Local News
UPDATE: Brookfield may expand ‘Success by Six’ course
BROOKFIELD — The Brookfield school district is considering expanding a program it says helps prepare students for kindergarten and first grade.
It’s called “Success by Six” and it is funded by the United Way of Mercer County. Each school picks students going into kindergarten who they think might be falling behind other students, and puts them through a six-week course that focuses on the areas they need help in.
Brookfield elementary had 20 students involved in the program this summer. According to their records, scores on the tests children must take before entering kindergarten have steadily improved since they started “Success by Six” four years ago.
“We had one classroom,” Brookfield kindergarten teacher Sherry Ondo, who helps coordinate the “Success by Six,” said. “We would like to have two, but that is up to the United Way.”
The United Way funding provides the instructors, food for lunches and the transporation to the school. Children who participate are ones who have been singled out by teachers as having areas they need to improve upon before starting school.
Unlike other United Way-supported programs, such as Head Start, there are no income requirements for “Success by Six.”
“The only financial obligation to the school district is the building and the supplies,” said Brookfield Superintendent Tim Saxton.
“We are definitely looking to do more with it,” Mrs. Ondo said.
There are 10 schools in Mercer County that also have “Success by Six” programs. They are Commodore Perry, Farrell, Greenville, Grove City, Hermitage, Mercer, Reynolds, Sharon, Sharpsville and West Middlesex.
The United Way of Mercer County supports the program in Brookfield because of its proximity.
Laura McElhinny, the United Way of Mercer County development director, said they’ve been offering it for eight years.
“We’ve always been reaching for 20 kids per classroom,” she said. “We’ve never really discussed a limit.”
“Success by Six” is funded through donations to the United Way. Ms. McElhinny said they didn’t see a problem with a school district wanting to expand their involvement.
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Commissioners formally move to raise sewer fees
Hermitage commissioners introduced an ordinance Wednesday to increase sanitary user fees.
Residents tapped into the Hermitage Municipal Authority lines now pay $95 a quarter. That rate will bump up to $105 a quarter on Jan. 1, under the proposed rate hike.
Two more hikes on Jan. 1, 2012, and Jan. 1, 2013, will result in the rates increasing 50 percent from the current fee. -
Water is on at Forrest Brooke
Water service has been restored at Forrest Brooke Manufactured Home Community after well problems left the 165-unit complex dry Tuesday.
A boil and conserve water advisory has been issued by the DEP and will remain in place until tests confirm the water is safe to drink, Forrest Brooke’s manager Pete Havens said.
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Storm damages trees, wires
Thunderstorms ripped through parts of Mercer and neighboring counties Wednesday night, downing trees and wires and keeping rescue workers on their toes.
A Mercer County 911 dispatcher shortly after 8 p.m. said they were busy with calls across the northern part of the county. He said there had been a few reports of trees falling on homes.
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City leaders open to talks
Sharon officials aren’t opposed to sitting down with their counterparts in Farrell to revisit the idea of combining the two struggling cities.
“It never costs a penny to talk and there’s no (idea) that’s not worth looking at,” Sharon councilman Ed Palanski said. “I think it would be foolish to oppose looking at the idea.”
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Murphy’s Law doesn’t faze regional planners
A complicated, two-day public meeting blitz in 32 counties ran headlong into Murphy’s Law in Mercer County on Tuesday.
The group Power of 32 are looking to re-write the regional map and create a grand, 15-year strategic economic plan for the 32 counties in four states that make up the Ohio River basin and greater Pittsburgh area.
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Forrest Brooke copes with water outage
Residents of Forrest Brooke Mobile Home Community in Jefferson and Lackawannock Townships woke up Tuesday morning to find they didn’t have any water.
Managers of the park could not be reached for comment, but residents said they were told they won’t get water service back for at least another month.
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City facing bleak financial reality
LaVon Saternow has been Farrell’s city manager since 1992. Shortly after she took the job, Sharon Steel, the city’s economic engine, officially closed down.
Since, the city has struggled to remain solvent and Mrs. Saternow said it is facing its worst financial crisis in her tenure.
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Near-complete addition to let man come home
Although the weather delayed the start of Penny and Paul Strechansky’s construction project by about three weeks, the end of the sawing, hammering and stapling is in sight.
“It should be done by the middle of next week,” Strechansky said of the 15-by-20 foot addition being built onto the back of his garage in Hermitage, which will be the new home of his grandson, David Johnson.
Johnson was critically injured in a car crash June 19, 2009, on what is now Interstate 376 in Lawrence County. The crash rendered Johnson, who just turned 21, blind and brain damaged. He is unable to care for himself.
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Man prison-bound for role in drug buy shooting
It may never be known for certain who fired the two fatal shots that killed a Sharon teen on Nov. 6 on Wallis Avenue during a botched drug deal, prosecutors have said.
But Christopher Swogger, 24, Sharon, was fingered by at least one other suspect as the one whose bullets killed John B. Hosey III, 18, of 422 Meek St. Swogger was sentenced Monday.
Swogger was sent to prison for 1 1/2 to 3 years for having a firearm without a license, ending his role in the criminal prosecutions of the drug deal turned shooting.
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Farrell, Sharon to revisit merger
Times are tough.
In Farrell Monday night, city council heard a grim financial report from City Manager LaVon Saternow.
“It’s not a pretty picture,” Mrs. Saternow said. “We could conceivably run out of cash by the end of the year. I don’t know how to put it more bluntly.”
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Commissioners formally move to raise sewer fees





