023 Application page on the township website includes a complete copy of the application, planning commission recommendations and hearing
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Friday, January 12, 2024
The West Sadsbury Township Board of Supervisors on Jan. 2 voted to increase property taxes by 55% in 2024. The increase brings the new property tax rate to 5.6 mills. There is an additional 1.4-mill fire tax to cover fire and ambulance services. The new total tax rate is 7 mills, up from 5 mills in 2023. For a resident with a property assessed at $100,000,
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Friday, January 12, 2024
The Tredyffrin-Easttown School Board voted 7-1 to proceed to authorize an agreement to purchase a 15-acre property at 1200 W. Swedesford Road, Berwyn, for $15.9 million for a possible sixth elementary school. The district has 60 days to determine if the site is usable as an elementary school. The closing date would follow within 30 days after the review
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Friday, January 12, 2024
South Coatesville Borough residents will see an increase in trash fees for 2024, affecting approximately 560 households. Borough council voted unanimously to increase the annual trash fee from $250 to $375, effective Jan. 1. “The normal resident of the borough may be shocked when they see a $375 trash bill,” resident Tina Floyd said. In January,
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Chester County commissioners approved a 2024 consolidated budget of $683.4 million that keeps the county property tax rate at 4.551 mills. The consolidated budget includes a $613.3 million operating budget and a $70.1 million capital budget. The operating budget reflects a decrease in federal and state COVID and American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) grants, but
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Friday, December 22, 2023
West Chester Borough Council raised property taxes by 5% as part of its $35.7 million 2024 budget. The budget covers police, fire, emergency services, trash, recycling, streets, recreation and other services. The average taxpayer living in a house assessed at about $178,600 will pay an additional $70 a year in real estate taxes. Sean Metrick, borough
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Kennett Square Borough Council approved a 2024 budget that will raise taxes by 1.2 mills. The increase comes, in part, from the library tax that was approved by residents in a referendum during the November election. The remainder of the tax increase is for the new fire and EMS contract with Longwood Fire Company, which will provide services for 2024. The
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Friday, December 15, 2023
Chester County commissioners approved $5 million in grants to municipalities in urban centers throughout the county for community revitalization projects. Commissioners Chairwoman Marian Moscowitz said the grants help the county’s urban centers encourage growth and ensure that crucial infrastructure needs are maintained and improved.
Oxford Borough:
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Friday, December 15, 2023
Toll Brothers has purchased a 21-acre property in Spring City Borough near Phoenixville, where it plans to build 33 single-family homes. The Fort Washington home builder paid $2.64 million for the land at 25 Seven Stars Road. The land was previously owned by the Soltys family since at least 1947, according to property records. The undeveloped site is just
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Friday, December 8, 2023
The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) has laid out its plans for the new Big Elk Creek State Park, and some neighbors and stakeholders aren’t happy. Located along the Maryland border, the 1,700-acre Big Elk Creek property in Elk and Franklin townships contains 800 acres of farmland, 600 acres of woodland, 100 acres
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Friday, December 8, 2023
About 50 Malvern area residents and state officials on Nov. 29 celebrated the opening of the Great Valley Community Organization’s community center at 5 N. Bacton Hill Road in East Whiteland Township. “This center has been a dream of ours for the last 15 years and today we open the doors to a bright future ahead,” said Tom Curran, founder
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Tredyffrin supervisors approved an inter-municipality agreement between Tredyffrin and Easttown townships that will see the construction of a new fire station, which will combine fire and EMS services. “This is the culmination of two years of work to fund and move forward with Easttown to ensure our residents are delivered the highest quality of
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Friday, December 8, 2023
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued an order Tuesday denying Tower Health’s bid to appeal its loss of a property tax exemption for Phoenixville Hospital. Phoenixville Area School District said the decision will allow it to keep nearly $5 million in property taxes paid by Tower since the company acquired the hospital in 2017. “This ruling is a
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Friday, December 1, 2023
Oxford Borough officials are grappling with a perfect storm of financial challenges that include rising costs, lingering impacts from the pandemic, and unfunded mandates from the state and federal government. Budget discussions are ongoing, but Oxford Borough Manager Pauline Garcia-Allen told the public at a finance committee meeting that there are no
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Friday, November 17, 2023
West Whiteland’s 2023 millage rate is 0.714 mills, which means the municipal portion of the average real estate tax bill is $127. The township’s proposed millage for the 2024 budget is 2 mills — a 180% increase — which would raise the average residential real estate tax bill to $354 and the average commercial real estate tax bill to
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Friday, November 17, 2023
Maryland developer Elm Street Communities is beginning site prep on a new development in Caln Township near Coatesville, with 175 townhomes and 87 single-family homes planned. After the development was fully approved a month ago, Elm Street bought the 119 acres for $6 million, according to Chester County property records. The vacant site is at 201 S. Caln
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Chester County Department of Community Development has received an Award of Excellence from the National Association for County Community and Economic Development (NACCED) for the creation of its Affordable Housing Developer Collaborative. NACCED cited the efforts of the county’s Partnership to End Homelessness initiative to bring together
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Westtown Township will consider enacting an ordinance to increase its earned income tax (EIT). The EIT would be increased for the purposes of securing open space by an additional 0.04%, for a total of 0.08% for open space and an overall total of 1.08% EIT split between the township and West Chester Area School District. The township was allowed to exceed
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Friday, November 3, 2023
The Kennett Greenway is about to add another link in what is envisioned as a 14-mile multi-purpose trail loop throughout Kennett Borough, Kennett Township, New Garden Township and northern Delaware. Representatives from the greenway project held a groundbreaking ceremony for the new Chandler Mill Trail, which will include paved pathways, a scenic overlook
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Friday, October 27, 2023
North Coventry Township amended its stormwater management ordinance in 2023 to comply with new provisions of the Chester County and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. The changes provide for updated criteria for regulated activities, such as grading, excavation, swimming pool construction and other building construction. Learn more about
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Friday, October 27, 2023
West Goshen Center owner Chris Robbins announced that a Target and Chick-fil-A are coming to the property. An almost 120,000-square-foot Target will occupy the space vacated by K-Mart, and a free-standing Chick-fil-A will sit in the southeast corner of the center. The Target is expected to open in spring 2025, and Chick-fil-A will likely open in the third
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Friday, October 27, 2023
Citing several threats to the viability of New Garden Township, Township Manager Christopher Himes proposed a real estate tax increase beginning in 2024 that would raise tax rates for homeowners as much as 120%. During a supervisors meeting on Oct. 16, Himes proposed a scenario that would raise millage rates from 1.72 mills to 3.9 mills. In a 57-page
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Downingtown Area School District had agreed to sell 237 acres of farmland in Uwchlan Township to Audubon Land Development for $96 million — but the deal appears to have been called off. The district bought the Lionville Station Farm property for $22 million in 2006, and planned to use the sale proceeds to finance full-day kindergarten and other
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Tredyffrin Township supervisors have tabled a plan to implement a stormwater fee to help with ongoing flooding issues throughout the township. Instead, the supervisors decided to implement a separate fund for stormwater management in the annual budget. Joseph F. DiRocco, finance director, said the township is adding tax increases for the stormwater fund.
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Friday, October 13, 2023
The West Fallowfield Township Board of Supervisors will consider an ordinance that would impose a requirement that property owners post reflective address signs on their properties. The ordinance will be considered by the board for adoption on Wednesday, Oct. 18, at 6:30 p.m. in the West Fallowfield Township Building, 3095 Limestone Road, Suite 1,
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Last month, Longwood Gardens, the botanical garden and former du Pont estate that sprawls over 1,000 acres of meadows, woodlands and rolling Chester County countryside in Kennett Square, repurchased the former Galer Estate Vineyard and Winery, which adjoins its campus in East Marlborough Township. A Longwood Gardens’ spokesperson would not disclose
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Friday, October 6, 2023
On July 27, the Chester County Court of Common Pleas, Orphan’s Court Division, approved a settlement agreement providing for the transfer of the 220-acre Swiss Pines property from its current owners, the Bartschi Foundation and Estate of Henriette Bumeder, to Charlestown Township. “Over the coming months we will begin the planning to meet our
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Chester County commissioners recently affirmed $2.7 million to implement the Chester County Whole-Home Repairs (WHR) program. The program will help low- to moderate-income homeowners make critical repairs so their homes are habitable, safe, accessible and healthy. The WHR program will be administered by the Chester County Department of Community Development
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Regional planners are reviewing designs for 155 single-family homes on a roughly 100-acre triangle of land at the intersection of Route 724, Sanatoga Road and Frick’s Lock Road in East Coventry Township. Proposed by Devon-based Artisan Development Group and called “Villages and Fricks Lock,” the project would pack the homes closely
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Friday, October 6, 2023
The French and Pickering Creek Conservation Trust has announced the preservation of more than 175 acres in two locations in Chester County. Landowners Ray and Terry Bentley, through their corporation Moose Meadows Properties LLC, have donated an amended conservation easement to expand the protection of the former Alberta Baker Pew property along portions of
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Monday, October 2, 2023
At a recent borough council meeting, West Chester Borough Manager Sean Metrick presented a preliminary 2024 borough budget that might require tax and fee increases. The borough has gone eight years without a property tax increase. “Eight years not changing the tax rate is just not sustainable,” Metrick told council. “We should work
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Kennett Square Borough officials shared a clean 2022 audit with attendees at a borough council meeting, with unmodified opinions on financial statements — the highest level of assurance a CPA can provide. The CPA firm, Zelenkofske Axelrod LLC (ZA), provided the findings, which are available on the borough’s public meeting documents site here. ZA
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The Transportation Management Association of Chester County (TMACC) is considering options to improve its Chescobus transit services: Coatesville LINK and SCCOOT. The agency is seeking public input via an online survey that is available in English and Spanish. Source: Chester County; 9/21/2023
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The East Goshen Pipeline Task Force provided input for reviews of both the Chester County and Pennsylvania hazard mitigation plans. The plans provide blueprints for first responders in emergency situations. In the past, pipelines have been approached using an all-hazard response. The Pipeline Task Force, along with other interested parties, is actively
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The Westtown-East Goshen Regional Police Department is in the process of updating its database for all commercial properties within the department’s coverage area. The department has created an emergency contact form for businesses. The department will not share the information outside of law enforcement agencies and other emergencies, such as fire
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Friday, September 29, 2023
New Garden Township held a joint open house with the architectural firm YSM that saw 200 area residents provide a wish list vision for the future of Saint Anthony’s in the Hills, a 137-acre property that the township purchased for $1.5 million in 2018. When the initial plans for the development of the property now known as New Garden Hills were first
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Friday, September 29, 2023
The Westtown-East Goshen Regional Police Department is in the process of updating its database for all commercial properties within the department’s coverage area. The department has created an emergency contact form for businesses. The department will not share the information outside of law enforcement agencies and other emergencies, such as fire
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Friday, September 22, 2023
A four-alarm fire broke out on South 3rd Street in Oxford Borough on Sept. 13, causing devastating damage to local businesses and residential units. Twenty-five families totaling 90 people have been displaced from their homes above the store fronts and warehouses on the block. The entirety of Oxford’s Main Street is shut down, with power to the area
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Friday, September 15, 2023
East Fallowfield Township is updating its park and open space plan, and is requesting resident feedback to help shape the future of recreation and open spaces in the township. Residents are invited to take a short survey by February 2024. Source: East Fallowfield Township; 9/2023
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Monday, September 11, 2023
Millions of dollars that help local governments manage stormwater runoff are at stake as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considers a lower court’s decision that a state-owned university was not required to pay because of its tax-exempt status. The decision also raises questions about whether the charges are even legal. Commonwealth Court ruled the
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Monday, September 11, 2023
Downingtown Area School District says it has been advised not to end an agreement with Audubon Land Development to build 1.96 million square feet of warehouse space on 237 acres of farmland in Uwchlan Township. Hundreds of residents have organized and asked the school district to sever the agreement and end the builder’s plans to construct warehouses
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Friday, September 1, 2023
Atlanta developer Portman Holdings bought 169 acres in Exton at the site of Happy Days Farm and is planning to build a massive 1.9 million-square-foot industrial complex. The site, at 1130 Pottstown Pike in Uwchlan Township, sits between Route 100 and I-476. The purchase price of the land and the expected cost of the planned development is a combined $330
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Friday, September 1, 2023
In an effort to curtail stormwater management problems and protect the environment, Tredyffrin Township supervisors unanimously passed a woodland conservation ordinance to protect trees. The ordinance requires residents to obtain permits when removing trees, noting that trees protect air quality and provide health benefits. Violation of the ordinance will
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Friday, August 18, 2023
New Garden Township supervisors are considering a draft ordinance that would regulate residential rental units. The ordinance would provide for the inspection and permitting of rental units, require landlords to file reports listing all rental units, and authorize the code enforcement officer to inspect them. A copy of the ordinance is available at the
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Friday, August 11, 2023
A proposed development at Rock Hill Farm is expected to be discussed at a Willistown Township Planning Commission meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 15. The meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Villa Maria Academy, 370 Central Ave., Malvern. Rock Hill Farm was purchased for $25.4 million by Philadelphia-area developer J. Brian O’Neill, who is seeking permission
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Thursday, July 20, 2023
East Coventry Township will host two open houses for the public to meet with Pennsylvania American Water, the township’s preferred bidder on the potential sale of its sanitary sewer system. Pennsylvania American Water will be there to share information on its services, environmental stewardship, operations, payment options, customer assistance
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Friday, July 14, 2023
East Goshen Township issued a reminder that the township has a solicitation ordinance that regulates door-to-door sales. Solicitors must visibly wear a township-issued solicitation license with a photo when they knock on your door. The township runs a background check on all applicants for a solicitation permit to deter crime. In addition, the township
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Springfield Township commissioners adopted Ordinance No. 1658, which establishes a 1% earned income tax beginning on July 1. The measure amends the township code to define the tax, outline requirements for declaration and payment, mandate employer withholding, and set forth the responsibilities of the tax collector, as well as procedures for enforcement,
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Chadds Ford Township is the first municipality in Delaware County to have a data center ordinance. Supervisors passed the 46-page document in a 3-0 vote during their April 8 meeting. Data centers would be restricted to the LI-1 Zoning District, be on a property with a minimum of 25 acres, be no taller than 40 feet, and be subject to conditional use
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Collingdale Borough Council announced that it will consider enacting an earned income tax. The council held a town hall on April 13 to discuss the possibility. The council also stated it is also planning to raise some fees. Fees for parking on the street will increase when it is street sweeper day, and there will be a new dumpster fee for those who have
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Friday, April 17, 2026
The Upper Chichester Township Board of Commissioners will hold a public hearing on a proposed ordinance that would amend the township’s zoning code to permit data centers and related facilities in designated districts. The measure would revise Chapter 600 to add definitions for data centers, accessory uses and substations, and establish detailed
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Friday, April 10, 2026
The Suburban Realtors Alliance recently received a complaint regarding Ridley Township’s use and occupancy application, which includes language requiring sidewalks, curbs and driveway aprons to be completed before a certificate of occupancy is issued, a provision the Alliance says conflicts with Pennsylvania law. The Alliance noted it has received
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Friday, April 3, 2026
The Newtown Township Planning Commission voted to endorse a redevelopment plan on Campus Boulevard that would demolish three office buildings and build 242 units of age-restricted housing. The owner, Campus Eleven Associates LP, is proposing to redevelop an existing 16-plus acre lot at 11,15 and 17 Campus Blvd. into a multi-family development, which would
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Collingdale Borough Council is considering an ordinance that would amend local regulations governing sewer systems and property inspections, including adding sewer lateral inspections to required transfer inspections and clarifying exemptions for certain property transfers, such as new construction and transfers among family members or existing owners. The
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Stream Realty Partners has proposed a four-building logistics center in Darby Township on a 106-acre property that formerly served as a Sunoco oil storage site. Called the Girard Point Logistics Center, the project has already appeared in front of the Delaware County Planning Commission and needs to secure township approval to move forward. The site, known
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Springfield Township commissioners are considering enacting a 1% earned income tax (EIT) on township residents. The township is facing rising costs for essential services, including police, fire protection, road and infrastructure, and officials say the EIT would diversify tax funding so the township is not entirely reliant on property taxes. The tax would
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Chadds Ford Township supervisors have voted to advertise an amendment to the zoning ordinance that would establish regulations for data centers. “These types of facilities are becoming more common, and the ordinance is intended to proactively define how and where they may be developed, including standards related to land use, infrastructure and
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Friday, March 20, 2026
Folcroft Borough Council is set to consider an ordinance that would require sewer lateral inspections prior to the issuance of a use and occupancy permit when property ownership is transferred. The proposed measure would amend Chapter 480 of the borough code to establish inspection requirements, define key terms, outline reinspection procedures and set
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Friday, March 20, 2026
Yeadon Borough Council is considering three ordinance amendments that would establish annual use and occupancy inspections for commercial properties, update the borough’s rental license and inspection code, and require the installation of secure lock boxes containing keys and emergency information for certain structures to aid first responders. The
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Radnor Township has backed off its plan to acquire roughly 17 acres from Valley Forge Military Academy Foundation through eminent domain, instead pursuing a deal with the institution for a right of first refusal for a larger piece of its property. Valley Forge Military Academy Foundation officials have said the land is not for sale and pledged to continue
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Chester Heights Borough has approved a reassessment cutting Wawa corporation’s real estate tax rate in half. Through negotiation, a value for five years, 2021 through 2025, was set and Wawa agreed to forgo filing an appeal in 2027, stabilizing the assessment for 2026 and 2027. The settlement provides stability and avoids financial risk and legal
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Friday, March 6, 2026
While most Delaware County property owners are coping with a 19% property tax increase in 2026, Wawa Inc. could see over a 50% real estate tax reduction on its corporate headquarters in Chester Heights Borough. Wawa appealed the 2020 assessed value of two parcels of property at their headquarters at 260 W. Baltimore Pike to the Delaware County Board of Tax
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Friday, March 6, 2026
Upper Darby Township requires a sewer lateral inspection at the time of sale as part of the use-and-occupancy (U&O) process. The inspection is valid for 90 days. If the buyer or seller changes during that period, a new inspection is required. To avoid delays in obtaining a certificate, the township recommends completing the sewer lateral inspection as
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Friday, February 27, 2026
The Wallingford-Swarthmore School Board approved a plan that would eliminate nearly 20 positions as it tries to reverse what officials have called a trend of unsustainable spending in the affluent suburban district. The reorganization plan, which was approved by the board 8-0 and takes effect on July 1, will save the district about $2 million, said
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Brandywine Realty Trust plans to open a 121-room Marriott Tribute Portfolio hotel this spring in Radnor. The company is the region’s largest office building owner, and the five-story project at 165 King of Prussia Road is meant to cater to their tenants in the suburbs. Dubbed The Brandywine, it cost $60 million to develop and will include an expansive
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Newtown Township supervisors rezoned the Campus Boulevard special district to allow about 250 new homes and other uses, such as restaurants or medical facilities, citing long-term financial concerns and the decline of office demand after the pandemic. Supervisors Chair Leonard Altieri III said the Newtown Square Corporate Campus is largely empty and no
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Swarthmore College is proposing to build an athletic complex in Swarthmore Borough, a move opposed by some residents. The new athletic complex aims “to create versatile sports facilities that enhance athletic and recreational opportunities while integrating community-friendly and environmentally mindful practices,” according to a letter the
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Friday, February 13, 2026
The Radnor Township Board of Commissioners introduced an ordinance that will begin the process of acquiring land from the Valley Forge Military Academy Foundation. The ordinance authorizes the board of commissioners “to select and appropriate by eminent domain certain real estate … for park, recreational and other municipal purposes.” It
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Swarthmore Borough and Nether Providence Township are exploring a merger of fire departments to compensate for a drop in volunteers and aging equipment. The proposed merger would unite the South Media and Garden City fire companies in Nether Providence with the Swarthmore Fire and Protective Association. Swarthmore and Nether Providence commissioned
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Delaware County Council unanimously approved a 2% increase to the hotel occupancy tax in a move that’s anticipated to draw in more economic dollars during a busy year. Council first introduced the tax increase in June to capitalize on the various upcoming events that will draw overnight visitors to the region. Pennsylvania law allows counties to place
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Friday, January 30, 2026
New-Jersey-based Chariot Equities and Allaire Health Services have bought the shuttered, 400-bed Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland Borough for $10 million. The new owners plan to reopen it within two years as a “right-sized” acute-care hospital offering emergency, inpatient and ambulatory services, after Prospect Medical closed the former
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Friday, January 30, 2026
A proposed land deal tied to a controversial development in Limerick Township, Montgomery County, would give Delaware County its first state game lands by transferring 177 acres of the former Sleighton Farm School property in Edgmont Township to the Pennsylvania Game Commission. In the proposed land swap, warehouse developer Limerick Town Center LLC would
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Friday, January 23, 2026
As Radnor Township begins the process to use eminent domain to acquire a roughly 14-acre tract of land owned by the Valley Forge Military Foundation, Valley Forge Public Service Academy is pulling its application for a charter school. Valley Forge Public Service Academy submitted its charter application with Radnor Township School District in mid-November,
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Friday, January 23, 2026
Springfield Hospital may finally have a new owner, as investor group KQT Aikens Partners 2 moves to buy the long-closed facility and its garage for $1 million. The deal hinges on Springfield Township officials lifting a deed restriction requiring 24/7 emergency services and agreeing to a tax assessment at the sale price, decisions that could shape future
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Friday, January 16, 2026
Plans to replace CF Patton Middle School now carry an estimated price tag of $139.5 million, about $19 million more than projected after a feasibility study, district officials said during a January school board work session. Facilities director James Whitesell said the estimate is roughly $8 million lower than earlier schematic design projections, while
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Friday, January 16, 2026
The Radnor Township Board of Commissioners is moving to acquire 14 acres of the 70-acre Valley Forge Military Academy campus in Wayne through eminent domain, citing concerns about overdevelopment and a lack of response from school officials as the academy prepares to close this year. Commissioners voted to authorize the township solicitor to draft paperwork
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Friday, January 9, 2026
Upper Darby Township has begun charging fees for residential use and occupancy (U&O) inspections, effective Jan. 1, 2026. The U&O permit fee must be paid at the time of application. The fee for a single-family U&O inspection is $110, while duplex inspections cost $135. The fee includes two inspections — an initial inspection and one
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Friday, January 2, 2026
Upper Darby Township enacted a local earned income tax (EIT) that went into effect on Jan. 1. All working residents of the township and nonresidents who work in the township are subject to the 1% tax on earned income and net profits. Keystone Collections Group serves as the local EIT administrator for all communities imposing the tax in Delaware County and
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Friday, January 2, 2026
Springfield Township commissioners approved a final 2026 budget that includes an 8.4% tax increase. The passage of Ordinance 1655 approves a $26.3 million budget along with the real estate tax increase. The 2026 millage rate is set at 4.25 mills, up from 3.92 mills in 2025. Trash fees will rise to $345 per household, while the sewer tax will remain at $12
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Friday, January 2, 2026
Upper Providence Township Council is planning to acquire a piece of land near the intersection of North Providence Road and Route 1. Ordinance No. 570 would “effectuate the purchase of and acquire the real property known as 1401 N. Providence Road … by either negotiation or eminant (sic) domain,” according to a public notice. The township
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Friday, January 2, 2026
Upper Providence Township's 2026 budget features a property tax reduction, dropping the millage rate from 2.399 to 2.1 mills, due to stronger earned income tax (EIT) revenue. The budget totals about $9.66 million in revenue and $9.45 million in spending, with a planned surplus and increased capital fund transfers, all while maintaining services. The final
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Friday, December 19, 2025
By a 4-1 vote, Delaware County Council passed a 2026 county operating budget with a 19% tax increase. “For far too long, Delaware County has underinvested in the central services, infrastructure and the systems that our residents rely on every day,” Chairperson Dr. Monica Taylor said. “For the first time in more than a decade, this budget
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Friday, December 19, 2025
The Township of Chester requires the completion of a use and occupancy (U&O) inspection for property transfers. The process includes submitting the use and occupancy application (with sewer lateral information) and scheduling the township inspection early enough to be completed prior to settlement. The form gathers key details, such as owner and buyer
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Friday, December 12, 2025
Delaware County Council approved a human relations ordinance on Dec. 3, which will prohibit acts of discrimination in employment, housing, public accommodations and health care. In September, the council passed a resolution establishing a 13-person volunteer human relations commission to hear complaints and mediate disputes. The members will attend training
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Friday, December 12, 2025
The Newtown Township Board of Supervisors will consider an ordinance amending the zoning code to create a new zoning district known as the Campus Boulevard Redevelopment District (CBRD) with two subdistricts known as CBRD-E and CBRD-W. The ordinance will rezone the roughly 90 acres of land located along Campus Boulevard between West Chester Pike and Bishop
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Friday, December 5, 2025
A North Jersey developer plans to build an 81,000-square-foot industrial building in Ridley Park as part of its continued expansion in the region. East Brunswick-based Greek Real Estate Partners secured a $12.3 million construction loan to develop the property at 130 S. Fairview Road, situated next to the intersection of I-95 and I-476 and 7 miles from
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Marple Township commissioners will consider adopting an ordinance that tightens contractor noise rules by banning the operation of equipment that can be heard beyond a property line between 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. — or until 9 a.m. on weekends and holidays — while also creating a new process for residents or businesses to seek special relief from the
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Delaware County residents expressed concerns about a proposed 19% tax increase at a recent council meeting. The 2026 county budget is anticipated to have its first reading at the Wednesday, Dec. 3, council meeting, and a final version is expected to be adopted by Dec. 10. A year ago, a property tax increase of 23% was enacted, and the tax bill for an
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Friday, November 28, 2025
The Community Action Agency of Delaware County, which operates three homeless shelters and a rental assistance program, was forced to reduce capacity at one of its shelters to 50% in October and close the other two on Nov. 1 as a result of the state budget impasse. Delaware County, which had been backfilling for missing state dollars, had to cut the funds
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Friday, November 21, 2025
St. Hedwig’s, which served Chester’s Polish Catholic community for generations, is officially no longer a church. And some of the former parish’s buildings may soon become multifamily housing. The archdiocese in January sold a property across the street from the church that included a former school, rectory and convent to a group of real
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Friday, November 14, 2025
Upper Providence Township officials will present the final 2026 proposed budget on Tuesday, Nov. 18, with adoption scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 16. The $9.66 million spending plan includes a 12.6% reduction in the overall real estate tax millage rate — from 2.399 to 2.1 mills — thanks to higher-than-expected earned income tax revenue, projected
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Friday, November 7, 2025
The Marple Township Board of Commissioners will consider rescinding Ordinance 2017-13, which regulates the planting, growing and maintenance of bamboo, under a proposed Ordinance 2025-4. The measure would remove all provisions of Chapter 214, Article III, of the Property Maintenance Code, including rules on existing bamboo, replanting prohibitions and
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Friday, October 31, 2025
The nonprofit Restorative Health Foundation, led by Philadelphia business owner Felicia Wilson, plans to reopen Springfield Hospital as a full-service medical facility if its $3 million bid for the property is approved in bankruptcy court. Spokeswoman Aminah Shabazz Perez said the group aims to partner with a major health system, such as Penn Medicine or
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Swarthmore Borough is tabling a proposal to implement a 1% earned income tax (EIT) after Swarthmore College stepped up to cover a funding gap left by the closure of Crozer-Chester Medical Center. Under a memorandum of understanding passed by Swarthmore Borough, the college will contribute $638,000 to the borough to help cover rising emergency service costs.
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Chester Township Council plans to adopt an ordinance raising the township’s occupational privilege tax from $10 to a $52 annual local services tax, effective Jan. 1, 2026. The occupational privilege tax has been renamed twice through state legislation and became the local services tax in 2008. The township’s new, higher tax, is expected to
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Friday, October 17, 2025
In September, the president of Valley Forge Military Academy (VFMA) stunned parents, alumni and faculty when he announced that the school would permanently close next year, citing years of declining enrollment and money troubles. But his account about the VFMA’s demise masked another plan that officials declined to disclose at the time. The president
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Friday, October 17, 2025
After years of debate and multiple legal challenges, Upper Darby Township Council voted 6-3 to enact a 1% earned income tax, effective Jan. 1, 2026. The measure, which followed five hours of discussion and public comment, will apply to most residents’ gross income, with exemptions for military pay and people earning under $12,000 annually. Supporters,
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Friday, October 17, 2025
The assessed value of a massive Collegeville office campus occupied by Pfizer and Dow has been reduced by more than 75% after two rounds of appeals. The new assessment for the parcels making up the 340-acre Bridge at Collegeville campus is a combined $45.4 million, according to Montgomery County property records, down from a combined $184.2 million since
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Friday, October 10, 2025
The planned closure of Valley Forge Military Academy in May 2026 is fueling speculation over the future of its 70-acre campus, a property that straddles Radnor Township in Delaware County and Tredyffrin Township in Chester County — two of the region’s most sought-after real estate markets. While Valley Forge Military College will continue to
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Delaware County Council and the Delaware County Planning Department have launched the Delaware County Primary Trail Network (PTN) Information Hub, a dynamic online resource that showcases the county’s growing trail system. The hub offers interactive maps, trail status updates and project details. For municipalities and planners, it provides resources
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Upper Providence Township Council is set to consider an ordinance that would redraw the township’s five voting districts to make them more balanced in population, following a Delaware County Court order issued earlier this year. The proposed ordinance would replace the township’s existing voting district map, which officials said is “out
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Friday, October 3, 2025
The shuttered Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland and Springfield Hospital will be auctioned on Oct. 10 as part of Prospect Medical Holdings Inc.’s bankruptcy proceedings, according to a court filing Friday. Bids are due Oct. 7 and must be free of contingencies, leaving potential buyers to contend with questions over property taxes. Industry
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Delaware County Council voted unanimously on Sept. 17 to approve Resolution 2025-10, establishing a county Human Relations Commission (HRC). Councilmembers described the measure as both symbolic and practical — showing Delaware County is “committed to standing against discrimination in all its forms, while beginning the careful work of designing
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Friday, September 19, 2025
A group of local investors have taken ownership of the Taylor Hospital site with the intent to make it a viable health care facility once again. The group purchased the 165,000-square-foot facility at 175 E. Chester Pike in Ridley Park for $1 million. For two years, the site will be taxed based on a $1 million assessment, then it will be reassessed. All
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Friday, September 12, 2025
A group of private investors has entered into a deal to acquire the shuttered Taylor Hospital in Delaware County for $1 million, according to documents filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Texas by Prospect Medical Holdings. California-based Prospect Medical, which filed for bankruptcy in January, is the owner of the closed Ridley Park hospital campus at
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Delaware County Council is considering creating a county-based Human Relations Commission that would have the authority to issue fines up to $500 based on violations impacting more than two dozen classifications. The creation of the commission had its first reading at the August county council meeting. It would consist of 12 volunteer members who would hear
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Swarthmore Borough’s Tree Committee recently shared an informational resource for residents who need to make sidewalk repairs near trees. The committee recognizes that tree roots can damage sidewalks, and there is a delicate balance between a safe sidewalk and maintaining the tree canopy in the borough. If a tree does not survive a sidewalk repair it
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Upper Darby Township Council will hold a public hearing on a proposed ordinance that would impose a 1% earned income tax on residents and nonresidents working in the township. The ordinance, No. 3191, would require employers to collect the tax at the source, establish exemptions, and set rules for collection and enforcement beginning on Jan. 1, 2026. The
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Friday, August 29, 2025
Swarthmore Borough Council unanimously approved the borough’s 2025 comprehensive plan, called Imagine Swarthmore, which updates the existing 2006 multi-municipal comprehensive plan. The council also voted to advertise a revised ordinance regarding by-right use of nonconforming properties. Members of Swarthmore’s Development and Affordability
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Friday, August 29, 2025
Residents of Chester City and neighboring communities can enjoy a newly revitalized Sun Village Park that includes a storybook walking trail, native plantings, new picnic tables, benches and community mural art. The improvements are the culmination of a three-year, $35,000 climate resilience communities project grant funded by the William Penn Foundation.
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Upper Darby School District has finalized its acquisition of the shuttered Delaware County Memorial Hospital. According to an asset purchase stipulation filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court earlier this month, Upper Darby School District agreed to pay $600,000 to California-based Prospect Medical for the 66,000-square-foot hospital building and two other
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Swarthmore Borough Council’s Finance Committee has been exploring an earned income tax as a potential way to expand the tax base. The borough has experienced rising costs in order to provide advanced life support to residents in the wake of Crozer Health’s closure. The committee has considered a possible rate of no more than 0.5% on earned
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Delaware County Council scheduled a public hearing for the first reading of an ordinance that would establish a county human relations commission. Ordinance 2025-06 would formally authorize the creation of the commission, which would serve as a local body to address human relations issues within the county. The meeting was scheduled for Wednesday, Aug. 20,
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Friday, August 15, 2025
Efforts to again pass an earned income tax is (EIT) on an Upper Darby council committee meeting agenda. The 1% tax on most residents’ income has been fought over through the past two administrations. In May, council members tabled the most recent vote on the tax after residents — who in the past successfully sued to block the tax —
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Friday, August 8, 2025
After hearing numerous complaints about the difficulty of conducting real estate transactions in Upper Darby Township, the Suburban Realtors Alliance (SRA) conducted a survey asking Realtors to share their specific experiences. In late June, SRA staff and local Realtors met in person with Upper Darby officials to convey these concerns and discuss solutions.
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Friday, August 8, 2025
A federal bankruptcy judge has granted Prospect Medical Holdings permission to abandon Delaware County Memorial Hospital and Taylor Hospital, despite objections from the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office, Delaware County, Upper Darby Township and Ridley Park Borough related to potential public safety issues, lack of transparency, and abandonment
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Radnor Township commissioners approved a preliminary land development plan to construct 29 new, single-family homes on a portion of the former Hamilton estate along Eagle Road, Grant Lane and Strafford Avenue in Wayne. An attorney representing the developer, George Broseman, noted that the development plan that was brought forward came after meetings with
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Friday, August 1, 2025
As of June 26, Chester City Council repealed the city’s requirement for a pre-sale inspection on residential properties. Rental properties are still required to be registered and inspected. The rental registration application can be found here. Commercial properties must also apply for use and occupancy permits. The Alliance has updated the
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Friday, July 25, 2025
A local developer is proposing a mixed-use development on 14.5 acres in Drexel Hill. Greg Lingo, owner of Delaware County-based Rockwell Development Group, came before the Upper Darby Township Planning Commission with conceptual plans to develop a wooded property next to Collingbrook United Methodist church between State Road and Township Line Road. Current
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Trainer Borough Council is accepting bids for the sale of borough-owned property at 824 Main St., the former borough hall building. Bids will be accepted until July 25, at 9 a.m., at which time all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. The property will be sold as-is. The borough administration moved to a new headquarters at 4300 Township Line Road
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Friday, July 11, 2025
As of June 26, Chester City Council repealed the city’s requirement for a pre-sale inspection on residential properties. Rental properties are still required to be registered and inspected. The rental registration application can be found here. Commercial properties must also apply for use and occupancy permits. Source: Chester City; 7/2025
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Friday, July 11, 2025
Morton Borough Council voted against a multi-municipality Emergency Medical Services (EMS) agreement dubbed “The Swarthmore Plan.” The vote puts the financial structure of the partnership in question as the Aug. 1 termination date looms for the stopgap coverage provided by Delaware County. The proposed plan was the result of months of meetings
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Friday, July 11, 2025
The Wallingford Swarthmore School Board approved a budget with a 2.85% increase. Business administrator DeJuana Mosley noted that the increase was necessary to offset higher medical and dental premiums, increases to the Public School Employees’ Retirement System (PSERS), and other expenses. She also noted that the revenue from tax-assessed properties
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Friday, July 4, 2025
Springfield Township commissioners approved a micro-hospital development project. Before he cast the deciding vote, Board President Jeff Rudolph said, “This has probably been the biggest land development project in this town for the last 40 years. I’ve heard everybody’s voice. I’ve listened, but we also have a duty to provide proper
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Friday, July 4, 2025
Delaware County Council is considering raising the hotel occupancy tax from 3% to 5% to take advantage of potential revenues associated with large events that will take place in the next year. “There’s a lot going on in 2026 in the region. The visitation numbers will be tremendous,” Rob MacPherson, chief marketing officer for Visit Delco,
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Friday, June 27, 2025
A working group of municipalities — including Morton, Nether Providence, Rose Valley, Rutledge and Swarthmore — has been meeting to address the issue of ambulance coverage in the wake of Crozer’s closure. In order to avoid any breaks in coverage the partnership must go into effect by Aug. 1, when the temporary ALS services supplied by
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Collingdale Borough Council will consider multiple ordinances at its meeting on Tuesday, July 1, at 7:30 p.m. The various proposals would: create a permitting process for block parties; update allowable noise levels in the nuisance ordinance; establish procedures for the rental and use of borough-owned facilities, parks and fields; change the composition of
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Friday, June 27, 2025
St. Joseph’s Family Hope Center in the convent of the former Our Lady of Charity Catholic Church is closing at the end of June. The facility has been open for nine years, serving hundreds of mothers and their children. Brookhaven Borough purchased the property for open space, and council members originally expressed hope that the shelter could stay,
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Friday, June 20, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance is asking Realtors to share their experiences working in Upper Darby Township. The Alliance staff has been in contact with the township regarding issues in its use and occupancy inspection process, and will be meeting with township officials later this month. Realtors are asked to fill out this brief online survey.
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Brookhaven Borough will consider adopting a volunteer service tax credit for fire companies and nonprofit emergency medical service agencies. The enabling ordinance will be considered for adoption on Monday, July 7, at 7 p.m. at the Brookhaven Municipal Center, 2 Cambridge Road. Source: Daily Times; 6/5/2025
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Norwood Borough Council will consider an ordinance amending Chapter 220 of the Norwood Borough Code, governing peddling and soliciting, and adding provisions governing public adjusters. The ordinance will be considered for adoption on Monday, June 23, at 7 p.m. at the Norwood Municipal Building, 10 W. Cleveland Ave. Source: Daily Times; 6/16/2025
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Collingdale Borough Council will consider establishing a human relations commission and adopting a proposed Chapter 145 of the borough code, titled “Human Relations and Non-Discrimination.” Collingdale’s drafted legislation casts a wide protective net, prohibiting discrimination for gender identity, gender expression, age over 35,
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Friday, June 13, 2025
The Suburban Realtors Alliance is asking Realtors to share their experiences working in Upper Darby Township. The Alliance staff has been in contact with the township regarding issues in its use and occupancy inspection process, and will be meeting with township officials later this month. Realtors are asked to fill out this brief online survey.
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Despite objections from some residents, Concord Township Council approved an expansion plan for Penns Woods Winery. The expansion would be for the barn and parking areas at 124 Beaver Valley Road. The barn would be expanded from 1,400 square feet to 4,500 square feet with a deck. An attorney for the neighbors said his clients have had no objection to the
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Friday, June 6, 2025
The Radnor School Board approved a $124.99 million budget with a 3.85% tax increase for the 2025-2026 school year. The budget raises the property tax rate from 15.2109 mills to 15.8 mills. Brian Pawling, the district’s business administrator, said some of the savings came from the elimination of two of the 10 contingency positions normally budgeted
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Saint Joseph’s Family Hope Center in Brookhaven Borough, one of only two family shelters in Delaware County, faces imminent closure as the borough is terminating its lease. The center must vacate the premises by Sept. 30. Shelter employees are working to move families out by the end of June. According to Robert Jordan, the shelter’s board
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Marple Township commissioners are considering a draft ordinance establishing “registration of foreclosing mortgaged property,” according to a public notice. The proposal would “require the registration and maintenance of certain real property by mortgagees,” and establish penalties and enforcement. Township commissioners will hold a
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Chester’s departments of Public Works and Licensing and Inspections visited the six-story Banneker Apartments on May 7 and found numerous violations. Under Mayor Stefan Roots, the city has aggressively worked to address quality-of-life issues for residents, including removing abandoned vehicles and enforcing building code compliance citywide. A
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Friday, May 23, 2025
In what may turn out to be a $410 million question in the City of Chester’s historic bankruptcy, the state Supreme Court heard arguments over who owns the Chester Water Authority (CWA) and who has the right to sell it. State law clearly gives the city control over the assets, said Chester attorney Matthew White. Noting that only a minority of its
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Upper Darby Township Council once again delayed enacting a new 1% earned income tax (EIT). The council had scheduled a vote for May 8 on the EIT draft ordinance, but it tabled the matter after hearing from residents who said it was improperly written. The council passed an EIT in February that was subsequently invalidated due to multiple errors. Under state
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Friday, May 16, 2025
At the May 8 meeting of Upper Darby Township Council, plumbers voiced their displeasure at the township’s recent change in licensing requirements. Robert DeLuca, a lawyer representing the plumbers, said that for 30 years the Philadelphia Plumbing, Heating and Cooling Administration has been issuing the test for plumbers. The township no longer
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Friday, May 9, 2025
Some Upper Darby Township residents are seeking an injunction against the township regarding its planned earned income tax (EIT). Four township residents asked Common Pleas Court to stop Mayor Ed Brown and the township council from implementing changes to the tax ordinance until legal questions are answered. The legal questions stem from a March 14 lawsuit
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Friday, May 9, 2025
The Swarthmore Borough Finance Committee will hold a special meeting to discuss an earned income tax (EIT). The meeting will take place on Monday, May 12, at 8:30 a.m. at Swarthmore Borough Hall, 121 Park Ave. Swarthmore Borough Council will have a meeting at 7 p.m. on May 12, as well. Source: Swarthmorean; 5/2/2025
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Friday, May 2, 2025
The abrupt closure of Crozer Health, Delaware County’s largest health system, will cost nearby school districts, boroughs and townships millions of dollars in tax revenue each year. Crozer-Chester Medical Center, the system’s flagship hospital, and its corporate offices sit in Upland Borough. The financially distressed Chester Upland School
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Upper Darby Township launched its interior resale inspections at the beginning of 2025, and Suburban Realtors Alliance continues to receive feedback from Realtors working there. Here are a few best practices when working with Upper Darby:
The main point of contact for all resale-inspection-related scheduling inquiries is the email address
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Crozer Health’s owner, Prospect Medical Holdings, plans to file notices that it is closing Crozer-Chester Medical Center and Taylor Hospital. The ambulatory surgery and imaging centers at Brinton Lake, Broomall, Haverford and Media will remain open, pending a new operator taking over. Lawyers for Prospect, a for-profit company based in California,
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Upper Darby Township Council will consider a draft ordinance to repeal an existing ordinance and impose a 1% earned income tax (EIT). The new ordinance would repeal the last EIT ordinance over a technical error. The tax would apply to earned income and net profits of individuals working within the township or living in the township. The EIT is projected to
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Weeks after Millbourne officials pleaded guilty to federal charges in a brazen scheme to steal a 2021 mayoral election, they are still sitting on the tiny borough’s council and are poised to vote to appoint new members to the board. On April 1, Md Nural Hasan, vice president of Millbourne Borough Council, and Md Munsur Ali, a council member, admitted
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Friday, April 18, 2025
Marple Township has posted information about proposed improvements to the Route 3 (West Chester Pike) interchange with Interstate 476, near the Haverford Township line. The proposed improvements include the delineation/separation of the westbound Route 3 off-ramp to the northbound I-476 on-ramp from the signalized intersection at South Lawrence Road. The
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Friday, April 18, 2025
The Davis Tract, a 16-acre property that was once the home of N.C. Wyeth, is now preserved and will become the headquarters for the North American Land Trust (NALT), which now owns the property. Chadds Ford Township will hold the permanent conservation easement. In addition to N.C. Wyeth, the property was later owned by Walter and Shirley Winther, who owned
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Friday, April 11, 2025
The vision for the last large forested section of land in eastern Delaware County, known as Delco Woods, was unveiled with a short-term plan for a woodland trail open to the public. The Delco Woods Master Plan sets a long-term vision for the park while also identifying more immediate needs to be completed in the next 18 months, including a half-mile, paved
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Friday, April 11, 2025
To avoid new legal disputes, Upper Darby Township Council passed a new ordinance to enact a 1% earned income tax (EIT). Council voted 6-4 for the new ordinance to enact the tax, which Chief Administrative Officer Crandall Jones said repeals the last EIT ordinance over a technical error that caused it to have some confusion around the application and
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Natural Lands, a conservation organization, announced that Chester Heights Borough has been able to purchase a tract of land at Valleybrook and Smithbridge Roads for $3.4 million. Fred Wood, a former mayor of the borough, was instrumental in pursuing the 40-acre parcel for community use. Fundraising included private donations and a nearly $1.9 million
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Friday, April 4, 2025
The Radnor Township Board of Commissioners will consider adopting the Radnor2035 comprehensive plan update. A draft of the plan can be found here. Radnor2035 acts as a roadmap for Radnor Township's next decade and beyond. It serves as the foundation for policy and investment decisions, and lays out goals and strategies for a variety of topics that include
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Friday, March 28, 2025
Upper Darby Township launched its interior resale inspections at the beginning of 2025. Suburban Realtors Alliance has been receiving feedback from Realtors relating to their experiences. Realtors are reminded that the main point of contact for all resale-inspection-related scheduling inquiries is the email address uo@upperdarby.org. The email address
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Upper Darby residents are suing to block a newly approved local income tax, and are again arguing that procedural errors invalidate the ordinance. The lawsuit in the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas continues a struggle between the township council and a group of residents that has persistently raised concerns, and lawsuits, about the board’s
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Friday, March 21, 2025
At a Radnor Township commissioners meeting, developer Greg Lingo of Rockwell Strafford LLC outlined his company’s plans for developing a former estate property in Wayne. The updated plan calls for 29 single-family homes at the former Hamilton estate along Eagle Road, Grant Lane and Strafford Avenue. The original 2020 plan that was rejected by the
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Friday, March 14, 2025
The Middletown Township Planning Commission was expected to review the Outrigger Industrial LLC plans to subdivide a 35-acre parcel from the Franklin Mint Redevelopment project to build a 330,000-square-foot warehouse, but the hearing has been pushed back to Tuesday, May 13, at 7 p.m. The project just south of the Pennsylvania State Police barracks would
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Aqua Pennsylvania has filed a federal lawsuit against a King of Prussia-based chemical manufacturer, accusing the company of negligence for contaminating a creek used as part of a network of waterways that supply thousands of people in Delaware and Chester counties with drinking water. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia, says that the
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Friday, March 7, 2025
William Penn School District is currently facing a $9.5 million budget deficit for the 2025-2026 school year. Superintendent Dr. Eric Becoats said that the majority of the shortfall came from unbudgeted increases in special education and charter school costs in the 2024-2025 year that have carried over to the next year’s budget. School Board Member
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Friday, March 7, 2025
After contemplating taking it by eminent domain, Radnor Township commissioners instead approved a 10-year lease for a 28,000-square-foot parking lot in Wayne. The lot is owned by and located behind Wayne Presbyterian Church, 125 E. Wayne Ave. The rent that the township will pay to the church is 50% of the gross parking receipts, with a minimum annual rent
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Friday, February 28, 2025
On its third attempt, Upper Darby Township Council approved the implementation of a 1% earned income tax (EIT), effective July 1. The EIT was first proposed in 2023 by then Mayor Barbarann Keffer. In December 2024 it was stopped due to a court ruling declaring that it was voted on improperly. Mayor Ed Brown said the EIT is a necessity and, once it is
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Upper Darby School District is considering the purchase of the shuttered Delaware County Memorial Hospital next to its high school as a possible site for expansion. The building is owned by Prospect Medical Holdings, which filed for bankruptcy protection last month. “We’re always looking for opportunities. We need space,” Superintendent
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Friday, February 21, 2025
After multiple public hearings, Upper Darby Township Council has approved a nearly $98 million budget for 2025. The approval of the budget comes after normal budget plans collapsed at the end of 2024, when a Delaware County judge overturned a proposed 1% earned income tax (EIT) that officials said was central to the budget. The court decision forced
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Friday, February 21, 2025
All residents are reminded to call the Ridley Township Code Enforcement Office at 610-534-4803 for permit information and requirements before commencing any new construction or alterations. Residents are also reminded that sidewalks and alleyways are the responsibility of the property owner and must be maintained properly. The township enacted an ordinance
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Friday, February 21, 2025
Chester’s Lead Task Force, headed by the city’s health commissioner, Dr. Kristin Motley, began after a group of Black alumni at Swarthmore College wanted to help out in the city. By late 2024, the effort moved forward to focus on lead. Now, after Motley recognized the city wasn’t enforcing an ordinance about lead abatement and keeping
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Friday, February 14, 2025
At a recent Rose Tree Media School Board meeting, the public got a first look at the site plan for the full-day kindergarten and first-grade center off Rose Tree and Middletown roads near Granite Run. David Schrader from the Schrader group, an architectural and engineering design firm, said a preliminary feasibility plan of the site looks “like a
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Glenolden Borough Council will consider amending the borough code by adopting and enacting a Chapter 113, titled “Nuisance Properties.” The chapter defines disorderly properties, provides the declaration of abandoned properties, provides for notification to the owner of a property, provides the means for abatement, and outlines violations and
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Delaware County wants to connect Upper Darby and Lansdowne with an elevated boardwalk. The project would see the extension of the Darby Creek Trail from where it currently ends near Kent Dog Park in Upper Darby through a 0.4-mile elevated boardwalk network that would connect with Scottsdale Road. “This project represents a significant step forward in
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Friday, February 7, 2025
Delaware County Council instituted a tax deferral program to allow income-eligible property owners to defer the increase in county taxes. The move comes after county council approved a 23% property tax increase in December. The tax deferral program applies to the increase in the county portion of the real estate tax only. The amount deferred becomes a lien
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Friday, February 7, 2025
The Chadds Ford Township Zoning Hearing Board denied a request for a variance from the requirement that the owner of a bed and breakfast live on the property. The board's decision was based on the failure of the applicant to prove a hardship if the variance was not granted. Chairman Bob Reardon explained that the hardship must be physical, and the financial
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Friday, February 7, 2025
Upper Providence Township Council will consider Draft Ordinance No. 562, which amends Chapter 880 of the township code to permit the township tax collector to charge a fee for creating real estate tax certificates. The ordinance will be considered for adoption by the township council on Tuesday, Feb. 11, at 7 p.m. at 935 N. Providence Road, Media. Source:
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Friday, January 31, 2025
The City of Chester has completed a three-month evaluation of thousands of properties in the city and found that the overwhelming majority of them are blight-free. Cyclomedia used a LiDAR camera mounted on top of a specially designed car to capture 13,823 properties from the street. The properties were then categorized in terms of condition of the property
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Work has begun on Springfield Township’s $16 million renovation and partial rebuilding of the municipal office and police station. The old police building will be razed with a rebuild, and the administrative offices will be renovated using the existing structure. The police department has temporarily relocated operations to 601 Baltimore Pike. The
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Upper Darby Township Council will hold a special meeting to consider an Amended 2025 Budget Resolution and Appropriations ordinance. The meeting will take place on Wednesday, Feb. 12, at 7 p.m. in the Township Meeting Room at 100 Garrett Road. Source: Daily Times; 1/17/2025
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Friday, January 17, 2025
Upper Darby has posted updated application documents and forms related to the use and occupancy (U&O) process. The new use and occupancy webpage on the township website — found under the Licenses and Inspection menu — consolidates forms, details and guidance for the resale inspection process. The page is intended to be a resource for
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Despite a projected $1 million budget surplus, Collingdale Borough Council voted to raise real estate taxes by about 31%. The council passed a tax rate of 14.24 mills for 2025. The 2024 millage was 10.865. The 2025 trash and sewer fees are also going up. Council President Ryan Hastings noted that a lack of reserve funds and community center repairs are
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Friday, January 10, 2025
In a surprising move, Upper Darby Township Council voted to keep the real estate tax rate unchanged for the new year. Chief administrative officer Crandall Jones recommended amending the ordinances to reflect that the rate would be 14.02 mills for general funds. Solicitor Sean Kilkenny said a tax rate can be advertised at a higher rate but can be brought
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Upper Darby Township has implemented changes to its use and occupancy inspection process, which now includes interior inspections, effective Jan. 2. Resale applications and payment should be submitted three to four weeks prior to the settlement date to allow time for the scheduling of inspections. For duplexes, triplexes, other multifamily properties and
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Chadds Ford Township supervisors approved the 2025 budget with no increase in township property taxes. There was a change in the former Business Privilege Tax, however, and the budget had to be readvertised because of that change. The name Business Privilege Tax (BPT) is gone and is replaced by a Business Registration License (BRL). Additionally, the BPT
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Friday, January 3, 2025
In a public notice published on Dec. 24, Yeadon Borough advertised that its borough council will consider for enactment draft ordinance 2024-015 amending section 281-1 of the borough code, titled “Lead Inspections Established.” No date for a public hearing was provided. The borough council voted to advertise the draft ordinance at its Dec. 19
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Friday, December 20, 2024
Suburban Realtors Alliance staff and Realtors recently met with Upper Darby officials to discuss upcoming changes to the township’s use and occupancy inspection process. Starting Jan. 2, 2025, the process will include interior inspections. Resale applications and payments should be submitted three to four weeks prior to the settlement date to allow
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Friday, December 20, 2024
Radnor officials said they are continuing negotiations with a local church in hopes they will not have to take a parking lot through eminent domain. The township has leased the lot from Wayne Presbyterian Church for decades, but a price increase caused the township to consider seizing the property. The president of the township commissioners said the
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Friday, December 13, 2024
A Delaware County judge issued a ruling on a key matter in the saga of Aqua Pennsylvania’s attempt to acquire DELCORA — the Delaware County Regional Water Authority, the sewer system that serves a half-million people in 46 municipalities in Delaware and Chester counties. Aqua in 2019 signed a $276.5 million asset purchase agreement with the
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Friday, December 13, 2024
Delaware County Council voted 4-1 to approve a 23% tax increase for 2025, raising the property tax rate to 3.873 mills from the current 3.149 mills. The increase will add roughly $185 annually for the average property owner. Council members cited a need to maintain county services as federal COVID-19 relief dollars run dry, even as dozens of residents
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Friday, December 13, 2024
A court ruling has stopped Upper Darby Township from enacting its earned income tax (EIT) as planned, blowing a roughly $15 million hole in the 2025 budget. Common Pleas Judge Spiros E. Angelos invalidated the township’s Sept. 4 ordinance that enacted the 1% EIT because it violated the township’s home rule charter. He said the ordinances were
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Delaware County Council is considering a proposed $321 million budget that would raise property taxes by 23%. For a home assessed at the county average of $255,108, the tax bill would increase about $185 from $803 to $988. At a Dec. 3 council budget workshop, county executive director Barbara O’Malley explained that costs have increased. Chris
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Friday, December 6, 2024
The City of Chester is proposing to raise the earned income tax for residents from 2.75% to 3.75%, which would result in a 36.36 percent increase. The earned income tax for nonresidents would remain 2%. Bill No. 14, which includes the EIT increase, will be considered for final passage on Wednesday, Dec. 18, at 10 a.m. in Council Chambers, 1 Fourth St.
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Hatfield Borough Council has been considering an ordinance that will create a Residential Rental Property Inspection program. The proposed draft of the ordinance states the purpose of the ordinance “shall be to protect and promote the public health, safety and welfare of its citizens, to establish rights and obligations of owners and occupants
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Friday, November 29, 2024
The Swarthmore Borough 2025 preliminary budget includes a 4% increase in taxes. The full, zero-deficit budget can be found here. The total millage for 2025 would be 3.996 mills, up from 3.843 mills. For trash collection and disposal, $562 will be collected per dwelling unit annually. The budget will likely be up for a vote at the Monday, Dec. 9, meeting at
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Friday, November 29, 2024
The zoning hearing over a supersized Marple Township home ended with a tentative agreement between the neighbors, the township and the owner. The home at 2 Willowbrook Road has a footprint of 3,900 square feet in a neighborhood where most homes are split levels with a third of that. Work began to enlarge the existing home, but a stop work order was issued
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Friday, November 29, 2024
Delaware County Council is planning to vote on a $396.5 million county budget that would significantly increase property taxes in 2025. According to a public notice, the proposed budget includes a total property tax rate of 3.873 mills — 3.268 for general purposes and 0.605 mills for debt service — which is a 22.9% increase over last year. In
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Haverford Township commissioners voted to move forward with a preliminary budget that includes a 3.9% real estate tax increase. Township Manager Dave Burman said the proposed $54.9 million budget does not add any new positions but includes a 4.2% raise for police and a 3.5% increase for other township staff. Burman said personnel costs, which have gradually
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Radnor Township commissioners adopted the 2025 preliminary comprehensive budget, which has $60.8 million in revenues and $60.5 million in expenses. The preliminary budget would raise property taxes by 2%, from 2.4365 to 2.4852 mills. Officials said the increase aims to cover a base operating deficit of roughly $300,000 created by the new Police Community
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Upper Darby Township Council members expressed concern during a recent meeting that $800,000 in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds could evaporate while they await a court decision. Since 2021, the township has received over $41 million in ARPA with the stipulation that it all be “encumbered” to a project by the end of 2024. In June
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Media Borough Council will consider an ordinance regulating the use of combustion-powered leaf blowers. The proposed ordinance will prohibit the use of leaf blowers from sunset until 9 a.m. on weekdays during the school year (Sept. 1 to June 30). The ordinance will be considered at a public meeting on Thursday, Nov. 21, at 7 p.m. at the Borough of Media
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Radnor commissioners last month delayed a decision on using eminent domain to take property owned by Wayne Presbyterian Church for a municipal parking lot in Wayne’s business district. But the vote is now expected to happen at the commissions' next meeting. Through a lease agreement dating back to the 1940s, the township has used the parking lot as a
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Swarthmore Borough has drafted a rental inspection ordinance that requires residential structures that are being used as non-owner-occupied dwelling units to be inspected first prior to tenant occupancy and at every subsequent change of the dwelling’s tenants. Rental inspections will aid in verifying that basic life-safety features are in place,
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Friday, November 8, 2024
The Aston Township Board of Commissioners will hold a public hearing regarding a text amendment to its 2011 zoning ordinance. The amendment would: add a definition of “community hospital;” permit community hospitals as a conditional use in the LI (Limited Industrial) zoning district; and establish a front yard setback for community hospitals in
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Collingdale Borough Police Department announced that the Pennsylvania State Police – Media Station will provide police coverage to the borough between the hours of midnight and 8 a.m. daily until further notice. Collingdale Borough Police Department officers will be on duty from 8 a.m. to midnight. All community members are reminded to continue to
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Friday, November 1, 2024
A supersized home construction project in Marple has residents hoping the township stands up against a public official and businessman. Typical split-level homes in the neighborhood are about 1,800-square-feet, while the new house has a footprint that is 3,900 square feet, with a total square footage that would be nearly double that. After submitting plans,
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Thursday, October 31, 2024
Villanova University will invest $75 million to renovate and repurpose buildings on the former Cabrini University campus with the potential to eventually house as many as 900 students there, according to university president Rev. Peter M. Donohue. Villanova acquired the Radnor campus for $11.5 million and is paying $45 million to cover Cabrini's long-term
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Radnor Township is considering invoking eminent domain to take ownership of a church parking lot in Wayne that will soon see an end to a 70-year agreement. The lot is owned by and sits behind Wayne Presbyterian Church at 125 E. Wayne Ave. Since 1955, the township and church have had a lease agreement allowing Radnor to use the site as a municipal parking
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Upper Darby Township’s Licenses and Inspections Department has been given approval for a new software system that will streamline application submissions, inspection reports and the issuance of use and occupancy certificates. The new software will also allow the department to better track progress. The launch of interior inspections for resales will
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Aldan Borough Council is considering enacting a 1% earned income tax (EIT) in 2025. In addition to the growing costs of utilities, maintenance and employee salaries, the borough cites a need to renovate and expand its borough building. The building needs to be expanded to accommodate eight full-time police officers along with a borough manager, a borough
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Upper Providence Township Council will consider establishing and enacting an earned income tax (EIT) for township residents and nonresidents working in the township at a rate of 1%. The township has answers to common questions about the proposed tax on its website. The township council determined the EIT is necessary to diversify the tax base and lower
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Upper Darby Township Council held two meetings relating to preliminary discussions of the 2025 budget. Mayor Ed Brown said he wanted to shift the township budget to one that considers strategic priorities to ensure effective resource allocation and community well-being. Upper Darby chief administrative officer Crandall Jones gave an overview of the current
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Friday, October 4, 2024
A long-vacant, 25.5-acre plot of land in Concord Township approved for 165,000 square feet of retail space is trading hands, and the new owners plan to move ahead with developing the site. New Jersey-based Retail Sites is under agreement to acquire the parcel at the corner of Route 202 and Ridge Road near the borders of Glen Mills and Chadds Ford. Retail
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Friday, October 4, 2024
An official reopening ceremony was recently held for New Road bridge in Aston Township, also known as County Bridge #7. Delaware County Council remains committed to investing in bridge infrastructure. As noted in the transportation section of the county comprehensive plan, improving the safety and capacity of Delaware County’s transportation network
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Friday, September 27, 2024
Beginning on Nov. 1, Upper Darby Township will begin performing interior inspections along with exterior inspections for all property resales. The timing will allow the Licenses and Inspection Department to ensure that necessary updates — including applications, forms and administrative procedures — are in place. The township asks that all
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Some Chester residents have endured nonstop traffic noise since I-95 was built in the 1970s, but new sound barriers should provide some relief. PennDOT plans to install 16 walls between the Highland Avenue overpass and Ridley Creek Bridge in the City of Chester and Chester Township. Chester City spokesman Justin Tibbles said the barriers are long overdue.
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Residents at the Glen Manor apartment in Glenolden Borough were facing the prospect of having to leave their homes due to emergency fire equipment not being up to code. But according to Borough Manager Brian Razzi, the immediate life safety issues were corrected by the property owners. Now Glen Manor owners will have two weeks to address other non-emergency
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Christiana Care has announced that it will build a neighborhood hospital, or micro-hospital, in Aston Township. The hospital will be located at 700 N. Turner Way, which is directly across Dutton Mill Road from the IceWorks skating facility. The existing building there will be demolished, and a new two-story building will be constructed on the same site. A
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Upper Darby Township has posted a notice that beginning on Oct. 1, the township will begin performing interior inspections along with exterior inspections for all property resales. The township has requested that resale applications and payment be submitted at least three to four weeks prior to the settlement date to allow for inspections to be performed,
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Haverford Township residents are invited to celebrate the grand opening of the Pennsy Trail on Saturday, Sept. 7, from 10 a.m. to noon. The completed trail starts at the Haverford YMCA, 891 N. Eagle Road in Havertown, and runs to the Llanerch Shopping Center on West Chester Pike. Part of the trail features a bridge that spans Manoa Road. Source:
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Friday, August 30, 2024
Upper Darby Township Council will hold a public hearing to consider imposing an earned income tax (EIT) on residents and nonresidents who work in the township. Proposed Ordinance No. 3169 would impose an EIT of 1%. Township officials say the purpose of the new tax is to meet the need for additional revenues for the general fund and to avoid raising real
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Friday, August 30, 2024
The court-appointed receiver for the City of Chester, Michael T. Doweary, plans to solicit bids for monetization of the water, wastewater and stormwater operations. “I am excited to propose an innovative approach that, if done properly, could not only help Chester address its financial situation, but also result in a publicly owned regional entity
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Chester’s newly created director of community and economic development position will oversee several city departments and bureaus, including Economic Development, Planning and Zoning, Community Health, Buildings Standards, Safety, Community Housing, and the city’s Federal Housing Department, Business Expansion Attraction and Retention, Special
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Friday, August 23, 2024
The Newtown Township Board of Supervisors announced that Equus Capital Partners has donated the Square Tavern to the township. The property includes the historic building, surrounding yard, parking lot and Goshen Trail trailhead. The property at Goshen Road and North Newtown Street Road (Route 252) dates to 1742 and has been preserved through several
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Delaware County announced it is transforming the vacant Briarcliffe Fire Company building in Darby Township into a new community center thanks to a unanimous 2023 vote by Delaware County Council to purchase the property. The new community center will soon open as a space for residents and nonprofit organizations. It will offer meeting rooms, training spaces
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Upper Darby Township Council voted to advertise a draft ordinance that would create a 1% earned income tax (EIT). According to township projections, by 2027 if nothing is done, the budget deficit would grow to over $16 million. According to the Suburban Realtors Alliance municipal database, more than 80% of municipalities in the region have an EIT. Gordon
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Crozer Health could get a new owner under a preliminary agreement announced Wednesday by Prospect Medical Holdings, the California for-profit firm that has controlled the financially beleaguered Delaware County health system for eight years. The tentative buyer is CHA Partners LLC, a New Jersey real estate company that specializes in buying hospital
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Upper Darby Township had advertised a change to its use and occupancy requirements that was to begin on July 1. But that change — the addition of an interior inspection — had not taken effect as of the end of July. The township is continuing to work on updating its procedures and forms. Currently, the township requires an exterior inspection and
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Friday, August 2, 2024
The Delaware County Office of Data and Mapping Innovation (ODMI) is a department dedicated to utilizing advanced Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to help government officials and residents visualize complex issues and make informed decisions. The primary mission of ODMI is to create and maintain geospatial data—including infrastructure,
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Friday, August 2, 2024
State Reps. Leanne Krueger (D-161st) and Lisa Borowski (168th) are inviting residents to a free clinic on Pennsylvania’s recently expanded Property Tax/Rent Rebate Program, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Friday, August 2 at the Roosevelt Community Center, 464 S. Old Middletown Road, Middletown Township. The program benefits Pennsylvanians 65 or older,
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Friday, July 26, 2024
The City of Chester has launched its Facade Enhancement Initiative (FEI), a comprehensive program aimed at revitalizing the city's Central Business District and elevating the aesthetic appeal of its commercial buildings. In Phase I, the initiative will focus specifically on the 400-500 blocks of Avenue of the States. Beginning in 2025, the city will oversee
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Friday, July 26, 2024
Concord Township Council approved Garnet Valley School District’s land development plan, which entails the demolition of existing buildings and other existing features, and the addition of three athletic fields and four parking areas. The athletic fields would be at the high school and would be turf fields using ground tire material. Bus parking would
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Friday, July 26, 2024
Chichester School District is extending the due dates for 2024 school taxes. The discount due date is now Sept. 10. The face value due date is Nov. 10. The penalty deadline will not be extended, and the lockbox will remain open until Jan. 17, 2025. The three installment due dates are Sept. 10, Nov. 10, and Jan. 10, 2025. Source: Marcus Hook Borough; 7/2024
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Darby Township has passed a vacant property ordinance that requires property owners to register properties within 90 days after the property becomes vacant. If the owner does not reside within 30 miles of the property or is a corporation or LLC, they will be asked to provide information relating to an appointed local agent who is authorized to accept
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Upper Darby Township Council is again considering enacting an earned income tax (EIT), a proposal that was previously floated in 2023. Chief administrative officer Crandall Jones said a benefit of an EIT is it brings in nonresident funds. PFM Consulting Group, which the township hired, estimated the EIT would bring in about $9 million at a 0.5% rate or
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Eddystone Borough’s new municipal offices at 1300 E. 12th St. are now open. Borough officials are still in the process of moving and ask residents to be patient during the transition. All phone (610-874-1100) and email contacts remain the same, and the office hours are still weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Source: Eddystone Borough; 6/2024
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Upper Darby Township announced that on July 1 it would begin conducting interior and exterior use and occupancy inspections based on the standards within the 2015 International Property Maintenance Code. According to township staff, the expanded inspection requirement will only apply to use and occupancy applications submitted after July 1. Read more in the
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Friday, July 5, 2024
Upper Darby Township announced that on July 1 it would begin conducting interior and exterior use and occupancy inspections based on the standards within the 2015 International Property Maintenance Code. According to township staff, the expanded inspection requirement will only apply to use and occupancy applications submitted after July 1. The township has
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Upper Darby Township will begin conducting interior and exterior inspections based on the standards within the 2015 International Property Maintenance Code beginning on July 1. The township has made changes to the property resale page. According to the township website, “Please submit all resale applications along with payment at least 3-4 weeks prior
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Swarthmore was on track to become the first Pennsylvania municipality to ban two-stroke, gas-powered lawn equipment, such as leaf blowers and string trimmers, as part of a fight against climate change. But an ordinance to do so has been derailed for at least a month as the borough council faces pushback by both residents and landscaping business owners, who
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Upper Darby Township will begin conducting interior and exterior inspections based on the standards within the 2015 International Property Maintenance Code beginning on July 1. The township has made changes to the property resale page. According to the township website, “The township asks that resale applications and payments be submitted at least 3-4
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Swarthmore Borough Council voted to table its combustion-powered outdoor maintenance equipment (CPOME) draft ordinance after months of debate. The ordinance was sent back to the environmental committee for revisions. A number of residents offered up comments for and against the ordinance during the discussion. In its previous versions, it would have banned
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Delaware County Council is no longer seeking to place a mental health facility in the old Don Guanella buildings adjacent to the Delco Woods park in Marple Township. The county posted an announcement on June 12, saying “the county has determined that the building located on the Delco Woods property is not a viable option for an LTSR due to its
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Chadds Ford Township supervisors adopted a new zoning ordinance and map. Supervisors Chair Samantha Reiner said it was a 10-year process that began with the township creating a task force to examine and streamline the zoning code in 2014. The new code combines several zoning districts into one and creates another district. Previously, there were two
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Concord Township Council granted preliminary approval for Orchard Knoll, a proposed 22-lot subdivision on a 44-acre site on the east side of Brinton Lake Road near Costco. Final approval is still pending. Township engineer Nate Cline said access would be from Brinton Lake Road, a state roadway. There would also be one lot off of Cedar Grove Drive, and there
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Brookhaven Borough Council will consider adopting the 2018 edition of the International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) with certain revisions. The new edition will replace the 2015 edition of the same code. The ordinance will be considered at a public hearing on Monday, July 1, at 7 p.m. at the Brookhaven Municipal Center, 2 Cambridge Road. Source: Daily
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Friday, June 14, 2024
The Bethel Township Board of Supervisors will consider two proposed ordinances at an upcoming meeting. The first proposed ordinance would amend Chapter 303 of the township code to restate the “no solicitation” sign and “do not knock list” options for residents, expand the permissible hours of operation for peddlers and solicitors,
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Folcroft Borough Council and the mayor will hold a grand opening of the borough’s new municipal complex on Saturday, June 8, at 12:30 p.m. The two new buildings at 799 Ashland Ave. behind the Folcroft Library and clock tower include a new police station, municipal hall and a community center. “This is the first time in our history that the
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Friday, June 7, 2024
The William Penn School District is planning a $115 million expansion to the Penn Wood High School that will reconfigure the schools in the district. “The expansion creates spaces that support a 21st-century learning environment with a focus on STEM/STEAM that we cannot currently achieve without a renovation,” district business administrator
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Upland Borough will consider adding Chapter 131 to the Upland Borough Code, titled "Property Vacant and Abandoned.” A public hearing will take place on Tuesday, June 11, at 6 p.m. at Borough Hall, 224 Castle Avenue. The borough already has a chapter pertaining to blight control that was adopted in 2012. Source: Daily Times; 5/31/2024
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Friday, May 31, 2024
The Radnor Township School Board unanimously approved a 2024-2025 budget proposal with $120 million in expenditures that includes a 3.95% tax increase. Under the state’s Act 1 index, the school district could have increased taxes by up to 5.3%. Board Member Lydia Solomon said she would support the budget with its tax hike but hoped it would come in
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments to board members of the Stormwater Authority of Chester may have been made illegally during the past eight years, according to the city’s bankruptcy receiver, and they may have to pay the money back. The receiver’s office, which has petitioned U.S. Bankruptcy Court to order the Stormwater Authority of
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Friday, May 24, 2024
After a lengthy public comment period, Swarthmore Borough Council amended its combustion-powered outdoor maintenance equipment (CPOME) ordinance proposal. The revised ordinance will apply only to leaf blowers in the borough and includes a two-year adoption period rather than the original four years. The previous version would have applied to all
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Friday, May 24, 2024
Delaware County has filed two actions for its rights to develop Delco Woods as a park and potential housing for people with mental illness. The first motion was an appeal with the Marple Township Zoning Hearing Board of the township commissioners’ vote to rezone the entire 213-acre Delco Woods property as open space. The second was an action in the
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Friday, May 17, 2024
In the bankrupt City of Chester, where more than one in four households live in poverty, the state receiver and the mayor are demanding that the stormwater authority release details on how it is spending the “rain tax” fees it is collecting from residents and businesses. The fees rank among the highest in the country. The receiver’s office
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Friday, May 17, 2024
Delaware County’s Homeownership First Program provides counseling and up to $10,000 in down payment and closing costs to qualifying low- and moderate-income first-time homebuyers. Funding is limited, and there is no guarantee that persons completing the counseling program will receive financial assistance. The assistance takes the form of a 0%
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Friday, May 10, 2024
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has designated the Chester Housing Authority (CHA) as “troubled.” The agency gave the CHA a Public Housing Assessment (PHA) score of 53% in April 2023, mainly due to poor physical conditions. The PHA measures each housing authority’s performance in four categories: capital fund,
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Friday, May 10, 2024
The Haverford Township School Board is scheduled to vote on Thursday, June 13, on a budget proposal that would raise taxes for the 2024-2025 school year. The proposed budget would raise the millage rate from 18.1684 to 18.8951 mills, with 1 mill equaling $1 of tax for every $1,000 in assessed property value. According to the district, a home with an
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Friday, May 3, 2024
A draft ordinance to phase out combustion-powered outdoor maintenance equipment has been advertised by the Swarthmore Borough Council. The proposed ordinance would be phased in over four years and wouldn’t take full effect until 2028 or later. The ordinance notes that the borough finds “the use of combustion-powered outdoor maintenance equipment
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The bridge carrying Smithbridge Road over Webb Creek in Concord Township has reopened. The nearly 100-year-old bridge is vital to the Bethel, Concord and Garnet Valley communities, as it connects local residents to Route 202 and Garnet Valley schools. The bridge has been closed since July 2023, when urgent repairs were called for after an inspection.
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Philadelphia Union president Tim McDermott has hired architecture firm Gensler, which designed the MLS venues in Toronto, Los Angeles, Austin and San Diego, to study how to expand Subaru Park in the City of Chester. Gensler’s work in Philadelphia includes $125 million of upgrades to Lincoln Financial Field a decade ago. Subaru Park’s 18,500-seat
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Chadds Ford Township will consider a draft ordinance repealing and restating Chapter 105 of its municipal code, “Stormwater Management, Grading, Soil Erosion and Sediment Control.” The proposed ordinance provides requirements for stormwater management for any activity that alters or develops land in a manner that may affect stormwater runoff.
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Friday, April 19, 2024
At a special meeting, the Marple Township Board of Commissioners voted to reject Delaware County’s attempt to use a portion of the former Don Guanella property as a mental health facility, and commissioners voted to rezone the entire 213-acre property as open space. Another special meeting will take place on Monday, April 22, to ratify the decision.
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Chadds Ford Township has fined the owners of a historic home $17,000 so far in 2024 for violating local zoning code by renting the property through Airbnb. The more than 100-year-old home on 44 acres was once owned by the du Pont family. After a neighbor complained about disruptive renters, township officials decided last year that renting the property for
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Friday, April 5, 2024
At the April 3 meeting of Delaware County Council, the council renamed the 213-acre Don Guanella property in Marple Township to Delco Woods and county officials spoke about plans to use existing buildings at the site as a mental health facility. Two days earlier, the county filed an application for use permit with Marple Township to preserve its rights to
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Friday, April 5, 2024
Chadds Ford Township supervisors voted to contribute $250,000 to North American Land Trust’s (NALT) grant application to buy 17 acres at 1597 Baltimore Pike. Supervisors Chairman Samantha Reiner said the money would come from open space funds. The property is the former home of N.C. Wyeth and, most recently, the Camp family. The Camps sold the
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Friday, March 29, 2024
The Aston Township Board of Commissioners voted to seek a state grant to complete a design to build the West Branch of the Chester Creek Trail. Officials said the idea had been in the works for a while, and they expect all or most of the construction and design costs to be paid by state and county grants. Planning is in the early stages of the trail, which
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Friday, March 22, 2024
The Stormwater Authority of the City of Chester broke ground on a $9.9 million project to address flooding problems in Veterans Memorial Park. For years, heavy rains would flood the park and create havoc downstream, flooding houses, businesses and the city’s only library. The debris-filled flood waters would then flow directly into the Delaware River.
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Friday, March 15, 2024
Delaware County has issued a statement debunking claims that Delaware County Memorial Hospital and Springfield Hospital will be converted to house immigrants. Some social media posts also claim that the county council voted on the decision to use the hospitals to house immigrants. Both hospitals are owned by Prospect Medical Holdings and are currently for
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Friday, March 15, 2024
The Delaware County Recorder of Deeds office, led by director Robert A. Auclair Esq., has become the third county in Pennsylvania to offer its residents GovOS Cloud Search — the most advanced government records search engine available. The program, launched on Feb. 1, is a web-based tool that has made millions of county public records more accessible
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Friday, March 15, 2024
Collingdale Borough Council put out a bid for a forensic audit after an auditor found 2022 tax collection revenue off by 13%. The $330,000 discrepancy was brought to the attention of Council President Ryan Hastings by the borough’s auditor, George Fieo. “ said he’s never seen a gap like this,” said Collingdale’s new solicitor,
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Friday, March 8, 2024
The Aston Township Board of Commissioners approved the land development plans for the township’s new $14 million municipal building and police station to be located next to the community center on Concord Road. The expected completion date for the building is fall 2025. Township Manager Bill DeFeo said funding for the new structure is expected to come
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Friday, March 8, 2024
Brookhaven Borough Council is proceeding with the potential purchase of the former Our Lady of Charity school property located on Upland Road. The 7.4-acre parcel, which has been appraised at $1.55 million, includes the shuttered school and convent. The church, which is still in service to the community, is not included in the sale. Borough council is said
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Friday, March 1, 2024
The Delaware County Office of Services for the Aging (COSA) is partnering with the state revenue department to assist residents in applying for the expanded Pennsylvania Property Tax/Rent Rebate (PTRR) program and filing their taxes. Six Delaware County senior centers will host state revenue department representatives to help residents with determining
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Friday, February 23, 2024
Collingdale Borough Council has amended the borough’s 2024 budget, which had been approved by the previous council at the end of 2023. The amended budget will re-allot funds that the newly elected council favors. Meeting attendees complained about the loss of $3,500 to the Collingdale Athletic Club. Council members pointed out that, while the athletic
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Radnor Township School District officials have presented a budget proposal with a 5.3% tax increase for the 2024-2025 school year. The increase would change the millage rate from 14.63 to 15.41 mills. If approved, the 5.3% hike would represent an increase of $567 for a property assessed at the township average of about $730,600. Due to a resolution approved
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Friday, February 16, 2024
The Upland seminary where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. studied may be transformed into a center for peace and justice in his honor. Delaware County Council approved allocating $10,000 of American Rescue Plan Act funds toward that purpose. The three-story facility, known as Old Main, sits on the Crozer-Chester Medical Center campus and was where King
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Friday, February 9, 2024
In a ruling that is a game changer in the City of Chester’s historic bankruptcy — and that may have impacts on economically struggling towns elsewhere — the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has affirmed the state-appointed receiver’s plans to rescue one of the nation’s most-distressed cities from “financial doom.” The
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Friday, February 9, 2024
Brookhaven Borough officials voted unanimously to move forward on the possible purchase of 7.4 acres of the Our Lady of Charity Catholic Church property in the 200 block of Upland Road. “The main purpose is green space, but ultimately the public will decide what goes there,” said Council President Terry Heller. The church, which is still active,
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Friday, February 2, 2024
The Delaware County Housing Coalition presented a report on housing in the county to elected officials, community stakeholders and the public. The coalition developed three sub-groups — the unhoused community, affordable rental housing and home ownership. To address the priority of affordable homes, the coalition is looking at a variety of ideas,
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Collingdale Borough Council plans to hold a meeting in February to amend the 2024 budget. The amended budget proposal cuts spending by $22,000 but does not change the property tax rate of 10.865 mills. The borough is currently without a manager, as the council voted at a Jan. 2 meeting not to renew the contract of Aaron Walizer, who was sworn in as manager
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Friday, January 26, 2024
A clerical error on an ordinance will force Upper Darby Township Council to vote again on the 2024 township budget tax rate at a special meeting planned for Wednesday, Jan. 31. The council previously passed an ordinance setting the tax rate of 14.21 mills — but it intended to set the rate lower, at 14.02 mills. Mayor Ed Brown said that his
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Delaware County residents should be aware that TD Bank branches no longer accept payments for county real estate taxes. The county continues to offer multiple payment options, including an online payment portal, payment by mail to the county treasurer’s office, or in person. For more information, visit the Delaware County Treasurer’s website.
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Unionville-Chadds Ford School District’s preliminary 2024-2025 budget estimates revenues and expenditures of approximately $106.7 million, with a $12,000 deficit between them. The budget proposes millage rates of 33.17 mills for Chester County property owners and 18.89 mills for properties in Chadds Ford, the only Delaware County municipality in the
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Upper Chichester Township has been awarded a $200,000 grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, which will be used for the revitalization and enhancement of Kingsman Park and its amenities. The grant is complemented by a $250,000 matching contribution from a previous grant from the county’s Delco Greenways Program,
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Tinicum Township will consider draft Ordinance No. 2024-919 that will vacate and repeal Ordinance No. 779 of 2004, codified as Chapter 264, Properties, Disorderly. The ordinance will be considered at a public hearing on Tuesday, Jan. 16, at 6:30 p.m. at the Tinicum Township Municipal Building, 97 Wanamaker Ave. Source: Daily Times; 1/8/2024
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Friday, January 5, 2024
Ridley Park Borough Council approved a 17% increase in 2024 property taxes to make up for money that Prospect Medical Holdings Inc. did not pay last year for Taylor Hospital, which is part of Crozer Health. The borough is still trying to negotiate a settlement with Prospect that would cover at least part of the roughly $350,000 that Taylor’s
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Delaware County Council unanimously approved a $358 million 2024 budget with a property tax increase from 2.999 to 3.149 mills. A median home valued at about $254,700 will see an annual property tax increase of $38 for a total county real estate tax bill of $802. The county's last property tax increase was in 2014. A county press release said the budget
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Ridley Park Borough Council is expected to vote on a 2024 budget that includes a 17% increase on sewer fees and real estate taxes to make up for a shortfall of unpaid taxes by the borough’s largest taxpayer, Taylor Hospital. “Unfortunately, it’s going to fall to the residents of the borough,” said Council President Dane Collins.
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Beginning Jan. 1, 2024, the annual business and mercantile license fee for Upper Darby Township will be set to $50. The purpose of the fee is to cover expenses relating to regulating, inspecting and supervising businesses with merchants in the township. The full ordinance can be found here. Source: Upper Darby; 12/6/2023
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Friday, December 15, 2023
Natural Lands announced that it has acquired 46 acres of open space in Aston Township for a new township park. “It’s been a long but incredibly rewarding process that’s culminated in a huge open space achievement,” said Robyn Jeney, land protection project manager for Natural Lands. “The preservation of this land is especially
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Delaware County officials say that a 5% real estate tax increase is necessary to balance the 2024 budget. Should the tax increase remain in the budget, it would equate to a $38 annual increase for a property assessed at approximately $250,000, the county average. “Nine straight years without increasing revenue is a heck of a run,” County
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Friday, December 8, 2023
A special hearing on a proposed 1% earned income tax (EIT) for Upper Darby residents and workers was recently canceled, effectively tabling the issue until at least next year. In order to institute the new tax, the township would have had to notify the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development by Dec. 1. Mayor Barbarann Keffer had
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Radnor Township Commissioners approved a 2.1%, or 0.05-mill, real estate tax increase. White said smaller increases could prevent a larger one in the future, especially if other township revenues, such as business taxes, fell unexpectedly. The primary purpose of the increase is to cover an operating deficit of roughly $257,300. The deficit is the result of
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Friday, December 1, 2023
Radnor Township commissioners approved a roughly $789,000 project to transform the township’s street lights into LED lights to be more energy efficient. Michael Fuller, president of Keystone Lighting, based in Boalsburg, Centre County, said the township’s 1,350 street lights — of which 1,100 are the classic street lights — will be
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Friday, November 24, 2023
A proposal calling for the enactment of an earned income tax (EIT) in Upper Darby Township is receiving a cold reception from local businesses and residents. The proposal, included in Mayor Barbarann Keffer’s 2024 budget, estimates an EIT could generate approximately $12 million in annual revenue for the township. An EIT is a tax on the money received
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Friday, November 24, 2023
Chester Housing Authority (CHA), the city of Chester’s largest affordable housing provider, has announced it will refurbish 110 housing units in the Ruth L. Bennett Homes. The work is being made possible through a $5 million grant received from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency’s (PHFA) Housing Options Program. The Ruth L. Bennett Homes,
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Friday, November 17, 2023
Later this year, Delaware County will become the third county in Pennsylvania to make GovOS Cloud Search — the most powerful government records search engine available on the market — available to its residents. The Delaware County Recorder of Deeds Office, which serves as the county’s custodian of all land records and indexes relating to
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Friday, November 17, 2023
Upper Darby Township is considering enacting a 1% local earned income tax (EIT) starting in 2024. The township estimates that the new tax would bring in $9 million of revenue in its first year. “The EIT is part of a multi-pronged financial strategy to secure the future of Upper Darby which includes the implementation of the realty transfer tax two
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Friday, November 10, 2023
A new report from PolicyLink and the Community Legal Services of Philadelphia focuses on a marked increase in Pennsylvania eviction rates since the pandemic. Titled “Advancing Pennsylvania’s Housing Futures: Sealing Eviction Records for Housing Stability and Economic Prosperity,” the report says more than 114,000 people had evictions filed
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Friday, November 10, 2023
A preliminary budget presented to Eddystone Borough Council contained a decrease in the millage rate from 9.6 mills to 9.4 mills. The sewer rate is also slated to decrease from $6.45 per 1,000 gallons of water usage to $6 per 1,000 gallons. The borough sewer charge per household is based on water usage. The budget presentation can be found here. Passage of
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Friday, November 10, 2023
Nether Providence Township Council adopted Ordinance 853, Intent of Taking of Right-of-Way. The ordinance expresses an intent to take private property by condemnation for a permanent easement and a temporary construction easement at 306 S. Providence Road for the construction of a sidewalk as authorized under the first-class township code and the eminent
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Lansdowne Borough Council will consider the adoption of a proposed ordinance that would increase its earned income tax (EIT) from 0.5% to 1.0%. The EIT “is necessary to diversify the tax base of the borough and allow the borough to lower property taxes for its residents,” according to a borough notice. The borough estimates that approximately
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Friday, October 27, 2023
A recent Haverford Township Zoning decision has given a local builder a partial victory on plans to build four apartments and a showroom at Jack Quinn’s Lamplighter Tavern, a long-closed landmark at Campbell Avenue and Darby Road in the Oakmont section of the township. The original structure dating back to the 1890s was built as a home. The
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Eddystone Borough Council will consider adoption of Ordinance No. 680-2023, which will revise and update the borough’s rental act by recreating Chapter 97 of the borough code and repealing Ordinance No. 612. The meeting will take place on Monday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m., at the Eddystone Firehouse, Joe Hughes Hall, 1112 E. 7th St. The Suburban Realtors
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Delaware County Council adopted Ordinance 2023-8 to take private property by condemnation against unknown owners at three locations in Aston Township. The properties total about 0.14 acres, and will be used by the county for construction of an extension of the Chester Creek Trail, as authorized by state eminent domain laws. The ordinance takes effect on
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Friday, October 13, 2023
In December 2021, Middletown Township Council passed an ordinance requiring a 10-foot buffer between any bamboo and an adjacent property. Township officials say that 13 properties have been impacted by the ordinance, of which seven had interventions by the township. Some residents who have received notice from the township felt that they had been singled
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Chester City Council will consider adopting ordinances pursuant to property tax abatement for certain deteriorated residential, industrial and commercial properties. The purpose is to incentivize the redevelopment of aging or deteriorating properties to stimulate economic development, as allowed under the state’s Local Economic Revitalization Tax
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Brookhaven Borough Council recently voted to make an unsolicited offer to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia to purchase a portion of the shuttered Our Lady of Charity property on Upland Road. Council President Terry Heller said the offer would be $1.6 million for eight acres, not including demolition and renovation costs, but the purchase is contingent upon
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The Concord Township Zoning Hearing Board heard complaints from residents opposed to Penns Woods Winery’s attempt to reconstruct a barn at its vineyard and tasting room. Penns Woods, in the 100 block of Beaver Valley Road, zoned R-2D residential in Concord Township, applied for a special exemption in July to replace a dilapidated, 1,400-square-foot
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Commonwealth Court Judge Ellen Ceisler has extended the term for Chester City Receiver Michael Doweary for two more years, until Dec. 28, 2025. Doweary’s term was set to expire at the end of 2023, but Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development Secretary Frederick Siger filed a motion with the court to have the term extended for two
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Monday, October 2, 2023
The Major Gen. Smedley Butler U.S. Marine Corps Training Center in Ridley Township is located in a dense residential section of Folsom, Ridley Township, and residents are voicing concerns about its truck traffic. The facility was once a Marine infantry location, and in recent years it was the location for a military bridge building division. Last year, the
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Delaware County is asking the public for suggestions to name the new, 213-acre park on the former Don Guanella property in Marple Township. Entries are due by Oct. 31. For more information, visit the county website. Watch a video about the contest here. Source: Delaware County; 9/22/2023
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Collingdale Borough Mayor Donna Spadea swore in Aaron Walizer as the new borough manager. Walizer was formerly assistant borough manager in Doylestown, Bucks County. He studied city management at Villanova University. Source: Daily Times; 9/27/2023
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Friday, September 29, 2023
Brookhaven Borough Council recently voted to make an unsolicited offer to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia to purchase a portion of the shuttered Our Lady of Charity property on Upland Road. Council President Terry Heller said the offer would be $1.6 million for eight acres, not including demolition and renovation costs, but the purchase is contingent upon
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Friday, September 29, 2023
The Concord Township Zoning Hearing Board heard complaints from residents opposed to Penns Woods Winery’s attempt to reconstruct a barn at its vineyard and tasting room. Penns Woods, in the 100 block of Beaver Valley Road, zoned R-2D residential in Concord Township, applied for a special exemption in July to replace a dilapidated, 1,400-square-foot
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Friday, September 22, 2023
After receiving several reports from Realtors describing communication issues with Upper Darby Township, the Suburban Realtors Alliance reached out to Upper Darby seeking direction for Realtors. The township has asked that all requests be submitted through a centralized email address, LI@upperdarby.org, which is monitored by multiple staff in the
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Friday, September 22, 2023
In 2022, Radnor Township made updates to its existing stormwater management ordinance. According to a township notice: “Some big things in the new ordinance include green infrastructure, incentives to reduce impervious surface area, a simplified stormwater management approach, and many others. These changes allow for residents to have more choices
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Friday, September 15, 2023
Yeadon Borough Manager Isaac Dotson and solicitor Mark Much’s law firm are both no longer employed by the borough. The Kilkenny Law Firm was hired as the solicitor, and finance director Nafis Nichols’ consulting group, NJN & Associates LLC will assist in the search for a new manager. Much’s firm had a contract for $8,000 per month that
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Friday, September 8, 2023
The most recent plan to replace the Parkway Inn at 675 Baltimore Pike in Springfield Township with a “super Wawa” has met with concerns from residents of neighboring Morton Borough. The Parkway Inn motel has been the site of multiple incidents involving police presence. In addition to the Wawa, the property would also have a Bank of America and
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Friday, September 1, 2023
Eddystone Borough Council will consider an amendment to Ordinance No. 673 by updating the definition of private sewer lateral and describe the same in further detail. The ordinance will be considered for adoption at the regularly scheduled council meeting on Monday, Sept. 11, at 7 p.m. at the Eddystone Firehouse, 1112 E. 7th St. Source: Daily Times;
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Friday, August 11, 2023
Radnor Township commissioners will hold a hearing on Monday, Aug. 15, at 6:30 p.m. to consider an application for a townhouse development on land owned by the heirs of Dorrance Hamilton. The hearing is at the Radnor Township Municipal Building, 301 Iven Ave., Wayne. The property is 7.5 acres at 208 and 228 Strafford Ave. and 18 Forrest Lane in Wayne.
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Thursday, July 20, 2023
Applications are open for Delaware County residents seeking more emergency rental relief as the county has been given another $2 million. The Pennsylvania Department of Human Services redistributed $26.9 million in unspent funds from 20 counties that didn’t fully utilize the program to those that had success in the initial rounds. From that, Delaware
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Friday, July 14, 2023
Eddystone Borough Council approved the rescission of Ordinance No. 675, passed in November 2022, which related to sprinkler and fire alarm systems. Among other things, the ordinance contained a requirement for the installation of sprinkler systems for rental properties. This rescission means that the ordinance has been repealed. Source: Eddystone Borough;
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Friday, April 17, 2026
A U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has dismissed a $150 million lawsuit brought by developer R.P. Wynestone and seven investors against New Hanover Township. The developer and investors had alleged that years of procedural delays in approving the Town Center project — a 700-home, 209-acre development along Swamp Pike first proposed in 2005 — were
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Chester and Montgomery counties have released a Data Center Ordinance Guide to help municipalities develop local regulations for data centers, which have become a hotly debated topic due to concerns about environmental impact and power usage. The guide recommends that municipalities allow data centers of 100,000 square feet or more through a conditional use
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Lower Merion Township is reminding residents that its phased-in ban on gas-powered leaf blowers begins in the summer, prohibiting their use from June 1 to Oct. 1, with restrictions expanding each year until a full year-round ban takes effect in 2029. The ordinance, passed in November 2025, cites air and noise pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and health
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Lower Merion Township commissioners have voted to receive conceptual plans for renovating Ardmore's Schauffele Plaza and the adjacent 72-space Parking Lot 6 into a pedestrian-friendly civic green space, though the vote does not commit the township to any work or funding. Two options are on the table: Option A would eliminate all parking in Lot 6 and
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Pottstown School District is weighing a 3% tax hike as part of its draft $96.5 million budget for the 2026-2027 school year, which would raise the tax rate to 45.72 mills and still require drawing $2.3 million from the district's $25.8 million reserve fund to close a projected deficit. The proposed increase is less than last year's 5.8% hike — the
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Montgomery County has broken ground on a new 50-bed, short-term supportive housing facility at 1430 DeKalb St. in Norristown. It is expected to be completed by the end of 2026. The 24-hour, year-round facility will serve single adults at greatest risk of severe health and safety consequences, as determined by the county's Your Way Home coordinated entry
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Friday, March 27, 2026
After more than six years of delays caused by pandemic work stoppages, supply chain issues and unexpected construction challenges — including a hidden oil tank and crumbling walls — Ardmore's renovated SEPTA station reopened on March 23 in Lower Merion Township. The project, originally budgeted at $62 million and expected to take two-and-a-half
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Lansdale Borough officials and local nonprofits are collaborating on a "compassionate" approach to address a homeless encampment at Stony Creek Park, pushing back against misinformation circulating on social media about the camp and its residents. Rather than punitive enforcement, officials say they're focused on the well-being and dignity of their
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Friday, March 27, 2026
At its March 11 meeting, Skippack Borough Council opened discussion on a Residential Rental Inspections Ordinance and a Fire Inspections Ordinance, per the meeting agenda. The proposed ordinances were introduced at the meeting (discussion begins in the video around the 43:00 mark) to “start the conversation” with the public. It was noted at the
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Friday, March 20, 2026
The Institute for Justice (IJ), the law firm that won a unanimous Commonwealth Court ruling in December finding Pottstown's rental inspection program unconstitutional, is now pushing back against the borough's proposed workaround. The borough's backup plan would require landlords to hire certified private inspectors — rather than borough officials
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Friday, March 20, 2026
After Plymouth Township rejected its plan to build up to 200 apartments and retail space at the Conshohocken Ridge Corporate Center, developer BET Investments has pivoted to a more modest proposal: a 24-hour, 6,500-square-foot convenience store with eight gas pumps at the 625 W. Ridge Pike property it purchased for $17 million in 2024. The township's
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Pottstown Borough is appealing a Commonwealth Court ruling to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court after the lower court found that its use of administrative warrants to inspect rental properties violated the Pennsylvania Constitution. The case originated in 2017 when landlord Steve Camburn and his tenants, backed by the Institute for Justice, challenged the
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Friday, March 13, 2026
The Whitemarsh Township Board of Supervisors is set to consider whether to schedule a hearing on an ordinance that would ban real Christmas trees in multi-family, commercial and public buildings, following a recommendation from the township's fire marshal citing fire hazards from drying and rapid flame spread. Single- and two-family homes used solely for
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Friday, March 13, 2026
The Douglass Township Board of Supervisors will consider enacting an ordinance establishing a Do Not Solicit Registry when it meets on Monday, March 16, at the township building, 1320 E. Philadelphia Ave. in Gilbertsville, with the meeting starting after 7 p.m. The ordinance would amend Chapter 187 of the township code, which covers peddling and soliciting,
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Friday, March 6, 2026
Red Hill Borough Council will consider adopting amendments to the “Use and Occupancy and Rental Inspection Ordinance” at its public meeting on Wednesday, March 11, at 7 p.m. at Borough Hall, 56 W. Fourth St. The proposed ordinance would amend the borough's codified ordinances to require residential rental unit inspections and change-of-use or
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Friday, March 6, 2026
North Wales-based WB Homes Land Acquisitions is seeking a zoning change to convert the former Audubon Elementary School in Lower Providence Township into six residential units through an "adaptive reuse" project that would preserve the character of the building's exterior. The school, which operated since 1928, was closed by Methacton School District in
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Friday, February 27, 2026
A $105 million redevelopment project in Upper Moreland Township is set to transform the Willow Grove Shopping Center across from Willow Grove Park Mall into a mixed-use complex with 261 apartments and 35,000 square feet of new retail. Demolition of about 130,000 square feet will begin in the summer with completion expected in 2028, according to developer
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Friday, February 27, 2026
Johnson & Johnson announced plans to invest more than $1 billion to build a next-generation cell-therapy manufacturing facility on a 154-acre site in Lower Gwynedd’s Spring House section. The project is expected to create about 4,000 construction jobs and 500 permanent skilled positions while expanding U.S. production of advanced treatments for
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Telford Borough Council recently approved a resolution allowing officials to clear snow and ice from sidewalks at noncompliant properties and charge property owners for the costs incurred. The resolution was prompted by about 17 violations after a January storm. Borough secretary Bryan Poster suggested the fee be added to the 2026 fee schedule by amendment
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Friday, February 20, 2026
Montgomery Township supervisors voted 3-2 to approve a revised 2026 budget that sets the real estate tax rate at 3.94 mills and establishes a dedicated 1-mill fire tax as a separate line item on property bills. The move will create a stable funding stream for fire protection and potentially support hiring additional career firefighters. Township Manager
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Upper Frederick supervisors voted Jan. 14 to suspend roughly $60,000 a year in township fire tax funding to the Upper Frederick Fire Company pending resolution of alleged financial misconduct, submission of long-overdue, state-required financial reports, and an end to prohibited partisan political activity. Supervisors said the fire company has failed for
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Upper Pottsgrove Township announced its administration office has reopened effective Feb. 2 at a temporary location, 1441 Laura Lane. In January, commissioners unanimously approved leasing first-floor office space in a building owned by developer Richard Mingey near Route 100 and Farmington Ave. The move follows the September closure of the former offices
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Friday, February 6, 2026
Montgomery Township supervisors recently voted 3-2 to reopen the adopted 2026 budget under provisions of the Second-Class Township Code that allow amendments in January following a municipal election. The supervisors cited the need to revisit fire department funding, capital reserves and long-term fiscal planning. The majority argued the original budget
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Montgomery County commissioners and row officers will gather for the 2026 State of the County address on Wednesday, Feb. 11. The event will be held from 10 to 11:30 a.m. at Montgomery County Community College in the Montco Cultural Center Theatre, 1313 Morris Road, Blue Bell. Over the past year, Montgomery County has made meaningful strides to address the
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Friday, January 23, 2026
A proposed land swap in Limerick Township is raising concerns that it could pave the way for a second hyperscale data center — a massive facility designed to handle huge amounts of data and consume huge amounts of power. The Pennsylvania Game Commission is scheduled to vote on Saturday, Jan. 24, on an exchange that would trade 614 acres of mostly
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Friday, January 23, 2026
Suburban Square in the Lower Merion section of Ardmore has its first apartment community with the opening of Coulter Place, a five-story, mixed-use development featuring 131 one- to three-bedroom units and 20,000 square feet of ground-floor retail. The complex offers amenities, such as a fitness center, a pool, coworking spaces and EV charging in garage
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Friday, January 16, 2026
Limerick Township is reviewing a proposal for a massive 1.4-million-square-foot data center on 192 acres across from the Philadelphia Premium Outlets, a project that would include eight server buildings, use up to 750 megawatts of electricity, and consume as much as 1.3 million gallons of water per day for cooling. Presented to the planning commission by
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Friday, January 16, 2026
The Plymouth Township Planning Agency voted 4-3 on Jan. 7 not to recommend a special exception that would allow the former DoubleTree Suites at 640 Fountain Road in Plymouth Meeting to be converted into 213 apartments. The hotel closed in November 2025. The proposed plan would have created 173 one-bedroom and 40 two-bedroom units ranging from 600 to 1,200
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Friday, January 9, 2026
At its reorganization meeting, the newly constituted Upper Pottsgrove Board of Commissioners voted 3-2 along party lines to hire Kilkenny Law as township solicitor and then unanimously moved to drop two of three lawsuits pursued by the previous board, ending appeals related to the failed Smola Farm municipal complex project and a defamation suit deemed a
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Friday, January 9, 2026
Radnor Property Group and the Piazza family are set to begin construction on The Piazza at Ardmore, a $187 million mixed-use development at 100 W. Lancaster Ave. in Lower Merion Township that will include 270 residential units and roughly 30,000 square feet of ground-floor retail. The project, financed with $140 million from Affinius Capital, will include
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Friday, January 2, 2026
New Hanover Township supervisors unanimously approved a $13.4 million 2026 budget that raises property taxes by 36%, marking the first tax hike in nearly two decades. The millage rate will rise from 2.152 to 5.642 mills, adding about $84 a year to the bill of a home assessed at $151,700. According to Township Manager Jamie Gwynn, real state tax revenues
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Friday, December 19, 2025
New testing near the closed Boyertown Landfill in Douglass Township has revealed dangerously high levels of PFAS, or “forever chemicals,” in soil, surface water and dozens of private wells, far exceeding the federal safety standard of 4 parts per trillion. The site, which operated from the 1950s to 1987 and accepted municipal and industrial
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Towamencin Township approved its 2026 budget, implementing a 7% real estate tax increase, the first in three years. The millage rate will rise to 6.089 mills and is projected to generate just under $350,000 in new revenue. The budget maintains the homestead and farmstead exemptions at $50,000, holds sewer rates steady at $590, and includes $5 million in
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Friday, December 12, 2025
A Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court judge has ruled that Pottstown’s ordinance allowing officials to enter rental homes using “administrative warrants” without showing probable cause is unconstitutional. The decision stems from a lawsuit brought by residents Dottie and Omar Rivera and their landlord, Steve Camburn, with support from the
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Telford Borough Council will consider adopting an ordinance that would establish biennial inspections of rental properties, along with annual registration requirements, fees, enforcement procedures and exemptions. A public hearing is scheduled for Monday, Dec. 8, at 7:30 p.m. at Borough Hall, 50 Penn Ave. The full proposal is available for public review at
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Pottstown Borough Council will vote on the 2026 budget and tax ordinance at its Monday, Dec. 8, meeting. The proposed ordinance sets the 2026 real estate tax rate at 15.601 mills — up from the current rate of 15.118 mills, but less than the 15.871 mills that was proposed in October. The proposed increase will amount to an additional $48 for each
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Lubert Adler Partners is under contract to purchase the largely vacant Plymouth Meeting Mall from PREIT and plans to invest more than $100 million to redevelop the 110-acre property into a mixed-use town center. The Philadelphia-based developer aims to transform the site with potential residential units, youth sports facilities and community-focused
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Lower Merion Township officials have proposed a 9.5% property tax increase for 2026. If adopted without change, the millage rate will increase from 4.462 to 4.886 mills. In 2025, a property with an assessed value of $200,000 had a township tax bill of $892. Under the township’s projected tax increase for 2026, that same property would have a township
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Friday, November 21, 2025
Montgomery County officials unveiled a 2026 proposed budget featuring a 4% property tax increase to help close a $25.5 million deficit. The budget gap will be filled by using the $12 million in new revenue generated by the tax increase and relying on $13.5 million from the fund balance. The county trimmed more than $14 million in costs by reducing benefits,
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Friday, November 21, 2025
A proposed 2-million-square-foot AI data center at the former Cleveland-Cliffs steel mill in Plymouth Township, near Conshohocken, was abruptly withdrawn during a recent zoning board hearing after legal issues arose over the applicant’s standing. Developer Brian O’Neill’s attorney, Edmund Campbell, sought a continuance to the December
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Friday, November 21, 2025
Upper Gwynedd Township supervisors unanimously voted to advertise the budget and tax ordinance for 2026. If approved without change, residents will see the first tax increase in nearly a decade. The proposed budget includes a $100 increase per average property through the fire tax, which would rise from 0.63 to 0.769 mills, bringing total township millage
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Friday, November 21, 2025
Horsham Township has fully rezoned the former Willow Grove Naval Air Station to match its long-term redevelopment vision for 862 Rise, a planned mixed-use community of housing, offices, retail and green space. The unanimous Nov. 12 vote shifts the property from industrial zoning to permit residential, commercial, business park and town center uses, a move
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Friday, November 14, 2025
Souderton Borough Manager Sara Jarrett-Eaton announced that the proposed, $12.4 million 2026 budget will be balanced with no tax increase. The borough’s capital fund remains strong and is in good shape to address needed improvement projects. Jarrett-Easton reported that a revised fee schedule with some increases is expected later in November.
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Lower Salford Township has reached a $21.5 million agreement to purchase the 62-acre Allebach property. The farmland, bordered by Main Street, Quarry Road and Stover Road, is considered one of the area’s most prominent landscapes and had been zoned for mixed-use development that could have brought hundreds of apartments and commercial buildings. To
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Friday, November 7, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township has authorized up to $50,000 for Township Manager Michelle Reddick to secure temporary office space after mold problems again forced the closure of township offices in the basement of the Farmington Avenue firehouse — the third such shutdown in three years. The latest closure was announced at the end of September, and
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Thursday, October 30, 2025
Pottstown officials unveiled a draft $66 million 2026 budget that currently includes a 4.98% property tax increase to close a $602,000 deficit. For a home assessed at $100,000, the proposed hike would mean an annual tax increase of about $75. Borough Manager Justin Keller and finance director Marley Boone assured council that the final increase is likely to
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Buccini Pollin Group is planning a $50 million mixed-use development near the Spring Mill SEPTA Station in Whitemarsh Township just outside Conshohocken, aiming to boost the area's growing transit-oriented community. The five-story building would replace part of the parking lot at the Quaker Park office complex at 1001 E. Hector St. and include 115
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Sal Paone Builder has received rezoning approval from Plymouth Township Council to develop 159 townhomes on the 38-acre Plymouth Ridge Corporate Center site in Plymouth Meeting. Four mostly vacant office buildings will be demolished, while one will be repurposed as the new home of Mission Kids Child Advocacy Center. The townhomes will range from 2,250 to
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Friday, October 10, 2025
The Pottstown Borough Zoning Hearing Board is reviewing a request for several variances tied to the proposed redevelopment of the blighted former Levengood Dairy building at Chestnut and North Washington streets. Developer Elan Shirman and his attorney, Mike Murray, argued that the current zoning requirements are too rigid and prevent feasible
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Friday, October 10, 2025
The Plymouth Township planning board voted 4-0 not to recommend that the zoning board make a special exception for an AI data center at the idled Cleveland Cliffs steel mill. Developer Brian O’Neill wants to turn the former steel mill into a 2-million-square-foot data center that would span 10 existing buildings on the 66-acre site. O’Neill
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Montgomery County is preparing for an estimated 100,000 new residents over the next 25 years, making housing and homelessness central issues in its Montco 2050 comprehensive plan. The plan, expected to be adopted in early 2026, aims to balance affordability, growth, sustainability and livability. At a Sept. 30 forum in Ambler, planners outlined draft goals
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Lower Merion Township recently hosted a community discussion with the developer of the long-awaited Piazza development in Ardmore. The mixed-use development will stretch along Lancaster Avenue and replace two car dealerships, a shuttered IHOP restaurant and several vacant lots with 270 apartments, nearly 30,000 square feet of retail space and around 480
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Lansdale Borough Council recently adopted Ordinance No. 2025-1989, amending the borough’s “Fire Prevention Code.” It establishes a registration requirement for unoccupied properties. Registration in the Unoccupied Property Registry will be required for “any building or structure that for six or more consecutive months is vacant or is
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Friday, October 3, 2025
The Red Hill Borough Planning Commission agenda for Sept. 18 includes a discussion of “Ordinance No. 2025-608: Occupancy Permits Amendments Ordinance.” Red Hill Borough’s current guidelines for resale occupancy permits can be found here. The Alliance will continue to follow any changes in Red Hill Borough that may impact residential resale
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Hatfield Borough Council recently discussed amending borough code relating to Chapter 5 — Residential and Non-Residential Property Inspection programs. The Sept. 17 agenda packet includes a draft of proposed Ordinance No. 559 that will amend and revise the property inspection programs by adding minimum maintenance requirements and require the
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Joseph Boldaz with Hydraterra Professionals LLC, the engineer of record for the Green Lane-Marlborough Joint Authority (GLMJA), appeared before Marlborough Township supervisors to stress the importance of working with Green Lane Borough on an Act 537 plan for the authority. The state’s Act 537 law requires municipalities to develop and maintain sewage
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Lower Merion Township officials plan to introduce an ordinance in October that will regulate the use of gas-powered leaf blowers. The agenda from the Sept. 10 sustainability committee meeting states the ordinance would “prohibit the use of gas powered leaf blowers during the period May 1 to Oct. 1 and Jan. 1 to March 1 annually; to prohibit the use of
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Friday, September 19, 2025
Towamencin Township supervisors voted 4-1 to reject a request for a zoning change that would have allowed 300-plus housing units on the Freddy Hill Farms parcel. Developer Pinnacle Realty proposed two plans — a dense plan for 300-plus townhouses and a mixed-use residential cluster that required the requested rezoning, or a 141-unit housing development
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Friday, September 12, 2025
Montgomery County has established a human relations commission. The decision passed with a 2-1 vote, with Commissioners Chairman Neil Makhija and Vice Chairwoman Jamila Winder, both Democrats, supporting the initiative, and Republican Commissioner Tom DiBello voting against it. Makhija and Winder agreed that the formation of the commission would offer a
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Residents of the Village at Willow Run Mobile Home Park off Ridge Pike in Limerick Township are facing a 50% rent hike recently announced by the corporate property owner, Malvern-based Longview Management LLC. In August, residents were given one month’s notice that their lot rents would increase by $310 per month and an additional $27 would be charged
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Friday, August 29, 2025
A redevelopment process that has taken years is moving forward in Horsham Township. Township officials recently rezoned the former Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove, and have now adopted an official map for the 862-acre site off Route 611. The map identifies the locations of public lands and facilities like streets, trails, water and sewer
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Friday, August 29, 2025
Weeks after its acquisition of Audubon Water Company, Pennsylvania American Water announced that the Audubon system now meets all current state standards for PFOS and PFOA (PFAS) and other water quality benchmarks. Compliance with standards was met after Pennsylvania American Water put into service an interconnection with its Norristown system and shut off
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Residents of the Village at Willow Run Mobile Home Park off Ridge Pike are facing a 50% rent hike recently announced by the corporate property owner, Malvern-based Longview Management LLC. Residents of the over-55 development own the manufactured homes in which they live, but rent the lots on which they are placed. Longview Management LLC gave residents one
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Horsham Township Council unanimously adopted an ordinance to rezone the former Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove from industrial to residential in June — 14 years after its closure. The township and Horsham Land Redevelopment Authority have been inching along with planning the strategic reuse of the 862-acre site off Route 611 since
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Friday, August 15, 2025
A July 23 review of an amended version of a proposed Main Street overlay ordinance had Towamencin Township supervisors debating residential density limits, procedural issues and the impact of the ordinance on the community. A code update to allow new uses within the township’s village overlay district has been in discussion since 2018, and a revised
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Friday, August 15, 2025
The Shipley School has acquired the College Hall apartment building at 801 Montgomery Ave. in the Bryn Mawr section of Lower Merion Township for $12 million. Head of School Ian Craig said plans for the 24-unit building have not been determined, but it gives Shipley nearly full control of a 17-acre plot of land in the heart of Bryn Mawr. The apartment
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Friday, August 8, 2025
West Conshohocken Borough Council is considering a draft ordinance that would revise the borough's Rental Registration Code and Zoning Code, including:
Updating the definition of “family” and adding terms such as “emergency repair” and “non-emergency repair”
Requiring rental registration certificates and establishing new
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Friday, August 8, 2025
Horsham Township Council will consider adopting two ordinances that would bring the township in line with updated international building and fire safety standards. The council will consider adopting the 2021 editions of the International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) and the International Fire Code (IFC), repealing older ordinances that conflict with the
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Friday, August 1, 2025
Upper Providence Township voters will have an additional decision to make when they go to vote in November — “Do I want to increase my taxes to preserve open space?” At the July 21 meeting, township supervisors voted 3-0 to adopt an ordinance putting a referendum on the November ballot, asking if residents are willing to increase both
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Friday, July 25, 2025
Upper Merion Township has agreed to pay more than $8 million for a property at 150 E. DeKalb Pike in King of Prussia. It is currently occupied by Rossi Auto Salvage and owned by the Rossi family. The land is adjacent to a future road that is planned to be extended, however the township’s long-term plans for the site are undecided. The property
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Towamencin Township supervisors narrowly voted to move forward with a housing affordability audit to be conducted by the Montgomery County Planning Commission. The commission had offered the review in June, citing past housing approvals and projected population growth, as the township faces discussions about potential development projects like Freddy Hill
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Friday, July 11, 2025
An analysis of Census Bureau data by Point2Homes has King of Prussia — the commercial hub of Upper Merion Township — becoming one of 15 major suburbs in the country’s largest metropolitan areas to become majority renter within a five-year span. Renters lived in roughly 41% of King of Prussia’s homes in 2018, compared to 52% in 2023,
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Friday, July 11, 2025
Another 30 housing units have been proposed near the Route 100 and State Street interchange in Upper Pottsgrove. Add that to the 219 units proposed for the same area earlier this year, and a busy intersection would become even busier. The Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission reviewed a project by Master Ventures LLC that calls for 28
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Friday, July 4, 2025
Lansdale Borough Mayor Garry Herbert issued a memo to Lansdale police officers “to begin a process of managing the unhoused in the parks, related to the sunup and sundown laws.” Borough officials have discussed homelessness within the borough for several years, with residents raising concerns over encampments in multiple borough parks and people
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Pottstown School Board adopted a $92.7 million budget for 2025-2026 that will increase taxes by 5.8% — marking the first tax increase in five years. The median property assessed at $78,995 in the district can anticipate an additional $192 in taxes for a total of $3,506. The district will use approximately $3.8 million out of the reserve fund
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Friday, July 4, 2025
The Souderton Area School Board approved a $159.7 million budget that includes a 3.95% tax increase. The Act 1 index maximum for the 2025-2026 school year is 4%. The real estate millage will rise from 34.4636 mills to 35.8249 mills — amounting to an additional $187 for a property assessed at the district average of $158,840. Those enrolled in the
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Friday, June 27, 2025
A third apartment project has been proposed for one of the busiest intersections in Montgomery County — Route 100 and State Street in Upper Pottsgrove Township. Design Pro Development is proposing a 219-apartment complex in three buildings at 994 Commerce Drive. When combined with two other apartment proposals in the area, the intersection could see
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Pottstown Beacon of Hope held a groundbreaking ceremony for a new homeless shelter to be built at the corner of West High and Glasgow streets. The project has been winding its way through legal issues, zoning hearings and public meetings for years. Tom Niarhos, executive director of Beacon of Hope, said the groundbreaking cemented “Pottstown’s
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Friday, June 20, 2025
North Penn Water Authority (NPWA) has announced important changes to account holders for water service, specifically affecting rental and lease properties. The new regulation states, “All service connections and account billing shall be issued only to the property owner for each parcel. As such, new accounts will not be in the name of tenants,
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township commissioners voted 3-2 to award bids for a new township complex on Gilbertsville Road. Commissioners Cathy Paretti and Dave Waldt voted against awarding the bids. Paretti said she is not against the project, but worries the township is making the same mistake it made when it targeted the Smola Farm open space as the site for the
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Pulte Homes will move ahead with a 72-townhome project on 18 acres of vacant land in Upper Dublin Township. Pulte purchased the triangle-shaped parcel at 1840 Norristown Road off Welsh Road and Limekiln Pike from Jenkintown-based Goodman Properties for $12.2 million. The approval process took seven years. Attached townhomes in “Maple Glen
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Friday, June 13, 2025
The Philadelphia Suburban Development Corporation (PSDC) recently gave Towamencin supervisors an update on two projects in the works. PSDC has proposed plans to revive the former Towamencin Village Shopping Center since the early 2010s, and the approval of an entertainment lifestyle overlay district in 2016 should have been a boost. An earlier version of
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Friday, June 13, 2025
North Wales Borough Councilwoman Anji Fazio recently asked Borough Manager Christine Hart for an update on the McKeever’s Tavern building. Originally built in the 1890s, it was first the Colonial Inn, then known as the North Wales Hotel through the 20th century, then McKeever’s Tavern until it closed in 2014. Several plans for the property were
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Overturning a 2023 Commonwealth Court decision in favor of Pottstown School District, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that Pottstown Hospital was entitled to property tax exemption as a nonprofit, despite linking executive bonuses to profits. In its 5-2 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that Pottstown Hospital’s financial bonuses were reasonable
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Friday, June 6, 2025
The Spring-Ford Area School Board voted 6-3 to adopt a $215 million budget for the 2025-2026 school year that will raise property taxes by 5.14%. The district’s millage rate was set at 34.1855 mills, which amounts to an increase of $167 per $100,000 of assessed property value. District administrators pointed to ongoing challenges, including rising
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Voters in Abington Township and the Borough of Rockledge approved a bond referendum in the May 20 election, authorizing Abington School District to spend $285 million to build a new middle school. A district-wide facilities assessment in 2021 identified the middle school as the building with the greatest needs. The current Abington Middle School was built
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Lower Merion’s historic preservation planner Greg Prichard recently gave a brief presentation on the township’s new interactive map showing all of its designated class I and class II historic properties. The township created its Historic Resource Inventory 25 years ago — a list that includes over 1,000 addresses. The map can be viewed on
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Revised land development plans were submitted in April for the “Enclave at Melrose,” a major redevelopment proposal for the shuttered Melrose Country Club in Cheltenham. The plans call for 330 total units, with 134 townhomes and a 24-unit multifamily building being designated as 55 and over. The proposal also includes medical office space,
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Friday, May 23, 2025
The Norristown Zoning Hearing Board recently granted a four-year variance that would allow a “temporary housing facility” to operate in the municipality’s office commercial retail district. The approval will allow Montgomery County’s plans to open a 50-bed supportive, short-term housing facility to take a major step forward. The vote
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Friday, May 16, 2025
The Pottstown School Board finance committee met on May 8 to further discuss the budget, and many members are unwilling to make some of the cuts recommended by the administration. A $9 million budget gap announced in February has been reduced to $3.3 million by increasing taxes to the maximum allowed by the state and making cuts, including: not replacing a
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Land damaged by Hurricane Ida several years ago will become a new park in Bridgeport Borough. Bridgeport was one of the hardest hit areas during the hurricane, with 300 people evacuated from their homes and about 500 temporarily displaced. The park will sit at the intersection of Front and Depot streets. The borough received the funding as part of the
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Friday, May 9, 2025
Upper Dublin Township commissioners will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, May 13, at 7 p.m. to consider an ordinance requiring sellers in qualifying real estate transactions provide relevant information about the property to prospective buyers, and to require prospective buyers to sign a statement confirming receipt of the information. The information to
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Friday, May 9, 2025
West Conshohocken Borough will hold a public hearing to consider amendments to the borough’s rental registration code. The proposed changes would amend the definition of family, require rental registration certificates, and establish rules and regulations pertaining to the use of residential rental properties. The April 8 borough council meeting
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Friday, May 2, 2025
West Conshohocken Borough will hold a public hearing to consider amendments to the borough’s rental registration code. The proposed changes would amend the definition of family, require rental registration certificates, and establish rules and regulations pertaining to the use of residential rental properties. The April 8 borough council meeting
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Members of the Pottstown Metropolitan Regional Planning Commission had several questions about a development proposal to erect 252 apartments across from the Upland Square shopping center. The apartments would be in 10 three-story buildings on just over 18 acres of land in West Pottsgrove Township. The property is located in the R-1 zoning district and also
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Toll Brothers has purchased the site of a former Catholic school in Jenkintown and plans to start construction on a 55-plus community on the property. Toll Brothers paid $9.5 million for the 46-acre former home of St. Basil Academy, a Ukrainian Catholic school for girls that closed during the pandemic. The developer plans to demolish the existing buildings
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Discussion of Heidelberg Materials’ revision of its Perkiomenville Quarry application has dominated Marlborough Township meetings recently. A group of residents attended a meeting in March that featured Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection representatives and Heidelberg lawyer Stephen Harris speaking and taking questions about the
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Friday, April 18, 2025
Jenkintown Borough Council will consider a draft ordinance regulating short-term rentals and amending rental property regulations to set forth additional licensure and requirements. The proposed ordinance will amend the zoning code to permit short-term rental uses by special exception in the Traditional Infill Overlay District and the Town Center District.
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Friday, April 18, 2025
Pottstown Beacon of Hope’s site plan for a 24-hour shelter for the unhoused won unanimous approval from Pottstown Borough Council. The site plan for the 2.3-acre property at the corner of Glasgow and West High streets was granted a recommendation for approval from the borough planning commission in March. A complicated legal tangle regarding the
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Friday, April 18, 2025
The projected budget gap between revenues and expenses in Pottstown Area School District has been brought down to $5.1 million, from a previous estimate of more than $9 million. Increasing taxes by the state maximum of 5.8% would close the gap further to $3.4 million, according to district business manager Maureen Oakley. Potential cuts on the table for the
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township is soliciting bids for the construction of a new municipal complex on township-owned land at the corner of Gilbertsville and Moyer roads. The land was initially purchased using $500,000 in open space funds — a move not supported by township commissioners Cathy Paretti and Dave Waldt. Paretti instead felt the property should
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Lower Merion Township officials are getting the word out to township voters — check your ward boundaries. The 2020 Census demonstrated a 10-year population increase in Lower Merion of 5,808 residents, for a total population of 63,633, with a 37.4% deviation in the range in population between the least and most populated wards. As a result, ward
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Friday, April 4, 2025
SEPTA has selected Alterra Property Group to develop a 300-unit building on 6.5-acres of SEPTA-owned land adjacent to the Conshohocken regional rail station and along the Schuylkill River. Alterra proposed a 300-unit project with 354 parking spaces and café space offered at a subsidized rental rate, as well as 119 parking spaces dedicated for SEPTA
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Friday, April 4, 2025
Norristown municipal officials recently removed a homeless encampment in a wooded area located along Stony Creek and near ball fields. Mark Boorse, director of program development at Access Services, which provides street outreach services, estimated the encampment has been in existence since at least 2017. Norristown municipal administrator Leonard
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Friday, March 28, 2025
Lansdale Borough Council tabled an ordinance pertaining to registration of foreclosed mortgages and vacant property at its March 19 business meeting. The proposed ordinance meant to address building vacancies has been met with questions from local business owners. The proposed ordinance was tabled by borough council following public comment at the March 19
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Minutes from the Feb. 12 Skippack Township Board of Supervisors meeting show that the board voted to authorize the advertisement of Ordinance No. 365. The proposed ordinance would set forth regulations that require homeowners to perform sewer lateral inspections prior to the sale of a home. The item was not included on the March 12 board meeting agenda. The
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Friday, March 21, 2025
West Conshohocken Borough Council’s March 11 agenda included the consideration of a vote to advertise an ordinance that will amend the borough’s Rental Registration Code. The proposed ordinance will set forth regulations requiring a rental registration certificate and establish procedures for acquiring the certificate, along with rules and
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Jenkintown Borough Council is considering a draft ordinance that would amend the zoning code to allow short-term rentals by special exception in certain zoning districts and amend existing rental property requirements to set forth additional licensure and regulations for the operation of rentals, including short-term rentals. The revised Chapter 142, Rental
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Friday, March 14, 2025
A lawsuit challenging Pottstown’s rental inspection ordinance, which allows officials to enter and search rental units without a warrant, was recently brought before Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Court. The long running saga began in 2017, when the Institute for Justice filed the suit on behalf of four Pottstown tenants and their landlord. In
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Friday, March 14, 2025
Freddy Hill Farms and Freddy's Family Fun Center in Towamencin announced it will close at the end of the 2025 season. The facility has been an entertainment staple for 53 years, with miniature golf courses, a driving range and batting cages. According to Montgomery County land records, the businesses exist on a 94-acre parcel owned by Freddy Hill Ventures
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township wasted no time in appealing a ruling from Montgomery Court of Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey Saltz. Saltz’s October ruling found that the 36-acre site on 370 Evans Road — the former Smola Farm that was purchased in December 2008 for $450,000 — was subject to the state’s open space law and could not be used for a
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Lansdale Borough Council continues to debate a possible ordinance meant to address building vacancies, while local business owners are pressing for specifics and voicing concern about the proposed law. The town’s code committee has discussed a possible vacancy tax or fee meant to spur owners of vacancies to submit plans or sell, and in August voted to
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Montgomery County officials publicly called on the federal government to release millions of grant dollars designated for homelessness services. The county had been awarded more than $5 million in U.S. Housing and Urban Development Continuum of Care grant funds for nine different area nonprofits providing housing and homelessness resources to those in need.
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Marlborough Township supervisors are considering a grinder pump ordinance. The proposed ordinance is intended to regulate the installation, operation, maintenance and retirement of grinder pumps and any associated low-pressure sewer systems and laterals within the township not otherwise subject to a valid grinder pump agreement enforceable by the Green
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Municipal and county officials recently signed an agreement of sale with Pinnacle Realty Development Company (PRDC) to start the long-awaited Norristown development project on land conveyed from Norristown State Hospital. The formal signing ceremony gives PRDC the ability to begin construction plans for a mixed-used development, dubbed the Preserve at Stony
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Friday, February 21, 2025
Court of Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey Saltz recently re-affirmed the ruling he made in October 2024, enjoining Upper Pottsgrove Township officials from soliciting or accepting bids on their proposed plan to build a municipal complex on the former Smola Farm. In a three-paragraph ruling, Saltz wrote “the court declares that the property designated by the
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Friday, February 21, 2025
A proposal to build 65 apartments was presented to Upper Pottsgrove Township commissioners. “Coolidge Commons” would be constructed on property bounded by Wilson Street, Farmington Avenue and State Street, opposite Highland Memorial Cemetery. The presented plans call for a garage and driveway parking spot for each apartment, allowing two cars
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Pottstown Borough Manager Justin Keller recently announced that work will soon begin on replacing the Keim Street Bridge. The bridge closed in 2010 due to structural deficiencies. Spanning the Schuylkill River, the bridge was built in 1935, connecting Industrial Highway in Pottstown with Route 724 in North Coventry Township, Chester County. Detours for the
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Friday, February 14, 2025
Whitpain Township supervisors recently viewed a presentation by township staff on the consideration of limited conversion of existing — but vacant — office space to residential uses. The concept was initially reviewed and addressed in the township’s comprehensive plan update in 2024. The presentation discusses the creation of a zoning
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Friday, February 7, 2025
The Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court will soon decide whether Lower Merion Township has the authority to limit where guns are sold in the community — a ruling that could have statewide implications. Pennsylvania state law strictly prohibits local governments from regulating guns, but maintaining that prohibition does not extend to land use. Lower
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Friday, February 7, 2025
A “new business” item on the agenda of West Conshohocken Borough Council’s Jan. 14 meeting was a presentation from the zoning officer about a proposed zoning amendment that would update rental requirements in the borough. The borough’s current rental registration regulations were last amended in 2001. Borough council next meets on
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Montgomery County commissioners are continuing their efforts to address homelessness with the unanimous approval of an agreement to lease hotel rooms in Pottstown. The six-month lease agreement with JSK Pottstown LLC procured at least 62 rooms at the Days Inn at 61 W. King St. Rent was set at “$60 per room per night,” according to the resolution
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Lansdale Borough Council recently voted to begin preparing an ordinance to deal with vacant commercial and residential properties. Vacancies in the borough have been discussed for years, with borough officials looking to encourage property owners to be active in the revitalization of the community. In December, the code committee heard from Hera Property
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Lower Providence Township passed Ordinance No. 683 in December, which requires the seller of any property in the township that is connected to the sanitary sewer system to inspect the private sewer service lateral prior to sale. The inspection must be completed by a township registered and licensed plumber, and it requires a video inspection of the private
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Norfolk-Southern Railroad has razed a ‘tent city’ occupying land it owns that sits adjacent to the Montgomery County Community College campus. Heather Garcia, a spokesperson for the railroad, said Norfolk-Southern worked for months with several organizations, including Opportunity House and private funders, “to connect individuals with
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Friday, January 24, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township officials have filed a civil complaint seeking a court injunction to prevent Matt Murray, who sued to block a township complex from being built on Smola Farm, from filing any more Right to Know requests. According to the court papers signed by Commissioners Chair Trace Slinkerd, township resident Murray has filed 100 Right to Know
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Friday, January 17, 2025
Gibraltar Rock’s 24-year effort to open a quarry in New Hanover Township has suffered another legal setback. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued an order refusing Gibraltar’s request to appeal a decision that rescinded the company’s mining permit. Stephen Harris, attorney for Gibraltar, said the refusal of the Supreme Court to hear the
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Friday, January 17, 2025
In December, the Upper Dublin Planning Commission gave the green light to move forward a proposed mixed-use development on the Prudential tract by a 4-3 vote. The vote constitutes a recommendation to the board of commissioners to adopt an amendment to the ordinance affecting mixed-use in Office Center zoning proposed by BET Investments in conjunction with a
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Friday, January 17, 2025
North Penn School District has announced that the sale of the so-called “movie lots” parcel has been delayed a second time for the developer to combine development plans. The first delay was to investigate environmental concerns. The parcels have been called “movie lots” because the strips measuring roughly 100 feet by 20 feet had
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Almost three years after the completion of the 33-home Bayberry Crossing development, Pennsburg Borough Council placed the developer in default. Council members voted unanimously to issue a notice of default to HG Properties 20 LP. Bayberry Crossing is located between 8th and 11th streets near the border with Red Hill. Solicitor Mark Hosterman said a letter
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Friday, January 10, 2025
Upper Pottsgrove Township commissioners voted 3-2 to hire a construction manager for a new municipal complex — although where exactly the complex will be located is still up in the air. Chairman Trace Slinkerd was joined by commissioners Don Read and Hank Llewellyn in approving the contract with Boyle Engineering, while commissioners Cathy Paretti and
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Lower Merion commissioners voted to increase township property taxes in 2025 — the first increase in over a decade. Todd Sinai, president of the board of commissioners, said the 6.5% increase to 4.462 mills will balance the township’s revenues with expenditures, something that has not happened in the years of no-tax-increase budgets. Source:
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Friday, January 3, 2025
Hatboro Borough Council recently approved the sale of the former Hatboro District Court, located at 414 S. York Road, for $300,000. The borough solicited proposals to sell the district court property in October. The property was sold to Victorian Village at Loller Academy, a 55-plus luxury rental community located at 420 S. York Road. Prior to the sale,
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Friday, December 20, 2024
The Perkiomen Bridge Hotel dates back to the early 1700s and is the first building seen when crossing into Collegeville Borough over the Perkiomen Creek Bridge from Lower Providence Township. Privately owned for 14 years, the hotel sits vacant and deteriorating despite citations from the borough for code violations. Flooding in September 2021 demolished
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Friday, December 13, 2024
Fort Washington-based Toll Brothers paid $8.2 million for a 42-acre site in Perkiomenville. The parcel, acquired from Provident Trust Group, is on Little Road and Route 29 behind a row of existing single-family homes. Toll Brothers plans to build 43 single-family homes on the land and expects to start selling homes next fall. It’s the latest in a
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Friday, December 6, 2024
A “tent city” sits on Norfolk Southern Corporation property in Pottstown. It is adjacent to Montgomery County Community College’s satellite campus, bordering College Drive and the railroad tracks just on the edge of the Schuylkill River. As part of a broader effort to sweep the encampment and offer short-term housing at a nearby hotel,
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Friday, December 6, 2024
Norristown municipal staff have recommended making certain revisions and clarifications to the property transfer inspection process, including clarifications to the provisions relating to transfer inspections between family members and revisions to the penalties and violations for failures to comply. The amendments allow for exceptions to a use and
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Friday, November 29, 2024
The 134-year-old Lindenwold Castle in Ambler is being auctioned off with a reserve price of $1.5 million. It was built in 1890 for the "Asbestos King" Richard Mattison, who was head of asbestos manufacturer Keasbey & Mattison. The property was designed to replicate Windsor Castle in the United Kingdom by Lansdale architect Milton Bean. The castle was
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Friday, November 29, 2024
West Pottsgrove Township plans to use eminent domain to acquire a small strip of land located within the township but owned by Pottstown Borough. The township is planning to construct a small park on land adjacent to the Pottstown Municipal Airport, converting a former township pool property into a park with a Veterans Memorial, pickleball court, inclusive
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Montgomery County has posted its proposed budget for 2025. The proposed budget includes a $15.8 million structural budget deficit and recommends increasing the county’s real estate tax millage rate by nearly 9%, from 5.178 to 5.642 mills. The proposed millage rate increase would add approximately $28.8 million of new net real estate tax revenue to
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Upper Pottsgrove Township commissioners voted to advertise a $4.4 million budget for 2025 that includes a 3.75% tax increase. Commissioners Chairman Trace Slinkerd said the tax hike is needed to close a structural deficit of more than $300,000. Not included in the budget — again — is a payment to the Pottstown Regional Public Library, which is
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Upper Pottsgrove Township officials are considering a tax increase for the first time in 15 years. The draft $4.4 million 2025 budget calls for an increase in the tax rate from the current 4 mills to 4.15 mills — a 3.75% increase. Township Manager Michelle Reddick estimates that, for a home assessed at $100,000, the increase would add $75 to the
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Friday, November 8, 2024
MCPC Monthly, a publication of the Montgomery County Planning Commission, will now have a feature on housing in each issue. At the beginning of 2024, the county sponsored a forum for housing advocates, municipal officials and staff, as well as developers, that addressed housing affordability, the challenges of addressing homelessness and potential municipal
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Friday, November 8, 2024
Marlborough Township Manager/Secretary Marybeth Cody announced that the preliminary draft of the township’s 2025 budget includes a $200,000 deficit. The budget shortfall has created a significant obstacle for the township’s plan to replace essential equipment for the Public Works department, including a truck, a chipper, a spreader, a loader and
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Brandywine Realty Trust has sold the Plymouth Meeting Executive Campus for $65.5 million — less than what the trust paid for four of the five buildings more than two decades ago. The five-building Class A office complex spans 22 acres and is located near the intersection of I-476 and I-276 and adjacent to the Plymouth Meeting Mall and a Whole Foods.
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Friday, November 1, 2024
The Conshohocken Borough Zoning Hearing Board’s agenda for Nov. 18 includes an application that seeks zoning relief to construct an office tower on undeveloped riverfront property behind the Millenium II and III office buildings. Morgan Properties, through an associated entity, Millennium IV Land Owner LLC, filed the application. The requested zoning
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Court of Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey Saltz ruled that Upper Pottsgrove Township’s plan to build a municipal complex on the Smola Farm would violate the state’s Open Space Act. The township had broken ground on the project earlier this year. In his ruling, Saltz imposed an injunction on the township to prevent the project from moving forward.
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Lansdale Borough officials voted to recommend council seek outside help to draft a long-discussed code update meant to address vacant properties. During the code committee meeting on Oct. 2, director of community development Jason Van Dame said some municipalities use an outside company to help develop the details of a vacant property ordinance. Then, after
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Montgomery County commissioners approved a consulting contract with Witt O’Brien’s LLC to support the county’s First Time Home Buyers (FTHB) program. Services stipulated the consultant’s scope of responsibilities, which included examining the current residential market and obstacles for first-time homeowners, analyzing the current
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Schwenksville Borough Council is preparing a proposed $2.43 million balanced budget for 2025 that includes an increase in the fire tax millage from 0.36 mills to 0.5 mills. The fire tax millage increase would generate an additional $7,000 in funding for the Lower Frederick Fire Company. Borough council has recently discussed the fact that the Schwenksville
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Friday, October 18, 2024
A lawsuit seeking to stop Upper Pottsgrove Township from building a municipal complex on land purchased by the township and listed in its open space plan as “permanently protected open space” now rests with Commonwealth Court Judge Jeffrey Saltz. The case is being closely watched by land preservation advocates and township officials throughout
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Friday, October 18, 2024
Whitemarsh Township held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Oct. 12 to open the Magical Miles Park Playground and basketball/pickleball courts. The playground features an inclusive and accessible new playground area and a solar cell phone charging station. Read more at the township website. Source: Whitemarsh Township; 10/14/2024
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Norristown Municipal Council approved a proposal from MM Partners for an apartment building at the intersection of Main and Dekalb streets. The seven-story, 116-unit apartment building at 69 E. Main St. would be built on land that has sat vacant for decades next door to the Justice Center Project, the expansion of the county courthouse. The new building
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Friday, October 11, 2024
Workers are nearing completion of a $1.3 million expansion of Limerick Community Park. The expansion includes new tennis and pickleball courts that are generating “significant interest from the community,” according to Limerick Township Manager Dan Kerr. Kerr updated supervisors on the progress being made and received approval to open the courts
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Lower Merion Township commissioners are considering a draft ordinance that would make updates to the township code, including the following changes:
Removal of provisions for residential rental licensing and related definitions from Chapter 92 (Housing-Property Maintenance)
Amendment of Chapter 75 (Fair Housing) to become Chapter 75 (Housing), retaining
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Towamencin Township supervisors recently voted to adopt an ordinance that repeals the township’s long-disputed sewer sale. In August, township officials, seeing little chance the sale to PA American Water would be approved due to recent rulings by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, asked for a motion to terminate the sale. Opponents of the
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Friday, September 27, 2024
The Lower Merion Township Building Department recently informed local landlords about proposed changes affecting rental properties. Township commissioners are considering a draft ordinance that includes these changes to the municipal code:
Removal of provisions for residential rental licensing and related definitions from Chapter 92 (Housing-Property
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Friday, September 27, 2024
Montgomery County will receive $45 million in funding for several walking and biking trails that will further improve accessibility and sustainability across the region. Work made possible by the grant will connect the Cross County Trail in Conshohocken with the Wissahickon Green Ribbon Trail, SEPTA’s Fort Washington Station, the Willow Grove YMCA and
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Friday, September 27, 2024
North Penn School Board members recently voted to approve a $15 million sale agreement for the so-called “movie lots” near Welsh Road in Hatfield Township. The parcels were divided into strips roughly 100 feet by 200 feet and given away by movie theaters as prizes for attending movies. The properties remained undeveloped due to a lack of
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Conshohocken-based JP Orleans is developing a 119-unit residential community on 18 acres off Mancill Mill Road and along the Schuylkill River in King of Prussia, Upper Merion Township. Called River Trail at Valley Forge, the community will have a mix of two-story carriage homes and three-story townhouses. The project is nestled between the sprawling retail
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Representatives of national home builder Pulte Homes appeared before Skippack Township supervisors to open a discussion on the future development of multiple parcels of land comprising 57 acres at the intersection of Routes 73 and 113. The developer presented a sketch plan and a concept — 349 residential homes of three different varieties, and
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Pennsylvania’s Right-to-Know (RTK) Law, first introduced at the state level in the 2007-2008 legislative session, requires any Commonwealth agency, such as a municipality or public school district, to provide the public with its records, in accordance with RTK’s outlined rules. It is designed to create a regulated process so that local
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Upper Pottsgrove officials recently agreed to have the township solicitor and police chief draft changes to the township’s solicitation ordinance. Township Commissioner Don Read raised the issue after receiving complaints from constituents. Township solicitor Eric Fray said the township must allow solicitation, “but there are ways you can put
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Friday, September 13, 2024
After receiving commentary from the Suburban Realtors Alliance, West Norriton Township's Board of Commissioners tabled a proposal at its Sept. 10 meeting that would have imposed new regulations on rental properties, landlords and tenants. Proposed Ordinance 2024-771 would amend the township’s housing regulations to require responsible local agents who
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Toll Brothers Inc. has announced site work is underway for a 54-unit, single-family home community in Royersford. Hearthfield will offer a variety of two- or three-story home designs with every home situated on a cul-de-sac. The floor plans range from about 3,000 to 3,670 square feet with 4 or 5 bedrooms, flexible living spaces, 3.5 to 5.5 bathrooms,
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Whitpain Township supervisors will consider a proposed ordinance that will guide the collection of delinquent real estate taxes. The proposal would create a penalty, interest and fee schedule for the collection of delinquent real estate taxes. The draft ordinance will be available on the Whitpain Township website. A public meeting will take place on
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Friday, September 6, 2024
The West Norriton Township Board of Commissioners will consider a proposal to impose new regulations on rental properties. The proposed ordinance amends the housing regulations to require responsible local agents to be designated for each rental property to be authorized to live within five miles of West Norriton Township and be authorized to receive
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Friday, September 6, 2024
On Aug. 28, Towamencin Township Board of Supervisors Chairman H. Charles Wilson III read the following statement: “Since our last meeting, the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) issued an order setting a formula that effectively determines what it deems to be a ‘reasonable’ purchase price for a wastewater system in a sale to a
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Friday, August 30, 2024
The Aug. 13 agenda for the West Norriton Township supervisors meeting included a discussion for the possible advertisement of amendments to the township’s rental property ordinance. Proposed changes include: a local responsible agent requirement; license requirements; rental license fees; re-registration of rental license at transfer of ownership of
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Friday, August 30, 2024
A new advocacy organization working to help individuals facing homelessness and poverty in Montgomery County and around the local area will open a new facility in Lansdale. Mitzvah Circle will hold a grand opening for the new location at 435 Doylestown Road on Wednesday, Oct. 30. The group operates a "diaper bank" for needy families, a period supply
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Friday, August 23, 2024
The Lower Merion Board of School Directors voted unanimously to authorize the sale of the former Oakwell estate to nonprofit conservation organization Natural Lands. The school district invoked eminent domain on the Oakwell estate and a second adjoining property in 2018, planning to use them as playing fields for its new Black Rock Middle School. In total,
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Abington School District Superintendent Jeffrey Fecher announced that middle and high school students will be required to forfeit their cell phones during class time, placing them in pockets that hang on the back of classroom doors. Fecher said the new limits on cell phone use during classes “may benefit students socially and emotionally” and
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Friday, August 16, 2024
Lower Merion Township has been discussing proposed ordinance amendments that would enact new licensing requirements and regulations for student and residential rentals. The proposed ordinance would separate student and nonstudent residential rental licensing regulations and requirements. One important change relates to how violations will be handled,
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Lower Frederick Township supervisors recently viewed a presentation about the township’s sewer inflow and infiltration (I&I) program. I&I refers to water from sources other than domestic wastewater that enters the sewer system, thereby reducing the available capacity of the system. Excessive I&I increases the cost of wastewater treatment
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Friday, August 9, 2024
New Hanover Township supervisors unanimously voted to purchase 35 acres of property in the township as preserved open space. The land was purchased using $1.3 million from the township’s open space fund. Money for the open space fund comes from a dedicated 0.15% earned income tax levy that was approved by voters in 2006. The use of the property at 342
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Friday, August 9, 2024
Lower Merion Township staff have been negotiating with Norfolk Southern for close to five years to lease a portion of land that would connect the Cynwyd Heritage Trail with publicly accessible trails along the Schuylkill waterfront at Pencoyd Landing. Parks and recreation committee members recommended that the board approve a lease agreement with Norfolk
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Friday, August 2, 2024
Fortune magazine released its best places for families to live in the U.S. – and Upper Merion took the No. 2 spot. It is one of just two towns in the region to be included in the third annual rankings, which evaluated over 2,000 cities and suburbs across the country. This year's list emphasized factors affecting multigenerational families and
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Friday, August 2, 2024
Homelessness has become a much-discussed topic in Lansdale, building on discussions held at the county level after flooding in 2021 damaged housing near Norristown and then the closure of the county’s only homeless shelter in 2022. Lansdale officials began discussions with the county in the summer of 2023, and borough police have kept council updated
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Friday, July 26, 2024
The Upper Dublin Planning Commission took a first look at a proposal to build a residential, retail and commercial development at 2101 Welsh Road — often referred to as the “Prudential tract.” The proposal by BET Investments called Promenade East would include 600 apartments, 160 stacked townhouses, 100,000 square feet of medical or
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Friday, July 26, 2024
The Pottstown Borough Authority unanimously approved a plan to raise water rates over the next three years. Average residential customers of the Pottstown public water system can expect to pay about $28 more per year by 2027 because of the increase. The new water rates will go into effect in January 2025. Sewer rates will remain unchanged. The authority
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Upper Pottsgrove Township commissioners voted 4-1 to use eminent domain to take 1.4 acres of privately held land for a planned frisbee golf course at Hollenbach Park. Negotiations to buy the land from the owners “have been difficult” because they could not agree on a price. The last offer from the township prior to the eminent domain vote was
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Friday, July 19, 2024
Royersford Holdings recently published “a section 108 notice” in the Pottstown Mercury. According to Gregory Heleniak, special counsel to Upper Providence Township, the description refers to the section of the Pennsylvania municipal planning code and is published to provide a 30-day window for anyone who wants to challenge the zoning amendment
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Friday, July 19, 2024
As part of a restructuring effort following a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, David’s Bridal will move its headquarters from 1001 Washington St. in Conshohocken to 630 Allendale Road in King of Prussia. The move will allow Hightop Development to proceed with redevelopment of the 3.7-acre Conshohocken property into 49 townhomes. Hightop Development CEO
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Conshohocken-based Morgan Properties announced that it has acquired an 11-property portfolio of apartments located throughout Pennsylvania from DePaul Management Company. DePaul Management was the original developer and owner of all the properties. Four of the apartment communities, totaling 1,743 units, are in Montgomery and Bucks counties. Morgan, one of
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The Souderton Area School Board has approved the district’s 2024-2025 budget with a maximum property tax increase for the second consecutive year. The balanced $153.5 million budget includes a 5.3% property tax increase that will amount to an extra $275 per year for the average homeowner with an assessed property value of about $158,000. The 5.3%
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Montgomery County officials are looking to create a source of renewable energy by using the Norristown Dam to generate hydroelectric power. The county is currently seeking federal approval for the project by submitting an Initial Consultation Document to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to start what will be a two- to five-year process. The
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The Upper Providence Township Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to consider a draft ordinance that would amend Chapter 220 of the township code regarding soliciting and peddling. The proposal would clarify persons who are not subject to the licensing requirements, and also authorize the creation of a “do not solicit” registry for
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Friday, July 5, 2024
The North Penn School Board approved the 2024-2025 school year budget with a 4.49% tax hike — the largest in the district since the early 2000s. The average homeowner can expect to see a tax increase of about $197, according to the district. In a letter to the North Penn community, School Board President Tina Stoll said the reason for the tax increase
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Friday, July 5, 2024
Plymouth Township has been working on a proposed “single-use plastic reduction” ordinance. The purpose of the proposed ordinance is to reduce the use of single-use plastics by commercial establishments within the township, promote the use of reusable plastic bags, and curb litter. The township held a town hall meeting on May 29 to review the
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Trader Joe’s announced plans to open a location at 224 W. Dekalb Pike at the Valley Forge Center just a mile from the King of Prussia Mall this year. Trader Joe's will take over the space in Upper Merion Township once occupied by Bed Bath & Beyond, and join a tenant roster at Valley Forge Center that also includes Target, Michaels, Starbucks and
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Lower Salford Township supervisors will hold a public hearing to consider amendments to the solicitation and peddling ordinance. The amendments include: exemptions for registration requirements for religious and political soliciting; establishing an application fee; prohibiting soliciting and peddling on properties with “no soliciting” signs
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Friday, June 21, 2024
Montgomery County has launched a new website offering affordable housing data and resources. The website is geared toward area residents, businesses, municipal leaders and housing developers, as its contents offer relevant information and toolkits. The Homes for All website aims to bring stakeholders together on the issue of affordable housing. It was
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Friday, June 21, 2024
The Souderton Area School District’s 2024-2025 budget will include a 5.3% tax increase — the maximum allowable by state law without special exemptions. The budget marks the second consecutive year the school district has raised taxes to the maximum allowed by the state’s Act 1 Index. School board members have attributed the need for tax
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Toll Brothers bought a 29-acre manure composting site in Royersford with plans to build 54 single-family homes. The property at 248 Rittenhouse Road, a mile-and-a-half east of Route 422, was purchased for $3.1 million. The developer has begun site work at the location that will be named Hearthfield. Toll expects homes in the development to open for sale in
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Friday, June 14, 2024
The latest round of awards in the Montco 2040 Implementation Grant Program included nearly $2.5 million to help fund 13 projects in municipalities across the county. “These grant awards will assist municipalities in making targeted physical improvements that achieve real progress toward the goals of the plan and the plan’s themes of connected
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Friday, June 7, 2024
The Perkiomen Valley School Board is poised to adopt a final $132.9 million budget on Monday, June 10, that includes a 2.59% tax increase. During a recent work session, business administrator James Weaver reported that the budget includes $129.3 million in revenues and $132.9 in project expenses. The budget deficit will be closed using about $1.5 million in
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Upper Providence supervisors voted 4-1 to adopt a zoning amendment that will allow for the alternative plan for the development of the Parkhouse property to move forward. The 176.5-acre property is adjacent to the Parkhouse Rehabilitation and Nursing Center. It is one of the largest undeveloped properties in the county. The current zoning on the property
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Friday, June 7, 2024
Upper Dublin Township commissioners will vote on June 11 on an ordinance to reapportion the seven wards of the township by revising boundary lines. The move is to make the populations in each ward as equal as practical, based on the 2020 census. At the same meeting, commissioners will also consider an ordinance approving the placement of a referendum on the
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Friday, May 31, 2024
North Penn School Board members voted unanimously on May 16 to advertise a $322 million budget proposal with a 4.49% tax increase. The tax increase is under the 5.3% Act 1 index set by the state, though that index is the highest it’s ever been. The 4.49% jump in taxes would equal a $197 increase for a home assessed at $150,000. A final vote to adopt
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Friday, May 31, 2024
Nearly 22 acres of forested land in Lower Frederick and Limerick townships are now preserved forever thanks to the efforts of its owners, longtime conservation advocate Phil Smith and his wife, Gail Gosser-Smith. The property, now under a conservation easement held by Natural Lands, can be viewed from both Gerloff and South Ryanford roads. The land is
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Friday, May 24, 2024
Upper Providence Township supervisors will consider a zoning amendment to further define “open space residential community development” at a special meeting on Wednesday, May 29, at 6 p.m. at the township building, 1286 Black Rock Road, Phoenixville. The following evening, Thursday, May 30, at 6 p.m. the supervisors will hold a conditional use
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Friday, May 24, 2024
The TownePlace Suites Philadelphia Horsham was put up for auction on May 10 with a starting bid of $1.4 million. Property records show the hotel is currently owned by Highgate, a New York real estate investment and hospitality management company. The hotel recently underwent $2.4 million in renovations and is being offered unencumbered by debt and
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Friday, May 24, 2024
Dublin Borough Council will hold a public hearing at Borough Hall, 119 Maple Ave., on Tuesday, May 28, at 7:30 p.m. to consider enactment of a draft ordinance that would amend Chapter 4 of the municipal code to require Knox Boxes on commercial buildings. Knox Box-style rapid entry systems allow emergency responders entry to buildings and may also include
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Friday, May 17, 2024
New York-based partners David Werner Real Estate Investments and GreenBarn Investment Group are planning to add up to 1.4 million square feet of new office, lab and manufacturing space to the Bridge at Collegeville. The partners acquired the 340-acre office and life sciences campus in Upper Providence Township last August for a reported $180 million from
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Friday, May 17, 2024
A proposed residential development project in Worcester Township has caused a stir for area residents. BT Worcester has submitted plans for the City View development project on 12 acres at 2794 Germantown Pike — a stretch of land that used to house motor vehicle sales, repairs, food service and retail businesses. The plans include two
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Friday, May 17, 2024
Collegeville Borough owns four parks: Community Park, Hunsberger Woods, Waterworks Park (owned jointly with Trappe Borough) and the new creekside park on West First Avenue, which is a work in progress. The borough’s parks committee has started work with the Montgomery County Planning Commission to create a master plan for the parks, and the borough is
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Friday, May 10, 2024
Lansdale Borough Council and several of its committees have discussed vacancies along Main Street for several years. Closures of pharmacies, bank branches and a hardware store brought the discussion back to the forefront in April, when borough officials resumed talks on a vacancy fee. The vacancy fee tactic was first broached by Mayor Gerry Herbert, who
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Friday, May 10, 2024
In 2010, Lower Merion Township officials adapted the zoning code to encourage more residential density and mixed-use spaces in key areas. Those changes laid the groundwork for an era of significant change in the landscape along City Avenue. Once dominated by strip malls and office towers, the existing surface parking lots offer ample space for new, infill
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Friday, May 10, 2024
Lower Gwynedd Township supervisors will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, May 14, at 7 p.m. to consider the adoption of a driveway, sidewalk and curbing ordinance. The proposed ordinance will establish standards for the construction, maintenance, restoration and repair of roads, driveways, sidewalks and streets. See the Lower Gwynedd Township website for
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Norristown Municipal Council members formally selected Pinnacle Realty Development Company as the developer of the 68 acres on the Norristown State Hospital grounds, accepting the proposal submitted by the Montgomery County Redevelopment Authority in conjunction with Pinnacle. Called the Preserve at Stony Brook, Pinnacle is calling for a sprawling,
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Lower Pottsgrove Township is taking bids for five vacant lots along East High Street where the township had intended to build a new municipal building. The parcels are being sold as a single, two-acre unit and are all located in the “limited commercial and office” zoning district. Bids will be publicly opened on June 6. The township began buying
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The developer handling the proposed redevelopment of a long-vacant shopping center in Towamencin Township recently gave an update to local officials. Located on the southwest corner of the intersection of Forty Foot and Allentown roads, the former Towamencin Village Shopping Center has been a topic of discussion since the early 2010s, as the developer has
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Lower Providence Township officials announced a pause in proceedings regarding a short-term housing proposal by Resources for Human Development to be built on the grounds of Eagleville Hospital. “Genny’s Place” was proposed to offer occupancy to up to 60 single adults ages 18 years and older from Montgomery County for 60 to 90 days, and
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Friday, April 26, 2024
The King of Prussia District first started tracking occupancy of office buildings in Upper Merion Township in 2011. The district recently announced that occupancy of non-owner-occupied buildings larger than 10,000 square-feet has hit 89.3% — the highest ever. King of Prussia District CEO Eric Goldstein noted that 2025 and 2026 are key years because
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Upper Providence Township supervisors voted 4-1 in a special meeting to allow an alternative proposal for the development of 176 acres of land around the Parkhouse nursing facility to take another step forward. Supervisors Chairwoman Helen Calci said the vote “doesn’t lock the board into anything,” but merely allows the alternative
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Pottstown Borough Council recently approved a request to schedule a public hearing on the establishment of a business improvement district (BID) in the downtown area. The request was made by Peggy Lee-Clark, executive director of Pottstown Area Economic Development. The BID would levy an assessment, with the money going to a nonprofit organization that is
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Residents interested in keeping up with the latest news from Montgomery County can sign up for the county’s new monthly email newsletter, Montco Monthly. Source: Montgomery County; 4/2024
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Friday, April 19, 2024
Scott France, executive director of the Montgomery County Planning Commission, said growth is a major theme in county planning as work continues on the county’s 2050 comprehensive plan. France said officials are looking to find the best way to manage future development in the state’s third-most populous county. The projected population for
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Friday, April 19, 2024
A second Pottstown homeless encampment has been cleared of people, this time by PECO. A small encampment had been set up alongside a PECO substation on College Drive, across from the main entrance to Riverfront Park. According to a former resident of the encampment, PECO provided at least six months of notice and has “been pretty nice about it.”
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Friday, April 19, 2024
An apartment building project in Ardmore will have to move forward without Toll Brothers after a partnership between the developer and Piazza Auto Group came to an end in April. According to Rich Orlow, attorney for the auto group, Piazza still anticipates moving forward with its plan to demolish the existing dealerships and a nearby and since-shuttered
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Friday, April 12, 2024
A public hearing was recently held in Lower Providence Township for a text amendment to revise the township zoning ordinance for a supportive housing proposal in an institutional overlay district. The text amendment stems from a proposal from Philadelphia-based Resources for Human Development to construct a supportive short-term housing facility in
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Friday, April 12, 2024
Collegeville Borough recently held a public meeting for members of the community to review and comment on a draft plan for the 400 block of Main Street. The plan emphasizes the importance of preserving the character of the historic architecture along Main Street, while promoting the adaptive reuse of existing buildings. The borough hopes to welcome more
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Friday, April 12, 2024
The Montgomery County Partners for Home Ownership (MCPHO) is hosting its annual housing fair on Saturday, April 20. The housing fair is a great starting point to have questions answered by experts including lenders, Realtors, insurance agencies, home inspection firms, nonprofits, government agencies and more. Attendees can learn about mortgages, grant
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The Markley Street Bridge in Norristown will close on April 15 for a $7.8 million construction project. The stone arch bridge over Stoney Creek carries about 25,000 vehicles per day, according to PennDOT estimates. The 123-foot-wide structure will see its stone barriers replaced with concrete barriers, as well as other foundational improvements that will
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The Montgomery County Planning Commission (MCPC) has debuted a proposed subdivision and land development reviews portal. The portal showcases all subdivision and land development proposals submitted under Act 247 from 2008 to present. It features an interactive map to explore past and current projects in any area of Montgomery County. Information about each
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Friday, April 5, 2024
Riverfront at Royersford LLC aims to build a four-story housing, retail and entertainment development along the riverfront in Royersford Borough. The mixed-use project would be on a nearly 25-acre former industrial site along the Schuylkill River in Royersford, where 188 apartments, a 25,000-square-foot entertainment venue, restaurant and bar, and nearly
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Friday, March 29, 2024
Montgomery County announced that the county’s MontcoForward Loan Program recently closed on its first housing affordability loan. The county, in partnership with the Walters Group LLC, issued a loan to support a 60-unit multifamily development in Upper Gwynedd Township. The MontcoForward Loan Program is designed to provide low-interest loans to
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Friday, March 29, 2024
Lower Providence Township supervisors will act on a proposed ordinance that will amend the zoning of the Institutional Overlay District to allow for supportive housing. Action may be taken at the regularly scheduled meeting on Thursday, April 4, at 7 p.m. at the township building, 100 Parklane Drive, Eagleville. The proposed ordinance defines supportive
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Developer R.P. Wynstone and a group of aligned landowners filed a legal complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania accusing New Hanover Township officials of reviewing development applications in bad faith and passing restrictive ordinances designed to make construction unfeasible. The complaint also alleges that township
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Friday, March 22, 2024
The City Avenue District has presented a new master plan to the Lower Merion Township Building and Planning Committee that aims to transform the three-mile stretch of City Avenue into a more walkable district with seamless connections. The plan separates the district into three primary areas that would each cater to different types of retailers. The master
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Friday, March 15, 2024
A project to convert a large vacant warehouse in Pottstown into 85 market rate apartments was given a second chance. The project came to a halt last June when the owner of the property on North Hanover St. declined to grant Dwight City Group an extension on the agreement of sale in order to obtain a parking variance. Judah Angster, CEO of Dwight City Group,
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Friday, March 8, 2024
The Montgomery County Homelessness Task Force recently released its final report. The report reflects months of collaboration and planning aimed at creating sustainable solutions for people experiencing homelessness. The task force, comprised of community leaders, experts and advocates, was established with a mission to analyze the root causes of
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Friday, March 8, 2024
The third and final building of Jefferson Apartment Group’s Fort Washington apartment complex is slated to be completed by January 2025. The 310-unit development includes three five-story buildings that offer one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments with both surface parking and individual covered garages. JAG Fort Washington, at 1125 Virginia Dr. in
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Friday, March 1, 2024
The application window for Montgomery County’s Whole Home Repairs Program is now open. The program is designed to offer financial relief for low-income property owners to make improvements on their homes. Montgomery County homeowners making less than 80% of the area median income, a figure set at $114,000, are eligible to apply for grants of up to
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Friday, March 1, 2024
The Upper Moreland Township Community Development Committee recently discussed implementing a rental inspection program. According to the agenda summary, the objective of the program would be to better ensure that the rental housing within the township meets minimum standards. The idea was first considered last year, but discussion ended after the previous
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Friday, February 23, 2024
SEPTA is working to unify a disparate collection of subway, elevated and trolley lines to make it easier to navigate, but the result has some riders confused. In the new wayfinding system, the Norristown High Speed Line will be known as the "M" — for Montgomery County. The system maps will use the color purple to mark the route of the Norristown High
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Friday, February 23, 2024
The Limerick nuclear power generating station will continue to make tax payments to Limerick Township, the Spring-Ford Area School District and Montgomery County under a settlement approved recently by all three taxing bodies. A previous agreement that expired in 2023 had set the assessment for the power plant property and buildings at $20 million. The new
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Friday, February 16, 2024
With over half of its budget spent on policing, Jenkintown Borough officials are worried that the cost of policing is outpacing the growth of the rest of the borough. Jenkintown’s budget for 2024 is just over $5 million, and its 4,000 residents pay the sixth-highest municipal tax and second-highest school tax in Montgomery County. Mayor Gabriel Lerman
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Whitpain Township supervisors will consider a draft ordinance that would amend the township code to regulate the keeping of chickens. The meeting will be held Tuesday, Feb. 20, after 6 p.m. at the Whitpain Township Building, 960 Wentz Road, Blue Bell. The full text of the draft ordinance amendment can be found on the township website. Source: Times Herald;
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Pottstown Borough Council will vote to authorize the borough solicitor to draft an amendment to the zoning code that will attempt to regulate “sober homes” for recovering addicts and alcoholics. According to a state database created by the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs, Pottstown has more licensed recovery homes than the
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Friday, February 9, 2024
A Montgomery County court has ruled that Lower Merion School District violated the Pennsylvania Constitution by disproportionately appealing tax assessments on commercial properties and apartment buildings. The ruling states that single-family homes make up 85% of buildings in the township, yet in 2017 — the assessment year in which the case was
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Friday, February 9, 2024
A Maryland-based developer has revived its plans to build a 1,203-unit residential senior care facility on 176 open acres in Upper Providence Township. The land is one of the last big chunks of open space in the Royersford area. Royersford Holdings submitted a plan in 2022 to build the care facility for people 62 and older — a plan that conforms to
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Friday, February 9, 2024
The Spring-Ford School Board unanimously adopted a $202 million preliminary budget for the 2024-2025 school year that includes a 6.5% tax increase. The board also voted to allow the administration to apply for exceptions to the 5.4% tax cap imposed by the state. The district will ask permission to raise the tax millage by an additional 1.53% over the Act 1
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Upper Pottsgrove Township officials approved by a 3-2 vote a plan to build a new municipal complex last year — on land originally purchased as open space in 2008, as angry residents continue to point out. Township commissioners, led by Board President Trace Slinkerd, say the land was never formally preserved through a deed restriction or conservation
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Friday, February 2, 2024
The Conshohocken Borough Planning Commission will review an amended land development plan for a 598-unit apartment community on the border of Conshohocken and Whitemarsh Township along the Schuylkill River. The apartment community was previously approved through a court-ordered settlement agreement with a previous owner of the property and a revision to
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Friday, February 2, 2024
The Conshohocken Borough Planning Commission will review an amended land development plan for a 598-unit apartment community on the border of Conshohocken and Whitemarsh Township along the Schuylkill River. The apartment community was previously approved through a court-ordered settlement agreement with a previous owner of the property and a revision to
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Resources for Human Development (RHD), a national human services nonprofit, has introduced plans for a new place to help people experiencing homelessness in Montgomery County. Owen Camuso, RHD’s regional director, went before Lower Providence Township supervisors to present the “short-term housing” plan called Genny’s Place at the
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Friday, January 26, 2024
Developers recently presented a concept for a 25-story apartment building above retail and restaurants to West Conshohocken Borough Council. The presentation was made to gauge the interest of the council and public in the mixed-use project. The plan calls for ground-floor retail, several floors of parking, 258 apartments and a rooftop restaurant. Members of
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Friday, January 19, 2024
North Penn School District residents voted down a ballot question proposing a major expansion of North Penn High School in a Jan. 16 special election. Despite heavy snows and freezing temperatures, unofficial county vote totals reported 10,790 votes against the borrowing, versus 7,844 votes in favor, and only 166 absentee and mail-in votes pending review.
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Effective Feb. 1, Your Way Home will operate a new call center through Montgomery County’s Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Community Connections. The change will provide more direct, local expertise and responses to calls from residents experiencing homelessness. The county will hold a soft launch of the new call center starting on
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Natural Lands recently announced the permanent preservation of 458 acres of vulnerable open space in New Hanover and Upper Frederick townships. Camp Laughing Waters, which has been run as a camp by Girl Scouts of Eastern Pennsylvania since the 1950s, is now protected with a conservation easement. The Girls Scouts will continue as owners of the land, and the
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Friday, January 12, 2024
Pottstown Borough Council will consider zoning matters related to the redevelopment of the Lastick Furniture buildings at the corner of High and Charlotte streets. The longtime business closed in 2022 after 50 years in downtown Pottstown. A plan has been proposed to convert the two buildings on either side of North Charlotte Street into a mixed-use
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Friday, January 5, 2024
Lower Merion School District officials have approved a plan for full-day kindergarten, but officials say it will come at a cost. Prior to the board’s vote, Superintendent Steven Yanni outlined some issues connected to the change to full-day kindergarten, including the need for increased revenue from taxpayers to pay for the plan. Yanni said they are
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Montgomery County commissioners adopted the county budget for 2024 that includes a 13% real estate tax increase. The budget includes $568 million in revenue and $567.8 million in expenditures, leaving a “moderate $200,000 surplus,” according to chief financial officer Dean Dortone. The county’s millage rate will increase from 4.237 mills
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Souderton Borough Council approved a $5.7 million budget for 2024 that includes a 2.5 mill real estate tax increase. The millage rate change from 6.56 mills to 9.15 mills equates to a 37% increase. According to Mayor Dan Yocum, last year a home with an average assessment generated a municipal tax bill of $868 for the year. In 2024, the tax bill for the same
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Upper Gwynedd Township commissioners voted unanimously to adopt a budget that does not increase taxes but does include a sewer increase for the first time since 2017. Township Manager Sandra Brookley Zadell said the sewer increase is $75 per equivalent dwelling unit, which means $75 per year for the typical homeowner. The sewer rate hike will amount to
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Telford Borough Council unanimously approved a 2024 budget that does not increase taxes. The budget projects a total revenue of $3.76 million and total expenditures of $3.21 million, yielding a surplus of nearly $550,000. The surplus is attributed to the sale of the old borough building, an open space grant and unspent American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds.
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Friday, December 22, 2023
Pennsburg Borough Council unanimously approved a $3.48 million budget that includes a 1 mill tax increase. The tax increase amounts to approximately $125 for the average property owner. Seventy-five percent of the tax increase will help fund the Pennsburg Volunteer Fire Company, and 25% will go to Upper Perkiomen Valley Ambulance. Trash fees will remain at
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Friday, December 15, 2023
North Penn School District (NPSD) will hold a special election on Tuesday, Jan. 16, so the community can decide whether it will move 9th grade to the North Penn High School campus as a part of its high school renovation project. The referendum question specifically asks whether the district should borrow $97.3 million for the high school renovation.
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Friday, December 8, 2023
North Penn School Board members voted unanimously in October to set a date of Jan. 16, 2024, for a voter referendum on borrowing roughly $97.3 million to move ninth-graders to the high school. Planned renovations to the school have been discussed for a year. If the referendum passes, the high school project would move ninth grade onto the high school campus
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Updated vote totals posted on Nov. 27 showed Towamencin Township Supervisor Rich Marino, a Republican incumbent, and challenger Kofi Osei, a Democrat, tied with 3,035 votes each in the race for the seat currently held by Marino. To break the tie, Marino and Osei participated in the drawing of lots held on Nov. 30 in Norristown. As mandated by state law, the
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Friday, December 1, 2023
The Borough of Conshohocken Authority is informing residents that a new stormwater fee will be applied to quarterly sewer bills, most likely starting in April 2024. The new fee is anticipated to be about $6.50 per 1,000 square feet of impervious area on a property, according to the mailer. The fee is expected to average $10 per month for a single-family
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Friday, December 1, 2023
The 2024 budget for the Municipality of Norristown was unanimously authorized for advertisement — and it includes a possible tax increase to cover a nearly $800,000 deficit. Finance director Kathy Pfister suggested increasing the municipal millage rate from 17 mills to 17.25 mills to close the gap. For those in single dwellings, the one-fourth millage
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Friday, November 24, 2023
Montgomery County commissioners recently proposed a $568 million budget for 2024 that includes a property tax increase. The draft budget calls for an increase in the real estate tax to 4.788 mills from the current 4.627 mills, which will raise taxes for the average home in the county by about $94 per year. The proposed tax increase would generate about
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Friday, November 17, 2023
SEPTA general manager Leslie Richards said the transit agency and Conshohocken Borough are close to a deal to redevelop 6.5 acres near the new Conshohocken Train Station. The land along the riverfront was previously the focus of a plan to construct a parking garage, but now SEPTA is exploring building residential units on the top of a garage. In 2022,
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Friday, November 17, 2023
Said to be one of the largest multi-tenant suburban office sales in the country this year, FLD Group and the Adjmi family have acquired the Bala Plaza office complex from Tishman Speyer for $185 million. The buyers plan to follow through on redevelopment plans for the 61-acre Bala Plaza site previously put forth by Tishman Speyer. The master plan, which was
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Friday, November 10, 2023
Pottstown Borough has posted notices along borough-owned property near the Schuylkill River Trail alerting people living there that they have until Dec. 1 to vacate the area. The area encompasses a roughly one-mile stretch of land running between the Route 100 and Route 422 overpasses. The notice states that the land is private property of the Borough of
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Norristown Historic Architectural Review Board (HARB) recently denied a demolition application for the vacant Montgomery County prison on Airy Street, but the motion included an opportunity for “compromise” with the county. County commissioners took note of continued public opposition and have reversed their position on the demolition of the
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Developers recently provided Norristown officials with a conceptualized vision of what a mixed-use development project would look like at a former Rite Aid property located between Main and Lafayette streets. The property, which is still in a conceptual phase, is expected to include 140 affordable residential units and a 6,100-square-foot commercial space
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Worcester Township supervisors announced the addition of a 10-acre tract to the township’s open space acquisitions. The property is at the intersection of Griffith Road and Valley Forge Road adjacent to Heyser Field and the Worcester Community Hall in Fairview Village. It was originally part of the 1727 Henry Rittenhouse farmstead. Rittenhouse was
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Friday, October 27, 2023
SEPTA is putting the finishing touches on a new Regional Rail station in Conshohocken. The new station will feature high-level platforms, a new canopy over the platform and a new station building. The current station sits by Fayette Street, between Stoddard Avenue and Washington Street. The new station is located farther to the northwest, so as to keep the
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Conshohocken’s planning commission voted at its Oct. 12 meeting to recommend approval of a proposed zoning overlay along Fayette Street. A borough task force produced the draft ordinance, which would create the Fayette Street Corridor Overlay District (FCO) and divide the street into three zones that stretch from Elm Street to 12th Avenue. The
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Lower Merion commissioners recently approved the preliminary concept for the Main Line Greenway. The greenway is defined as a network of designated roadways shared between cars and bicyclists and often used with multi-use trails. Jillian Dierks, senior planner with Lower Merion, said the township’s 2006 comprehensive plan included a recommendation to
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Pennsylvania American Water is set to acquire Audubon Water Company. Audubon, valued at approximately $8 million, is a private, investor-owned system serving approximately 2,900 customers in Lower Providence Township, and is located directly between Pennsylvania American Water’s existing Royersford and Norristown water systems. According to the
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Montgomery Township supervisors unanimously approved an ordinance aimed at reducing the use of single-use plastic carry-out bags, plastic straws and polystyrene containers, such as Styrofoam. The new rule will go into effect on April 22, 2024. The following restrictions will be applied to point-of-sale of retailers, restaurants and related
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Monday, October 2, 2023
A group of advocates for the homeless allege Norristown officials have “criminalized” homelessness and disregarded people’s rights to housing — while “actively refusing to get funds for people for affordable housing,” according to Eric Tars, legal director for the National Homelessness Law Center. Advocates for the
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Plans to modify the former home of WCAU Channel 10 in Bala Cynwyd got the go-ahead from Lower Merion Township officials. The building at 10 Monument Road is a Class 2 historic building under the township’s historic resources criteria, dating back to the early 1950s, when it was built for the television station. Changes to the exterior of Class 2
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Limerick Township officials confirmed that demolition has begun on the derelict buildings at the former Publicker Distillery in the Linfield section of the township. Township Manager Dan Kerr said there are more than 12 buildings on the site and the demolition will “take a while.” Developer Limerick Town Center LLC of Madison, Connecticut, has
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Preservationists in Limerick Township are hoping to avoid the razing of the dilapidated but historic Hood Mansion. Built in 1834 by John M. Hood, an Irish immigrant, it was a summer refuge from yellow fever epidemics and, later, a station on the Underground Railroad. CB Limerick LLC wants to build four large storage/warehouse buildings and a small retail
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Monday, October 2, 2023
North Penn School District (NPSD) and Superintendent Dr. Todd Bauer are again offering families and community members the opportunity to speak one-on-one about important issues involving NPSD schools. Community Conversations, a series of informal meetings, gives attendees the chance to talk freely with Dr. Bauer and share their concerns and suggestions for
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Friday, September 29, 2023
Limerick Township officials confirmed that demolition has begun on the derelict buildings at the former Publicker Distillery in the Linfield section of the township. Township Manager Dan Kerr said there are more than 12 buildings on the site and the demolition will “take a while.” Developer Limerick Town Center LLC of Madison, Connecticut, has
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Friday, September 15, 2023
Ambler Borough Council adopted Ordinance 1135 at a public hearing on Sept. 5, implementing a use and occupancy inspection and permit for residential property transactions. The borough council said its concern was the health, safety and welfare of residents, and it decided to keep the inspection list relatively simple. There is no charge for the use and
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Monday, September 11, 2023
Ambler Borough Council adopted Ordinance 1135 on Sept. 5, which requires residential resale occupancy permits and pre-permit inspections. The proposed ordinance includes inspections of sewer laterals, curbs and sidewalks, backflow prevention, and house numbers. In addition to the inspections, prior to proceeding to closing and the execution of a deed
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Friday, September 8, 2023
Ambler Borough Council adopted Ordinance 1135 on Sept. 5, which requires residential resale occupancy permits and pre-permit inspections. The proposed ordinance includes inspections of sewer laterals, curbs and sidewalks, backflow prevention, and house numbers. In addition to the inspections, prior to proceeding to closing and the execution of a deed
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Friday, September 1, 2023
Upper Gwynedd Township commissioners recently voted unanimously to approve a zoning change for a controversial apartment project on Pennbrook Parkway. The project has been part of public discussions since March 2022 when developer The Walters Group proposed expanding the township’s transit overlay district for a 44-unit apartment development. The
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Friday, August 18, 2023
Montgomery County Office of Housing and Community Development administrator Kayleigh Silver recently presented the department’s 2023 Annual Action Plan to county commissioners. The 2023 action plan prioritizes increased homeless services, affordable housing and other infrastructure improvements. A resolution for the multimillion-dollar planning
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Friday, August 11, 2023
Dekalb Plaza, a roughly 178,000-square-foot shopping center in East Norriton Township, has been sold to Abrams Realty & Development for $23.1 million. The property, at 2640-2714 Dekalb Pike, is near the intersection of DeKalb Pike (Route 202) and East Germantown Pike. It is 98% leased and anchored by Urban Air and Big Lots. The seller, Broad Street
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Thursday, July 20, 2023
SEPTA board members recently tabled a proposal for a new $48 million parking garage complex with more than 500 parking spaces in downtown Conshohocken. The project was supposed to replace a surface parking lot with roughly 100 spaces that regularly runs out of room for commuters. The money is still earmarked in the budget, but negative comments from the
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Friday, April 17, 2026
New details have emerged about Philadelphia’s effort to formally launch a proactive rental inspections initiative. Officials with the Department of Licenses and Inspections told city council they want to staff the program with a total of 18 positions, including as many as 13 inspectors. The program’s soft launch has already brought on board a
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Developer Dean Adler is under contract to buy the Franklin Mall — better known by its former name, Franklin Mills — in Northeast Philadelphia, he told the Business Journal. He plans to transform the once-prominent shopping destination into a major youth sports venue and mixed-use development. In addition to the youth sports facility, Adler said
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Friday, April 17, 2026
Philadelphia’s Business Income and Receipts Tax (BIRT) — $1.41 per $1,000 of sales and $57.10 per $1,000 of profits — now applies even when sales are under $100,000. That income used to be tax-exempt. The city estimates 75,000 small-business owners may owe the tax for the first time. But the realization that payment of this portion of the
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Two Philadelphia landlords are trying to invalidate city council legislation aimed at strengthening protections for city renters. They filed a motion seeking permission to amend an existing lawsuit with new allegations that the bills are unconstitutional because they violate “fundamental property rights.” If granted by a judge, the complaint
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Mayor Cherelle Parker’s administration will soon issue $400 million in bonds to fund the first phase of the Housing Opportunities Made Easy (HOME) initiative, a multifaceted plan centered on building and repairing 30,000 homes in Philadelphia. The milestone comes more than a year after Parker formally launched the effort in response to the
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Friday, April 3, 2026
Another 925 units of affordable housing in Philadelphia are in danger of disappearing, leading to a heated exchange between Philadelphia officials and Councilmember Jamie Gauthier at budget hearings over how to preserve them. It’s the latest chapter in a rolling crisis around expiring federal housing subsidies. The University of Pennsylvania estimates
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Friday, March 27, 2026
It is supposed to take 70 days to record deeds under the state rules of civil procedure, but under Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal, some buyers have waited a year or longer, leaving often vacant and tax-delinquent properties in limbo. A debt-acquisition firm filed a motion for sanctions against the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office in Common Pleas
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Friday, March 20, 2026
Mayor Cherelle L. Parker wants to bring a factory that builds housing to Philadelphia, and included $10 million in her latest budget proposal to help make it happen. Currently, Pennsylvania has 27 such manufacturing facilities, but none are in the Philadelphia area. In the factories, pieces of houses or apartment buildings are constructed and outfitted with
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Friday, March 13, 2026
Philadelphia City Council is poised to expand tenant protections against retaliatory evictions and move toward proactive rental inspections under two bills in the Safe Healthy Homes Act introduced by Councilmember Nicolas O’Rourke. The measures would extend the city’s “good cause” eviction protections to all renters, regardless of
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Friday, March 6, 2026
A Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas judge has overturned the designation of the Washington Square West Historic District, voiding demolition protections for more than 1,400 properties in the 26-block Center City neighborhood and potentially jeopardizing the city’s broader preservation efforts. Judge Christopher Hall ruled that the Philadelphia
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Friday, February 27, 2026
The Philadelphia Housing Authority’s (PHA) first purchase of a private, market-rate apartment building has produced uneven results, as residents of The Dane in Wynnefield report a rocky transition. Since 2025, PHA has spent $280.6 million to acquire 17 multifamily properties totaling 1,515 units as part of CEO Kelvin Jeremiah’s strategy to
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Friday, February 20, 2026
The long-vacant industrial building at 1807 Huntingdon St. in East Kensington is moving toward redevelopment after seven years of setbacks. New Jersey-based Ellavoz Impact Capital recently announced that it was acquiring the building in partnership with Smith & Roller, allowing the developers to move forward with their plans near SEPTA’s
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Friday, February 13, 2026
Many Philadelphia business owners are facing new city taxes this year, and some say the additional costs are hitting sole proprietors and single-person operations especially hard. Smaller enterprises may be paying, for the first time, the city’s business income and receipts tax (BIRT) after an exemption was eliminated last year following a lawsuit.
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Friday, February 6, 2026
For the second and final time, Philadelphia City Council has approved a bill authorizing the city to borrow $800 million for Mayor Cherelle Parker’s signature housing plan, capping a protracted legislative process that saw lawmakers publicly spar with her administration. Council unanimously passed an amended version of the measure — the
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Mayor Cherelle Parker announced Wednesday she wants to bring a modular home factory to the Logan Triangle as part of her $2 billion plan to preserve and create 30,000 housing units. If approved, the factory would sit on a 35-acre site near Roosevelt Boulevard where nearly 1,000 homes once stood. In the late 1980s, the city began demolishing them because the
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Friday, January 30, 2026
Developers have secured zoning permits for 824 new apartments around the former Hahnemann University Hospital in the month since City Councilmember Jeffery Young introduced legislation that would ban residential development in the area, prompting a rush to lock in projects before potential restrictions take effect. Recent permits include 163 units at
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Friday, January 23, 2026
A coalition of politically powerful building trades unions will help finance the redevelopment of a dilapidated senior apartment complex in West Philadelphia, an arrangement the mayor framed as a first-of-its-kind approach to expanding the city’s affordable housing stock. Mayor Cherelle L. Parker announced the plan alongside her longtime ally Ryan N.
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Friday, January 16, 2026
The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) is slated to spend $84 million to overhaul more than two dozen blighted properties in Germantown. The work, set to start by spring 2027, is expected to yield 121 affordable rental units scattered across the Northwest Philadelphia neighborhood. PHA took ownership of the 28 properties in October. The neglected
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Friday, January 9, 2026
The Eastern Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters plans to relocate its headquarters and two local training centers to the Philadelphia Navy Yard. “It’s really only the beginning of the story, and we’re going to be doing a lot of neat things down there,” William Sproule, the group’s executive secretary-treasurer, said.
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Friday, January 2, 2026
A major change to Philadelphia’s tax code will soon impact thousands of small businesses, including many real estate professionals operating as LLCs or independent firms. The city has eliminated a longstanding tax break that excluded the first $100,000 in revenue from the Business Income and Receipts Tax (BIRT), making all firms — regardless of
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Friday, December 19, 2025
Philadelphia’s school board voted — over some objections — to explore giving its surplus buildings to the city. The vote does not bind the district to hand anything over, but it opens the door to transferring properties in accordance with the wishes of Mayor Cherelle L. Parker, who has promised her administration will build or restore
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Friday, December 12, 2025
Philadelphia residents living beside long-vacant rowhouses face growing safety risks as deteriorating structures collapse, invite pests and damage occupied homes, while the city’s system for tracking these properties falters. The Department of Licenses and Inspections no longer relies on its once-touted vacancy-prediction tool and instead depends on
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Friday, December 5, 2025
Philadelphia City Council approved a major amendment to Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s H.O.M.E. housing initiative, shifting tens of millions of dollars toward programs for the lowest-income residents and triggering the sharpest public clash between Parker and lawmakers since she took office nearly two years ago. The move followed weeks of tense
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Saint Joseph's University closed a deal on Oct. 20 to sell its University City real estate portfolio for $66.5 million to the Belmont Neighborhood Education Alliance, a nonprofit chaired by housing investor Michael Karp, at a steep discount from its book value. The sale includes 10 parcels St. Joe's acquired in its 2022 merger with the University of the
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Friday, November 28, 2025
A New York developer is moving ahead with plans for a 620-unit apartment tower along the Delaware River in Philadelphia, presenting its proposal to the city and revealing new renderings. Brevet Capital is planning the 36-story tower at 1341 S. Christopher Columbus Blvd., between Washington Avenue and Reed Street in the Pennsport section of the city. The
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Friday, November 21, 2025
The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) is planning sweeping layoffs that will affect almost 300 of the agency’s 1,200 employees, beginning in January 2026. The cutbacks are the result of dramatic changes in how PHA, which provides affordable housing to thousands of families across the city, does maintenance and repair work. Instead of directly
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Friday, November 14, 2025
Flipping homes in Philadelphia has become much harder due to a combination of rising costs, limited inventory and a more competitive market. Investors report that even extensive renovations don’t guarantee profits, as property prices, construction costs, contractor reliability and borrowing rates have all increased. Buyers also have more negotiating
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Friday, November 14, 2025
Philadelphia officials are moving forward with Mayor Cherelle Parker’s $2 billion Housing Opportunities Made Easy (H.O.M.E.) initiative, which aims to create and preserve 30,000 housing units, but some advocates say the plan doesn’t adequately prioritize low-income and senior residents. City planning director Jessie Lawrence highlighted the
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Friday, November 7, 2025
A new study by the Reinvestment Fund found that corporate investors purchased about one in four single-family homes sold in Philadelphia between 2017 and 2022, a trend reshaping the city’s real estate market and limiting opportunities for first-time and lower-income buyers. Concentrated in lower-cost neighborhoods, such as Germantown, Cobbs Creek and
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Friday, October 31, 2025
The City of Philadelphia ended fiscal year 2025 with a record $1.187 billion fund balance, Mayor Cherelle Parker announced. A fund balance represents the difference between assets and liabilities in a given fiscal year. The Parker administration pointed to key taxes exceeding expectations, lower spending on personnel due to employee vacancies, and spending
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Friday, October 24, 2025
Philadelphia Land Bank purchased 35 garden parcels once tangled up with privately held tax liens at sheriff’s sale in August. The purchases are part of a plan orchestrated by garden advocates and some city council members to transfer abandoned land now used for agriculture to gardeners or nonprofit land trusts. “We’re talking about
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Friday, October 17, 2025
Philadelphia lawmakers are weighing legislation that would provide a rebate to certain low-income renters amid the city’s affordable housing crisis. The measure, introduced by City Councilmember Nicolas O’Rourke, calls for the city to provide a local match to recipients of the state Property Tax/Rent Rebate Program, which provides refunds of
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Philadelphia lawmakers have started poring over the details of a proposed budget for the first year of Mayor Cherelle Parker’s signature housing plan, a $2 billion initiative centered on dozens of programs designed to help renters and homeowners keep a roof over their heads. The latest proposal calls for an annual budget of $194.6 million for 26
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Philadelphia homeowners can now apply for all of Philadelphia’s major property tax relief programs through a single online form designed to simplify enrollment and boost participation. The new combined application on the Philadelphia Tax Center lets residents check eligibility and apply for the Homestead Exemption, Real Estate Tax Installment Payment
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Friday, September 26, 2025
Several Center City office buildings have sold in recent months for well under half their previous prices and assessed values, attracting residential developers and out-of-market investors. An Inquirer analysis of city tax assessment data found that the overall value of Philadelphia’s large office buildings in 2019 was about $9.8 billion, slightly
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Friday, September 19, 2025
Philadelphia has seen significant job growth in recent years, outperforming other major cities — but it’s not helping fill empty offices. A new report by Center City District, Philadelphia’s business improvement district, evaluated 15 years of data on office leasing and vacancy, job growth and the talent pipeline in the city and its
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Friday, September 12, 2025
Philadelphia just rolled out a system that officials say will prevent home stealing and keep families from losing the generational wealth that homeownership can create. Now, when someone who’s attempting to sell a home in Philadelphia submits a deed for the city to record, the city’s new automated system will use government databases to check
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Friday, September 5, 2025
Since fall 2022, Philadelphia has been giving no-strings-attached cash to 301 households randomly selected from the Philadelphia Housing Authority’s wait lists for public housing and federal subsidies. The PHLHousing+ program was scheduled to end in June, but because of new findings about the program’s success, it has been extended until June
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Friday, August 29, 2025
The largest office property in Philadelphia is up for sale while it remains mired in a foreclosure case. Centre Square, located just west of City Hall at 1500 Market St., is being marketed for sale. The 1.76-million-square-foot office complex consists of the connected 36-story East Tower and 43-story West Tower, along with a 450-spot parking garage. Centre
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Friday, August 29, 2025
The City of Philadelphia’s website has a central portal where users can find out what permits or licenses they need for an activity or project, and pay any tickets or violations. Through the site, users can apply for building and zoning permits, secure rental and vacant property licenses, and obtain certificates of occupancy or rental suitability.
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Friday, August 22, 2025
Carl Dranoff is preparing for his next project on South Broad Street, an 84-unit boutique apartment building at Broad and Carpenter streets. The seven-story building is planned at the site of a former McDonald’s, which was demolished to make way for the mixed-use development. The site is just north of the 322-unit Lincoln Square apartment building and
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Friday, August 15, 2025
Philadelphia officials are reminding real estate professionals and landlords of Philadelphia’s lead-safe certification requirements for rental properties, aimed at protecting children from lead poisoning. Under city law, landlords renting homes built before 1978 to families with children under 6 must hire certified technicians to inspect the property
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Friday, August 8, 2025
A major change to Philadelphia’s tax code will soon impact thousands of small businesses, including many real estate professionals operating as LLCs or independent firms. The city has eliminated a longstanding tax break that excluded the first $100,000 in revenue from the Business Income and Receipts Tax (BIRT), making all firms — regardless of
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Friday, July 25, 2025
Real estate developer James Levin is selling his vast portfolio of affordable Philadelphia rental properties, a decision that could have a ripple effect on the entire city. At least 3,000 people live in Levin’s buildings. Many, if not all, could be forced to move if the units were to become market rate under new ownership. City Councilmember Jamie
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Friday, July 18, 2025
Philadelphia has debuted a new park along the Delaware River — a 10-acre green space featuring a broad lawn, trails, a native meadow, modern restrooms, parking, and hundreds of freshly planted trees and shrubs. Robert A. Borski Jr. Park in Bridesburg marks an effort to reunite residents with a waterfront that had been cut off by various industrial
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Friday, July 11, 2025
Crews have been working to complete the first section of a cap to a busy section of I-95 South between Chestnut and Walnut streets in Philadelphia. When completed, the cap will be home to nearly 12 acres of parkland and seamlessly connect Old City to the Delaware River waterfront at Penn’s Landing. Work will soon start on the second section of the
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Friday, July 4, 2025
Philadelphia City Council has approved legislation authorizing the city to create an anti-displacement fund for tenants forced to move because their property has become uninhabitable. Under the legislation, tenants would be eligible to receive a one-time payment through the fund if they must move because of a negligent property owner or landlord.
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Friday, June 27, 2025
As of July 1, the city’s portion of real estate transfer tax will increase from 3.278% to 3.578%. The state will remain at 1%, making the total 4.578% for transactions in Philadelphia. Even if your transaction happens before July 1, if you don’t register the deed before July 1, the new transfer tax rate will apply. Source: Philadelphia
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Friday, June 27, 2025
Philadelphia City Council passed two key housing bills on June 12, setting the stage for them to become law in the coming weeks and bringing potential changes for both renters and landlords. State law already prohibits landlords from charging more than two months’ security deposit for a tenant to move in for the first year. During the second year,
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Philadelphia workers will see minuscule tax cuts and small-business owners will get a mixed bag of pain and relief from the $6.8 billion budget approved by Philadelphia City Council. After making minor amendments, the council largely approved Mayor Cherelle Parker’s taxing and spending proposal for the budget that takes effect July 1, as well as much
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Friday, June 20, 2025
Mayor Cherelle Parker’s $800 million bond initiative will provide funding for dozens of housing policies, and the first tranche of the bonds, worth $400 million, will be sold in the fall. The earliest the funds will start to flow to the housing initiatives is October. Parker administration officials have outlined how much funding they hope to see
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Friday, June 20, 2025
The new owner of the Wanamaker Building says that Philadelphia today is akin to New York City in the 1990s, but with better building codes. As TF Cornerstone embarks on the redevelopment of the historic department store — with local partner Alterra Property Group — they plan 600 loft-style apartments similar to units they created in
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Friday, June 13, 2025
Philadelphia City Council approved legislation crucial to Mayor Cherelle Parker’s signature housing proposal, a $2 billion strategy centered on creating and preserving 30,000 units during Parker’s time in office. The Housing Opportunities Made Easy, or H.O.M.E. initiative, is backed by an $800 million bond — dollars the administration
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Friday, June 6, 2025
Philadelphia City Council introduced legislation to approve Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s plan to issue $800 million in city bonds for her signature housing initiative — but not before adding an “oversight provision” giving lawmakers an increased role in how the money is spent. Parker and the council have about a week to finalize
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Friday, May 30, 2025
Philadelphia lawmakers have advanced legislation designed to fast-track the approvals process for affordable housing projects with long-term income restrictions. Under the legislation, the city’s Department of Licenses and Inspections would be required to expedite the review process for zoning permit applications for affordable housing projects,
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Friday, May 23, 2025
Philadelphia homeowners have access to a home repair loan through the city’s Restore, Repair, Renew program, which gives city homeowners access to 10-year, low-interest loans ranging from $2,500 to $50,000. Homeowners can use the loans to address repairs related to health, safety, weatherization, accessibility and quality of life. David Thomas,
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Friday, May 23, 2025
The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) has been the most active buyer of multifamily units in the city since September, gobbling up properties in Port Richmond, Grays Ferry, University City and Wynnefield Heights.The city agency has spent $235 million to acquire 1,329 units as part of its Opening Doors initiative to grow its portfolio citywide. The
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Friday, May 16, 2025
More than 1,100 apartments are under development in Center City through office-to-residential conversion projects. The conversions address two of Philadelphia's most pressing issues at the same time — keeping the office vacancy rate from rising above 20% while increasing the city’s tight housing supply. Clint Randall, vice president of economic
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Friday, May 16, 2025
Philadelphia voters will consider three ballot measures during this year’s primary election. One is designed to increase the city’s supply of affordable housing amid an ongoing crisis. The measure effectively seeks to close a loophole created by the Mixed-Income Housing Bonus program, which enables real estate developers to increase the density
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Friday, May 9, 2025
The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) has been trying to build dozens of affordable homes and apartments in Strawberry Mansion since 2019. The project spans 14 city-owned lots in the neighborhood and is backed by federal, state and local funds. To gain necessary approvals, the number of units was reduced from 77 to 57, plans for duplexes were scrapped in
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Friday, May 2, 2025
Top aides to Mayor Cherelle Parker defended the administration’s plan to eliminate a popular business tax break that is facing a legal challenge, saying the city would be unlikely to prevail in court if it defended the policy and could face significant financial consequences if it loses. The tax break excludes companies’ first $100,000 in
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Friday, April 25, 2025
Mayor Cherelle L. Parker revealed the specifics of her $800 million housing policy — dubbed Housing Opportunities Made Easy, or H.O.M.E. — detailing how she hopes to spend money raised by issuing city bonds to build or repair 30,000 homes. Angela Brooks, Philadelphia’s chief housing and urban development officer, described it as
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Friday, April 18, 2025
Mayor Cherelle Parker’s H.O.M.E. initiative, which she is asking city council to approve during spring budget negotiations, has an eye-popping $2 billion price tag. But very little of that would come out of the city budget next year if lawmakers approve her plan. Approximately $800 million would come from sales of city bonds that would be paid back
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Friday, April 11, 2025
Money from a $12 million federal grant for the Philly Tree Plan that had been frozen amid Trump administration scrutiny has been unfrozen — at least for now. City council members were surprised to learn the money had started flowing again to help pay for the city’s goal of greatly increasing the number of trees in multiple neighborhoods to
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Friday, April 11, 2025
The Neighborhood Infrastructure Driveway Repair Program officially reopened March 31, and applications are now being accepted to get potholes filled and broken cement replaced. The program, which is part of Philadelphia’s $400 million Neighborhood Preservation Initiative, covers the cost of repairs for eligible shared driveways at no cost to
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Friday, April 4, 2025
A new unit in the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office will work to combat illegal dumping, stepping up investigation and prosecution of one of the city’s most prominent quality-of-life crimes. Known as the Cleaner and Greener Enforcement Unit, the effort is being launched as a pilot program in the 8th and 9th city council districts, District
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Friday, March 28, 2025
Mayor Cherelle Parker said her administration hopes to leverage a $2 billion investment in housing under an “aspirational” proposal to expand the city’s supply of market-rate and affordable units amid an ongoing crisis. “There is no more important issue — single issue — facing our great city of Philadelphia than the issue
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Friday, March 21, 2025
Philadelphia’s double tax system on businesses could be phased out if Mayor Cherelle Parker’s budget proposal and subsequent legislation to codify the tax cuts are successful. The budget proposal is similar to recommendations by the Philadelphia Tax Reform Commission, which recently released its report. Through the Business Income and Receipts
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Friday, March 14, 2025
Last July, following a long hiatus, the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office quietly resumed selling off tax-delinquent properties across the city. Since then, the office has held nearly three dozen tax sales using a real estate auction website called Bid4Assets. Well over 1,000 properties were auctioned at those sales, but the Philadelphia Land Bank, the
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Mayor Cherelle Parker announced the hiring of Angela D. Brooks as Philadelphia’s chief housing and development officer, a new position created to shepherd her initiative to preserve and create 30,000 housing units in the city. Brooks was previously president of the American Planning Association and director of the Illinois office of the Corporation
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Friday, March 7, 2025
Homebuilders have been busy across greater Center City and especially along the Delaware River. Roughly 3,800 homes were completed in greater Center City last year — the highest number in the past five years, according to Center City District’s annual housing report, released March 4. Developers built almost 1,000 more homes in this region in
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Friday, February 28, 2025
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker has signed an executive order aimed at spurring residential development, the first tangible piece of a broader effort to increase the city’s housing supply amid an ongoing crisis. Under the order, the administration will convene an advisory group to “review existing processes and policies and provide
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Friday, February 21, 2025
Last spring, Philadelphia’s Eviction Diversion Program, a nationally recognized initiative created during the pandemic to resolve landlord-tenant issues outside court, became permanent. Landlords are required to participate in the program, which includes an opportunity for financial assistance, and to negotiate with tenants before filing for evictions
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Friday, February 21, 2025
West Philadelphia’s Haverford Square Properties is expanding to a new part of the city, with a proposal for 160 units in three buildings along Chester Avenue in Southwest Philadelphia. The bulk of the units would be in two new apartment buildings, but the stately stone building that once housed the St. Divine Mercy School will be put to new use as
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Friday, February 14, 2025
New research shows Philadelphia, the most impoverished big city in the country, is becoming less affordable. The median monthly rent for a typical apartment in the Philly metro area — which includes the suburbs and places like Camden and Wilmington — was $1,865 during the final quarter of 2024, according to a January report from real estate
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Friday, February 7, 2025
The first major office-to-residential conversion of the post-pandemic era in Philadelphia is set to be completed in the spring. Alterra Property Group is on schedule to finish the conversion of 1701 Market St. from an office building to apartments by Memorial Day. Leasing will begin in March. The Alterra project — with 299 units, 190 parking spaces
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Friday, February 7, 2025
Philadelphia lawmakers will consider a pair of bills aimed at reducing up-front costs for renters in the city, a move that comes as housing prices are increasing and outpacing income growth. One piece of legislation would cap apartment application fees at $20. A second bill would require that landlords allow renters to pay their security deposits in four
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Friday, January 31, 2025
Sharswood, a North Philadelphia community that was once emblematic of the city’s most entrenched social issues, is on the rise, thanks to what may be the most ambitious neighborhood revitalization effort in the country. Construction crews are busy rebuilding an entire city block near the corner of 23rd and Sharswood streets. To date, PHA has invested
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Friday, January 24, 2025
City arts leaders are hoping that UArts' buildings being sold through bankruptcy will maintain their cultural use in the hands of new owners. What will happen with the Arts Bank building on the Avenue of the Arts will hinge on whether Judge Brendan L. Shannon deems that the building should remain an arts asset or go to the highest bidder — Quadro Bay
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Friday, January 17, 2025
The 76ers’ stunning reversal on their plans for a Center City basketball arena is another blow for East Market Street, one of downtown Philadelphia’s most beleaguered commercial corridors. The basketball team’s owners have long pitched their plan as a much-needed boost for the corridor. Now, with the 76ers teaming up with Comcast Spectacor
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Friday, January 10, 2025
An analysis of municipal, school district and county tax increases by the Bucks County Courier Times shows real estate taxes have increased by an average of almost 8% over the past six years, with almost every property owner seeing some sort of tax increase. Pennsylvania property taxes are based on the total tax assessed value and the millage rates levied
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Friday, January 10, 2025
The opening of The Parker apartment building at 13th and Bainbridge streets a few months ago could be the start of a new way of creating affordable housing in Philly. That’s due to a unique agreement between the city and the building’s developer. A third of The Parker’s apartments are income-restricted, but the developer built the units
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Friday, January 3, 2025
A Philadelphia jury recently found that the owner and management of a building in Philadelphia were responsible for a woman losing her leg following a complication of an ankle injury she incurred slipping on a staircase with no handrail. The woman was awarded $15 million, the seventh-highest by a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court jury in 2024. The lawsuit was
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Friday, December 20, 2024
A bill in Philadelphia City Council proposes a change to a seemingly small and obscure section of the city’s zoning code known as nonconformities. The potential change prompted concerns from several groups: city planners, planning commission board members and a powerful building industry association board member. Some argue that such a change could
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Friday, December 13, 2024
Philadelphia City Council members voted 12-4 to give preliminary approval to the 76ers’ controversial proposal to build an arena in Center City, likely ending a two-and-a-half year saga that pitted the NBA franchise against leaders in neighboring Chinatown and paving the way for a transformation of the Market East corridor when the arena opens in
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Friday, December 6, 2024
A long-planned apartment project in the Italian Market appears to be shelved, with the developer instead planning a low-slung retail complex on the southeastern corner of Ninth Street and Washington Avenue. According to a brochure from real estate consultancy MSC, residential proposals for the site have been scrapped and replaced with more than 23,500
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Friday, November 29, 2024
After years of declining enrollment, the Philadelphia School District has grown. Superintendent Tony B. Watlington Sr. said the school system’s official student count for 2024-2025 is 117,956 — 1,841 students more than in 2023-2024, an increase of a little under 2%. Officials said the enrollment gain was due to students transferring from charter
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Friday, November 22, 2024
Officials with the Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) said they have released billions of gallons of water from upstream reservoirs to keep the river to acceptable levels in Philadelphia, but other protective measures might have to be taken if conditions persist. That could include reducing more reservoir releases or diverting water from elsewhere. DRBC
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Friday, November 15, 2024
More landlords are advertising their units to voucher holders, many in the face of increased vacancy rates at market-rate apartment buildings, particularly at newer properties in hot neighborhoods like Fishtown and Northern Liberties. Between 2021 and 2023, Philadelphia saw a spike in construction starts after a bevy of real estate developers lined up to
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Friday, November 8, 2024
At a recent public hearing on the Philadelphia Land Bank, city council members heard from community development corporations, real estate developers, community gardeners and government officials for more than four hours. Most of the attendees agreed that there is much room for improvement. “The Land Bank was designed to streamline the process of
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Two New York developers are pushing ahead with the first phase of redeveloping a long blighted and vacant 12-acre site in West Philadelphia. Their plan is to eventually renovate and build a total of 1,000 residential units, creating a major mixed-income housing development just west of Drexel University. The first phase of MSquared and LMXD’s Westpark
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Friday, November 1, 2024
Philadelphia City Council agreed to extend state and local tax breaks for the developer building warehouses at the site of the former Philadelphia Energy Solutions refinery. Council unanimously passed a 10-year extension of the Keystone Opportunity Zones covering the 1,300-acre property along the Schuylkill River in South and Southwest Philly. The site, now
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Friday, October 25, 2024
Philadelphia City Council advanced legislation that’s designed to hold corporate landlords accountable for “price-fixing” rental rates. Under the antitrust measure, violators could be sued and face stiff fines for coordinating monthly rent, an illegal practice housing advocates say hurts low-income renters by undermining competition and
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Friday, October 25, 2024
The Philadelphia Water Department released a public inventory of lead pipes throughout the city, a disclosure required of all U.S. municipalities by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Philadelphia residents can search their address in the city’s new interactive map to determine whether they’re connected to one of the many lead service
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Friday, October 18, 2024
A new Market East hotel proposed by the Goldenberg Group could be among the biggest in Center City, raising questions about whether post-pandemic demand will be enough to support the additional room supply. City officials announced plans for the 420,000-square-foot hotel late last month as part of a larger vision to revitalize East Market Street anchored by
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Friday, October 11, 2024
The Port of Philadelphia — managed by the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority, also known as PhilaPort — has outlined an aggressive strategic plan it estimates will create 9,000 new jobs and triple container capacity over the next 15 years as it invests $2 billion in capital projects and land acquisitions. The comprehensive plan will take
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Friday, October 11, 2024
In the world of affordable housing, area median income (AMI) is one of the most important metrics. Defined as “the midpoint of a specific area’s income distribution,” AMI is a regional measure often used as a shorthand to signal the relative affordability of a particular housing initiative. AMI is most often used to set income guidelines
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Friday, October 4, 2024
The assessed value of Center City office buildings fell by over $1 billion in recent years, the Office of Property Assessments (OPA) reported to city council. That spells trouble for Philadelphia’s tax revenue. The assessed value fell from $9.82 billion in tax year 2023 to $8.78 billion in tax year 2025, OPA stated, amid persistent office vacancies
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Friday, October 4, 2024
Philadelphia City Council is weighing legislation that would formally bar landlords from “price-fixing” rental rates, an illegal practice housing advocates say hurts low-income renters by undermining competition and fairness in the marketplace. The measure is designed to stop corporate landlords from using revenue management software like
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Friday, September 27, 2024
Although Center City is less of a regional draw than it used to be, restaurants and retail are booming due to the rising downtown residential population. The pandemic fundamentally altered shopping patterns in Center City, new research from commercial real estate services firm CBRE shows, sending foot traffic on Sundays soaring as more retail demand is
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Friday, September 20, 2024
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker said that her administration supports the development of a new arena for the Philadelphia 76ers in Center City, and she will send a legislative package to city council for approval in order to get the development started. “This is an historic agreement,” Parker said. “It is the best financial deal ever
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Friday, September 20, 2024
The Philadelphia Historical Commission voted to create the city’s largest new historic district in decades. Washington Square West’s new historic district includes 1,441 properties across roughly 26 city blocks. The designation is the culmination of a yearslong effort by preservationists and the Washington Square West Civic Association. And it
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Friday, September 13, 2024
Camac Street, or at least the two block stretch of it in Center City, was known for its curious paving, or lack thereof. The side street was the last wooden street in Philadelphia, and one of only a few anywhere in the country. In 2015, after several botched attempts to restore the rotting blocks, the wood was torn up in favor of asphalt. Now the quirky
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Friday, September 6, 2024
Some of Philadelphia’s landmark office skyscrapers have declined in value, resulting in lower property taxes for their owners next year. “It’s not a secret that commercial property values across the board, not just in Philadelphia, are seeing reductions, and that’s largely due to less folks in the office right now, people working
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Friday, August 30, 2024
Long-awaited reports analyzing the potential impact of the Philadelphia 76ers’ proposed Center City arena show positive economic effects but "significant" concerns for Chinatown. The Sixers plan to build the 18,500-seat, $1.5 billion arena, called 76 Place, along Market Street between 10th and 11th streets at the site of the Fashion District mall.
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Friday, August 23, 2024
Under Philadelphia’s latest property assessments released earlier this month, valuations are rising most rapidly in low-income neighborhoods in West Philadelphia that are near rapidly gentrifying areas, continuing a pattern of assessment spikes in Philadelphia’s Black and brown neighborhoods. Experts say a complex set of factors, including
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Friday, August 16, 2024
City property assessments are rising most rapidly in a handful of low-income neighborhoods that are near heavily gentrified areas in West Philadelphia, according to an Inquirer analysis. Homeowners in Kingsessing and Parkside this year will see some of the sharpest spikes in their real estate assessments, which the city uses to determine property tax bills.
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Friday, August 16, 2024
More than 1,700 apartments have opened in and around Center City this summer thanks to five major developments. The new units come amid a surge in multifamily projects throughout Philadelphia. Among developments with at least 50 units, 2,653 new apartments were built citywide in the first six months of 2024, according to real estate data firm Yardi Matrix.
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Friday, August 9, 2024
The average Philadelphia homeowner will see their property tax bill increase by $330 this year, Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s administration announced as her office prepares to release the first citywide real estate reassessment in two years. The city will mail reassessment notices to property owners in early August, and the new valuations will be
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Friday, August 9, 2024
There has been an increasing number of “concession surfers” — renters looking to repeatedly cash in on incentives doled out by landlords, especially in hypercompetitive environments like Northern Liberties and nearby neighborhoods on the Delaware River, where thousands of new apartments have recently come online. The surge in multifamily
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Friday, August 2, 2024
The Sheriff’s Office recently held its first auction of tax-delinquent properties in more than three years, resulting in the sale of 29 properties, as it begins to clear a backlog of more than 1,000 properties previously slated for sale. Housing advocates are worried that tax-delinquent homeowners might be caught off guard if they find their
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Friday, July 26, 2024
An investigation by the Philadelphia Inquirer found that the residents of Brith Sholom House, a 360-unit building in Wynnefield, are among thousands of tenants nationwide who were victimized as a result of one family’s empire of neglect. The ownership of Brith Sholom can be traced to the Puretz family, a New Jersey-based real estate family business
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Friday, July 19, 2024
A decade after the city first started looking into FEMA’s Community Rating System, which could save homeowners money on federal flood insurance, Philadelphia officials say they’re still exploring the potential of joining. But they estimate the earliest the city could enter the program is 2025. Over 3,400 residential properties in Philadelphia
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Friday, July 12, 2024
Some people who have purchased properties through Philadelphia sheriff sales have experienced unexplained delays in receiving the deeds. The deeds are supposed to be transferred within 60 to 90 days. Buyers who spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a foreclosed property at auction are left without a deed for many months, according to an Inquirer
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Friday, July 12, 2024
The typical Philadelphia-area renter household makes about $22,300 less than needed to afford the typical asking rent for an apartment, according to a report by the online real estate brokerage Redfin. In the Philadelphia metropolitan area, just 35% of renter households make enough money — $77,900 — to pay $1,948 a month, the median price of an
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Friday, July 5, 2024
Three years after buying and renovating the former Nelson building in Society Hill, Vert Properties has leased half of the property and expects it to be 80% occupied by the end of the year. Fifteen companies have moved into the three-story, 30,000-square-foot building at 222-230 Walnut St., with an average of 1,000 square feet per tenant. The style is a
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Friday, July 5, 2024
A 15-story Center City office building at 1760 Market St. changed hands last week for $11.5 million, almost two-thirds less than the $31.5 million at its last sale in 2018. The roughly 126,700-square-foot building is relatively small, and when it was put on the market earlier this year there was speculation that it could be converted to residential use. But
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Friday, June 28, 2024
Philadelphia's average new apartment is among the smallest in the nation — and projected to shrink even more based on the current pipeline of multifamily construction. The average size of a new apartment in the city is 764 square feet, an eight-square-foot drop from 10 years ago and the ninth-smallest average in the nation, according to a report from
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Friday, June 21, 2024
The new budget from Philadelphia City Council includes a last-minute allocation for a program that fixes leaky roofs and broken plumbing — and also “future-proofs” homes with electric heat pump HVAC systems and rooftop solar. The program, Built to Last, got $5 million in the budget for next fiscal year that council and Mayor Cherelle
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Friday, June 14, 2024
Many Philadelphia property owners will see higher real estate tax bills next year despite the new city budget containing no tax rate increases. That’s because the city is resuming property reassessments, which were paused in the final year of Mayor Jim Kenney’s administration. The new valuations will capture two years of growth and are likely to
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Friday, June 7, 2024
The abrupt closure of the University of the Arts, which has operated in Center City since the 1800s, will put a large real estate portfolio featuring some of downtown Philadelphia’s most recognizable buildings on the market. A 2022 city tax assessment estimated the combined market value of the university’s structures at about $162 million. The
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Friday, June 7, 2024
An effort to create a neighborhood conservation district mandating design and materials in development around East Mermaid Lane in Chestnut Hill is on track to be passed by city council in June, despite pushback from the Philadelphia Planning Commission. The bill would create a zoning overlay governing new construction and remodeling in that corner of
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Friday, May 31, 2024
The city’s mandatory Eviction Diversion Program, which requires landlords to try to resolve disputes with tenants outside of court, sunsets at the end of June. Philadelphia City Council’s Committee on Housing, Neighborhood Development and the Homeless advanced a measure that would make the diversion program permanent. Housing advocates say the
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Friday, May 24, 2024
A Philadelphia City Council committee has approved a bill designed to increase the city’s supply of affordable housing, moving the measure one step closer to becoming law amid opposition from Mayor Cherelle Parker’s administration. Introduced in February, the bill proposes a charter change to ensure that 100% of the “payments in lieu of
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Friday, May 17, 2024
Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s administration is planning a suite of changes intended to make the city’s Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) function more smoothly. Although Philadelphia’s zoning board has never been known for smooth functioning, during the pandemic wait times for a hearing ballooned and it became a substantial obstacle.
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Friday, May 17, 2024
At a recent city council hearing, community gardeners described a feeling of insecurity at being able to continue working the land they have tended for years, citing obstructionist land policies and a lack of financial resources. “With rising land values, the city’s community gardens are under threat,” said City Councilmember Kendra
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Friday, May 10, 2024
Philadelphia property owner Sandra Carter was shocked to see a 500% increase in the assessment of her family’s triplex, from $90,200 in 2019 to $513,800 in 2022. She was able to appeal the half-million dollar assessment and have it reduced to $130,000 — but researchers say her experience illustrates systemic biases baked into
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Friday, May 3, 2024
While running in last year’s Democratic primary for mayor, Cherelle L. Parker repeatedly promised to build 30,000 units of affordable housing. “I have a plan to grow Philadelphia’s economy,” Parker said in a televised forum last spring. “It includes the building of 30,000 affordable units of housing.” At a forum last May,
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Friday, May 3, 2024
The University City District is planning a bi-level water park on the western bank of the Schuylkill, between Chestnut and Market streets, featuring a large public pool, beach and a restaurant. The $60 million project unveiled at the district’s State of University City event would be built to withstand “a 500-year storm event,” according
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Stewardship of the residential properties of defunct nonprofit Germantown Settlement is being transferred to the Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA). The dozens of properties — a mix of rowhouses, apartment buildings and duplexes — have been largely abandoned for over a decade. The housing authority says only 17 units remain occupied. The
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Friday, April 26, 2024
Home sales in Philadelphia declined nearly 40% last year compared to the prior year, according to a new report from the Pew Charitable Trusts. In 2023, a total of 15,617 homes were sold — nearly 10,000 fewer than 2022, a banner year for home sales in Philadelphia. The report attributes the “exceptional” uptick in 2022 to low interest rates
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Friday, April 19, 2024
A Philadelphia-based developer co-leading the transformation of the Family Court building on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway has pulled out of the project, citing a shift in its investment strategy and complicating the future of the ambitious project, which includes the relocation of the African American Museum. National Real Estate Advisors said that the
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Friday, April 12, 2024
South Street business leaders say the long-suffering nightlife quarter is primed for a renaissance — a comeback that has been imperiled by a quietly unfolding financial crisis at the South Street Headhouse District (SSHD). Known as a “business improvement district,” the group is one of many empowered by City Hall to play a key role in the
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Friday, April 5, 2024
The release of key analyses intended to help Philadelphia officials decide whether to let the Sixers build a $1.55 billion downtown arena is three months behind schedule. And none of the principal agencies involved could say when the studies might be complete. In the meantime, any city government action around the future of a massive Center City development
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Friday, March 29, 2024
During her first budget address on March 14, Mayor Cherelle L. Parker indicated that the sheriff's sales of tax-delinquent property will resume soon, ending a stalemate between City Hall and Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal. It’s been nearly three years since Bilal has held an auction to sell off the city’s tax-delinquent properties. The
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Friday, March 29, 2024
Philadelphia City Council held a hearing on Act 135, the Abandoned and Blighted Property Act, which is Pennsylvania’s property conservatorship law. The law allows nonprofits and other organizations to take control of vacant or blighted properties, rehab them and sell them. “We are all for removing blight from our city, but there are some
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Philadelphia officials expect the total assessed value of office buildings across the city to drop by an estimated $1 billion as property owners battle financial woes and vacancy rates continue to rise. City finance director Rob Dubow said the sinking valuations had to be factored into Mayor Cherelle Parker's $6.29 billion proposed budget for fiscal year
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Friday, March 15, 2024
The city is abandoning a tiny-house project in Northeast Philadelphia proposed by former Mayor Jim Kenney’s administration to fight homelessness. Officials at Sanctuary Village, one of two sites chosen by the city for tiny homes, said they were told by Mayor Cherelle L. Parker’s administration that she wouldn’t support the development. The
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Friday, March 15, 2024
The effort to build the Chinatown Stitch, which aims to reconnect a severed neighborhood by capping part of the Vine Street Expressway, took a giant leap forward with a recently awarded $158 million federal grant. Officials said they anticipate a 2027 groundbreaking for a project that would cover part of the below-ground-level expressway and tie Chinatown
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Thursday, March 14, 2024
Be a Gem Crossing opened last month where a nuisance motel once stood. Nonprofit group North10 Philadelphia oversaw the approximately $20 million development in Hunting Park. The four-story property on Germantown Avenue has 41 apartments and a ground-floor commercial space that will become the home of a yet-to-be-formed community organization. Most of the
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Friday, March 8, 2024
For another year, a growing population of residents has been a bright spot in the story of Philadelphia’s downtown, according to Center City District. The number of people in and around Center City on a given day has dropped 8% over the past four years, but the population living there has grown by 3%, the business improvement district said in its
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Friday, March 1, 2024
St. Joseph’s University merged with USciences in 2022, marking the largest acquisition in the university’s history. School officials began exploring selling the newly acquired 24-acre University City campus soon after the merger. The West Philadelphia campus has been quietly on the market for one year, with a university spokesperson saying they
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Friday, February 16, 2024
Nearly 60 years ago, the National Park Service designated a district of Colonial-era buildings in Germantown a National Historic Landmark, the highest distinction a group of properties can receive from the federal government. But the accolade doesn’t come with any local safeguards, meaning some of the buildings within the district, centered along
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Friday, February 9, 2024
Philadelphia City Councilmember Jamie Gauthier will introduce a legislative package designed to protect low-income tenants and homeowners against displacement while providing more funding for affordable housing projects. Gauthier, one of the council’s most vocal housing advocates, hopes to help residents trying to rent on the private market through
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Friday, February 2, 2024
Cedar Park will likely see the construction of 22 new single-family homes with no affordable component — instead of an earlier proposal for a 76-unit apartment building where one-fifth of the units were earmarked for below-market rents. The owner of 4724 Chester Ave. pulled permits for 11 duplexes with roof decks and 22 parking spaces on a shared
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Friday, January 26, 2024
To help better manage high water events — and prepare for the more intense storms caused by climate change — Philadelphia is in the process of spending hundreds of millions of dollars to beef up its water and sewer systems. Three big Philadelphia Water Department infrastructure projects just received a $25 million boost from the state as it
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Friday, January 19, 2024
Lancaster-based economist Adam Ozimek gained prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic for his research on remote work, becoming a go-to source for news outlets across the country. Ozimek is also a Temple University graduate, a former Philadelphia resident and an alumnus of local economic research firm Econsult Solutions and West Chester-based Moody’s
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Friday, January 5, 2024
Cherelle L. Parker, the former state lawmaker and Philadelphia City Council member who was the protégé of trailblazing Black female politicians, was inaugurated as the 100th mayor of Philadelphia. Parker has pledged to make Philadelphia the “safest, cleanest, greenest city in America, with economic opportunity for all.” A centrist
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Friday, December 15, 2023
On the edge of Roxborough, along the ridge above where Main Street leads into Manayunk, sits a cozy Northwest Philadelphia neighborhood called Wissahickon. Cradled by the southern tendril of Wissahickon Valley Park, it’s a leafy community defined by an eclectic mix of 19th- and early 20th-century homes. Although some may think it is part of
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Friday, December 8, 2023
Monthly rents in Philadelphia are now on par with national averages, according to a new report from rental platform Zumper. The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment is $1,499, a dollar short of the national average. The median rent for a two-bedroom place is $1,750, about $100 off the national number. Both figures represent slight decreases compared to
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Friday, December 1, 2023
Three months after winning the bid to develop the former Family Court building and a neighboring surface parking lot near the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia, National Real Estate Development and Frontier Development & Hospitality Group have begun the planning process in earnest. Central to that process is the design of a residential tower at
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Friday, November 24, 2023
A historic school building in Germantown is slated to reopen by next summer — more than a decade after academic performance and shrinking enrollment closed the hulking property amid a financial crisis at the School District of Philadelphia. Developers are converting the former Germantown High School into a mixed-use development with approximately 240
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Friday, November 17, 2023
PGW customers will see their gas bills go up at the end of November. The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission approved a rate increase for the utility last week that will raise the company’s annual distribution rate revenue by more than $26 million, or around 3%, effective Nov. 29. The increase is less than a third of what the utility originally
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Philadelphia Office for People with Disabilities is here to stay, thanks to a ballot initiative that was approved by voters. The ballot question — approved by nearly 86% of voters — asked whether the Office for People with Disabilities should be permanently established in the city charter. It was the only ballot question posed to
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Friday, October 27, 2023
A 14-acre, $3.5 billion neighborhood of glassy skyscrapers and manicured green spaces is slowly being built just west of 30th Street Station. Dubbed Schuylkill Yards, the development is a partnership between Drexel University, which owns the land, and Brandywine Realty Trust, the Philly-based real estate giant that built the nearby Cira Center and FMC
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Philadelphia’s effort to regulate the short-term rental industry is shrinking the number of available offerings on platforms like Airbnb and VRBO. Philadelphia’s Department of Licenses and Inspections reports that since the crackdown on unlicensed operators began in July, more than 1,850 hosts have been delisted from platforms like Airbnb and
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Friday, October 13, 2023
A bill that requires the installation of sprinkler systems in older residential buildings taller than six stories in Philadelphia became a hot topic again at the end of September. The bill must be passed before the end of the year, or it would have to be reintroduced during council's next session. Fire safety groups and building trades unions are clashing
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Philadelphia officials recently broke ground for the first phase of the 10-acre Robert A. Borski Jr. Park in Bridesburg. The first phase, now under construction, should be complete by 2025 at a cost of about $7 million, raised through public and private sources. Designed with a wide-open lawn, upland trails, a meadow, restrooms and parking, the park is part
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Monday, October 2, 2023
More than a year after some Philadelphians received shockingly high gas bills during a month when people tend to use little heat, state utility regulators have ordered Philadelphia Gas Works (PGW) to tweak one of its billing practices — weather normalization adjustment. PGW will stop adjusting customers’ bills to account for weather fluctuations
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Monday, October 2, 2023
Philadelphia Housing Development Corporation (PHDC) has scheduled a housing fair for Saturday, Oct. 21, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Temple University Aramark Student Training and Recreation Complex at 1816 N. 15th St. The fair will provide resources for current homeowners, first-time home buyers, renters, landlords and others who are interested in
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Friday, September 15, 2023
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is proposing to build a 15-foot high, nearly 1,400-foot-long levee, estimated to cost $13 million, along Cobbs Creek to help control notorious flooding in the Eastwick neighborhood in Philadelphia’s most southwestern corner. The levee would be built on the left bank of Cobbs Creek, within the area of Eastwick Regional
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Friday, September 1, 2023
A new citywide program is expected to help hundreds of small landlords in Philadelphia make needed repairs to their properties while keeping the units affordable to tenants amid rising rents. The Rental Improvement Fund offers two types of loans — 10-year forgivable loans of up to $24,999 per property and 15-year 0% interest loans of up to $50,000 per
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Friday, April 10, 2026
Chester and Montgomery counties have released a Data Center Ordinance Guide to help municipalities develop local regulations for data centers, which have become a hotly debated topic due to concerns about environmental impact and power usage. The guide recommends that municipalities allow data centers of 100,000 square feet or more through a conditional use
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Friday, March 27, 2026
Chester and Montgomery counties are working to get ahead of a growing surge in data center proposals by developing model zoning ordinances. The urgency stems from the rapid expansion of hyperscale data centers driven by AI demand, with facilities that can consume as much electricity as a small city and millions of gallons of water per day — raising
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Friday, November 10, 2023
The Chester County Department of Community Development has received an Award of Excellence from the National Association for County Community and Economic Development (NACCED) for the creation of its Affordable Housing Developer Collaborative. NACCED cited the efforts of the county’s Partnership to End Homelessness initiative to bring together
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Friday, November 3, 2023
Westtown Township will consider enacting an ordinance to increase its earned income tax (EIT). The EIT would be increased for the purposes of securing open space by an additional 0.04%, for a total of 0.08% for open space and an overall total of 1.08% EIT split between the township and West Chester Area School District. The township was allowed to exceed
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Friday, November 3, 2023
The Kennett Greenway is about to add another link in what is envisioned as a 14-mile multi-purpose trail loop throughout Kennett Borough, Kennett Township, New Garden Township and northern Delaware. Representatives from the greenway project held a groundbreaking ceremony for the new Chandler Mill Trail, which will include paved pathways, a scenic overlook
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Friday, October 27, 2023
North Coventry Township amended its stormwater management ordinance in 2023 to comply with new provisions of the Chester County and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. The changes provide for updated criteria for regulated activities, such as grading, excavation, swimming pool construction and other building construction. Learn more about
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Friday, October 27, 2023
West Goshen Center owner Chris Robbins announced that a Target and Chick-fil-A are coming to the property. An almost 120,000-square-foot Target will occupy the space vacated by K-Mart, and a free-standing Chick-fil-A will sit in the southeast corner of the center. The Target is expected to open in spring 2025, and Chick-fil-A will likely open in the third
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Friday, October 27, 2023
Citing several threats to the viability of New Garden Township, Township Manager Christopher Himes proposed a real estate tax increase beginning in 2024 that would raise tax rates for homeowners as much as 120%. During a supervisors meeting on Oct. 16, Himes proposed a scenario that would raise millage rates from 1.72 mills to 3.9 mills. In a 57-page
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Downingtown Area School District had agreed to sell 237 acres of farmland in Uwchlan Township to Audubon Land Development for $96 million — but the deal appears to have been called off. The district bought the Lionville Station Farm property for $22 million in 2006, and planned to use the sale proceeds to finance full-day kindergarten and other
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Friday, October 20, 2023
Tredyffrin Township supervisors have tabled a plan to implement a stormwater fee to help with ongoing flooding issues throughout the township. Instead, the supervisors decided to implement a separate fund for stormwater management in the annual budget. Joseph F. DiRocco, finance director, said the township is adding tax increases for the stormwater fund.
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Friday, October 13, 2023
Last month, Longwood Gardens, the botanical garden and former du Pont estate that sprawls over 1,000 acres of meadows, woodlands and rolling Chester County countryside in Kennett Square, repurchased the former Galer Estate Vineyard and Winery, which adjoins its campus in East Marlborough Township. A Longwood Gardens’ spokesperson would not disclose
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Chester County commissioners recently affirmed $2.7 million to implement the Chester County Whole-Home Repairs (WHR) program. The program will help low- to moderate-income homeowners make critical repairs so their homes are habitable, safe, accessible and healthy. The WHR program will be administered by the Chester County Department of Community Development
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Friday, October 6, 2023
The French and Pickering Creek Conservation Trust has announced the preservation of more than 175 acres in two locations in Chester County. Landowners Ray and Terry Bentley, through their corporation Moose Meadows Properties LLC, have donated an amended conservation easement to expand the protection of the former Alberta Baker Pew property along portions of
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Friday, October 6, 2023
Regional planners are reviewing designs for 155 single-family homes on a roughly 100-acre triangle of land at the intersection of Route 724, Sanatoga Road and Frick’s Lock Road in East Coventry Township. Proposed by Devon-based Artisan Development Group and called “Villages and Fricks Lock,” the project would pack the homes closely
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Friday, October 6, 2023
On July 27, the Chester County Court of Common Pleas, Orphan’s Court Division, approved a settlement agreement providing for the transfer of the 220-acre Swiss Pines property from its current owners, the Bartschi Foundation and Estate of Henriette Bumeder, to Charlestown Township. “Over the coming months we will begin the planning to meet our
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Monday, October 2, 2023
At a recent borough council meeting, West Chester Borough Manager Sean Metrick presented a preliminary 2024 borough budget that might require tax and fee increases. The borough has gone eight years without a property tax increase. “Eight years not changing the tax rate is just not sustainable,” Metrick told council. “We should work
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Friday, September 29, 2023
The Westtown-East Goshen Regional Police Department is in the process of updating its database for all commercial properties within the department’s coverage area. The department has created an emergency contact form for businesses. The department will not share the information outside of law enforcement agencies and other emergencies, such as fire
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Friday, September 29, 2023
New Garden Township held a joint open house with the architectural firm YSM that saw 200 area residents provide a wish list vision for the future of Saint Anthony’s in the Hills, a 137-acre property that the township purchased for $1.5 million in 2018. When the initial plans for the development of the property now known as New Garden Hills were first
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Friday, September 22, 2023
A four-alarm fire broke out on South 3rd Street in Oxford Borough on Sept. 13, causing devastating damage to local businesses and residential units. Twenty-five families totaling 90 people have been displaced from their homes above the store fronts and warehouses on the block. The entirety of Oxford’s Main Street is shut down, with power to the area
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Friday, September 15, 2023
East Fallowfield Township is updating its park and open space plan, and is requesting resident feedback to help shape the future of recreation and open spaces in the township. Residents are invited to take a short survey by February 2024. Source: East Fallowfield Township; 9/2023
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Friday, September 1, 2023
Atlanta developer Portman Holdings bought 169 acres in Exton at the site of Happy Days Farm and is planning to build a massive 1.9 million-square-foot industrial complex. The site, at 1130 Pottstown Pike in Uwchlan Township, sits between Route 100 and I-476. The purchase price of the land and the expected cost of the planned development is a combined $330
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Friday, September 1, 2023
In an effort to curtail stormwater management problems and protect the environment, Tredyffrin Township supervisors unanimously passed a woodland conservation ordinance to protect trees. The ordinance requires residents to obtain permits when removing trees, noting that trees protect air quality and provide health benefits. Violation of the ordinance will
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