FARRELL, SHARON — When it comes to the tidiness of her Wallis Avenue home in Farrell, Kim Baymon said the motive comes from an adage her grandfather told her growing up.
“Not only do people come in your house, but people pass by it all the time,” she recalled.
Mrs. Baymon and her husband Jeffrey were awarded the grand prize Saturday at the inaugural Properties of Merit reception in Valley Baptist Church, Farrell.
The banquet honored 15 families who set the precedent for keeping a neat exterior to their estates in some of Farrell and Sharon’s more impoverished neighborhoods.
“This is a positive thing for our community,” said Leon Harrison, the local team leader for the initiative he hopes “will shine a good light” on the exemplary homes and spur their neighbors to strive for the same.
“Our theme has always been pride to improvement,” Farrell Mayor Olive “Ollie” Brown-McKeithan said.
A chairman for the group, she said neighborhood improvements can become contagious and spread from block to block with enough effort.
Sharon Mayor Bob Lucas echoed Mrs. Brown-McKeithan’s call.
“Too many times we focus on the negative,” he said. “A neighborhood is only as good as the people in it.
“These are the exceptions. We want to make this a positive and the majority.”
The program’s initial year picked homes from five different sections of the two cities, honoring two in each along with a people’s choice winner.
“All these people have equally magnificent homes,” said Properties of Merit founder Siobhan “Sam” Bennett.
Ms. Bennett organized the program in 1989 in Oneonta, N.Y., before spreading it to Pennsylvania a few years later. It was recognized by Gov. Ed Rendell in 2006 and allotted money to grow statewide.
It’s a “proven fact” that a neighborhood where families take active roles in keeping their homes neat is much safer than their counterparts, Ms. Bennett said.
Spending “a few minutes” maintaining a property can help “transform” a section of a town for the better, she added.
The local homes chosen all passed a “rigorous report card” and all got high scores, Ms. Bennett said.
“We just work hard to try to make things right in our neighborhood,” said Macielen Tanner, who was recognized for her home at 425 Oakland Ave., Sharon.
Since she began taking meticulous care of her home, Ms. Tanner said the two homes beside her’s have been renovated and also taken heed.
Working together to create a better community is the only way to improve the area for future generations, committee member Berry Holloway said.
“We need to take our streets back and our cities back,” he said. “To do that, we need to become one.
“We truly need a village to raise these children.”
“There’s hope regardless of where you’re (living) at,” Harrison added. The group plans to again honor homes in 2009, he said.
Properties can be nominated year round at http://www.farrellsharon.mypom.org.
Local News
15 valley families honored for keeping homes tidy
- Local News
-
-
Recycling program a bit too popular
The county’s effort at going green by encouraging recycling in rural areas has been a tremendous success by most accounts, but isn’t without a few glitches. In Wilmington Township, residents often only have a window of a few minutes to get cardboard recyclables in before the bin is full, prompting a discussion among Mercer County Commissioners Wednesday morning.
-
District will tap reserve fund
Reynolds school directors plan to fill a $374,567 hole in the 2012-2013 budget with money from the district’s fund balance.
-
School board mulls change to sports chaperone policy
In order to comply with the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association, the Sharpsville Area School Board is looking to adjust a chaperone policy it implemented six months ago.
-
Afternoon crash hurts 3 high school students
Three Jamestown High School students were injured – one seriously – when their pickup left a roadway in southwest Crawford County and crashed into a tree Tuesday afternoon.
-
Board sells some, holds some
Brookfield Board of Education members voted Tuesday to accept only the bids for the elementary school and the middle school, for a total of $97,050.
The decision came after an hour-long executive session. -
Levey: Kohl’s project died with school vote
Stripped of the necessity of voting for a tax incremental finance plan by Hermitage School Board’s unwillingness to participate, Mercer County commissioners said Wednesday they would like to meet with school board and Hermitage city officials to discuss other ways they can help Levey and Co. build a retail development in the city.
But Levey spokeswoman Jeffrey A. Mills said there is nothing to discuss.
-
Warden expects hectic season at county jail
With the unofficial start of summer just a few days away, Mercer County Jail officials are preparing for a busy season.
-
Levey officially drops TIF request
Levey & Co. has officially ended its request for a tax incremental financing plan to build a retail development anchored by a Kohl’s department store.
-
Grant will pay to fix 12-15 homes
The City of Farrell will be able to fix up about a dozen homes in the city thanks to a $300,000 HOME grant from the state. -
Hard budget choices yet to come
Hermitage School Board has been fortunate in many ways during the economic downturn that has been so hard on many other schools. - More Local News Headlines
-
Recycling program a bit too popular


