At last week's meeting of NorCo Council's Courts and Corrections Committee, DA Steve Baratta that he expects a "Gracedale report" from an investigating grand jury within the next six weeks. He indicated that the report is likely going to be focused on "issues of patient safety that we were made aware of over the past year. I don't want to shock anyone when they file the report, but at the end of the grand jury period, they're required to do that if they so choose. And I believe they want to write a report."
Lehigh Valley Ramblings
Today's one-liner: “In a republican nation whose citizens are to be led by reason and persuasion and not by force, the art of reasoning becomes of first importance.” T Jefferson
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
DA Baratta Tells NorCo Council Child Advocacy Center Needed
District Attorney Steve Barratta told NorCo Council's Courts and Corrections Committee last week that "it's a bit of an embarrassment" that the county has no child advocacy center. He acknowledged it's a "heavy lift" because a center for victims of child abuse needs both space and forensic interviewers. Most counties the size of NorCo do have child advocacy centers. He noted that Lehigh had a very vibrant center, but thanks to attacks by Controller Mark Pinsley, Lehigh Valley Hospital pulled out and the center was closed.
He indicated that NorCo and Lehigh might work together to establish a center .
NorCo Court Administrator Tells County Council That Higher Salaries Are Needed For Youth Care Workers
If you'd like to know more about county government, I'd strongly recommend that you view the committee hearings on YouTube. Last week, Council member Dave Holland's Courts and Corrections Committee conducted an exhaustive review of just some of the county agencies that deal with the back end of crime. This, like elections, is a core county function. The meeting kicked off with Court Administrator Jermaine Greene and what he calls his "baby," the Juvenile Justice Center.
Greene has been the county's court administrator for the past 10 years. Prior to that he was the Juvenile Justice Center (JJC) Director for 10 years. He explained that it is unique because it has both detention and treatment beds. It also has contracts with other counties for beds (Lehigh - 3, Monroe - 3, Lackawanna - 2, Pike - 1), that are paid at a rate of $415 per day, regardless whether the beds are filled.
Under the prior County Council and former Exec Lamont McClure, Greene was before County Council extensively in a quest to seek better pay for better wages for youth care workers, "the backbone of our juvenile center." He repeated this request with the current Council again last week. "We need to raise the salaries of our youth care workers," he argued. The current starting wage is $19,80 an hour, and they must have 60 college credits. "They can go down the bottom of the hill, work at Wawa or FedEx, and make more than that," noted Greene. He believes that raising the starting wage is the key to ensuring that the facility is fully staffed. "We have to spend some money to make money," he expounded. If operating at 80% capacity, the JJC can actually receive $2 million in bed fees from other counties. Right now, the facility is operating at about 40% capacity.
Greene claimed that previous attempts to set higher salaries were "roadblocked." But he said he had a good conversation with Exec Tara Zrinski, "and she got it. She got it after a half hour of conversation with her."
Greene added that "the court is fully behind me and the vision I have for the center. ... It will work. I promise you that. It will work." He complimented Council member Lori Vargo Heffner, who had unfiltered access" to staff and residents during a half-day tour, and invited all Council members to visit.
In response to a question from member Theresa Fadem, Greene said he'd like to raise the starting salary to about $23 an hour.
Member Tom Giovanni asked Greene about a four-county movement to create a regional JJC, which is actually up for a vote tonight in Lehigh County. Greene said he has a good relationship with Lehigh and added "we have the infrastructure right now to make it happen here." The county is currently negotiated with Lehigh for an increase in bed count.
The JJC is supposed to be staffed by 52 youth care workers, 13 assistant supervisors and 9 supervisors. The youth care workers are only about 40% staffed. The "assistant supervisor" was created to keep youth care workers from leaving and they were filled within a month. The JJC includes detention and treatment pods for females and sex offenders.
Member Dave Holland assured Greene that he now has advocates on Council who will support higher wages.
In addition to Greene, JJC Director JaMarr Billman spoke. He's been there 19 years. He explained that the facility can hold up to 36 juveniles in detention, but its usual census is 12-18. He acknowledged that there are current conversations with Lehigh to increase the number of contracted beds. Starting in July, the daily bed rate will increase to $435. This alone generates $1.4 million in annual revenue. Other counties also will send juveniles, and Northampton will accept if it has the available staff and beds.
The JJC also offers a boys' treatment program with an on-site school, including four teachers. The boys actually go out into the community to help with fundraisers, as volunteers for local events, visits to an art museum, jib searches and even Phillies and fishing trips. They can even receive lessons on building and repairing bikes, which makes me want to enroll. Dynamic Counseling Services provides mental health treatment.
Holland stated that the county really needs to both staff and fund every available bed at the JJC. "It's a core function of the county. and I don't know how long this (staffing shortage) has been going on , but the fact that we haven't been able to do that, is kinda outrageous. We have to find a way to do it. There's children who need help. We have empty beds. They're sitting there. We have to figure out a way to do that, and I believe we will."
Welcome to Northampton County, Mr. Holland, where tax breaks for the rich get priority over the needs of our most vulnerable. When Jermaine Greene said he was roadblocked, he has the receipts. Here are links to just some of my previous stories.
Previous Juvenile Justice Center Stories:
NorCo Administrators Respond to Staffing Crisis Story at Juvenile Justice
Express Times Awards Turkeys to Tara Zrinski & Kevin Lott
NorCo Council Addresses Staffing Shortage at Juvenile Justice Center
UPDATED: NorCo Council Members Zrinski and Lott Double-Team Court Administrator Jermaine Greene
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
NorCo To Close Senior Centers in Lower Nazareth, Northampton Due to State Budget Shortfall
In March, NorCo Exec Tara Zrinski told County Council that the Area Agency on Aging (AAA) was facing a $400,000 state budget cut. This was certainly surprising since Governor Josh Shapiro's office had bragged that the passed budget would provide $10 million more in services to older Pennsylvanians. Instead, NorCo is going to have to close its senior centers in Lower Nazareth and Northampton.
Back in March, Zrinski explained that the state was no longer paying AAA for desk audits that determine whether someone is eligible for long-term care without a face-to-face visit. The revenue received from that service helped fund our senior centers.
In a news release you can read below, the county explains the closures.
In Northampton County, we are facing a nearly $400,000 reduction in our Area Agency on Aging (AAA) budget due to state budget cuts. As a result, the County will be required to consolidate the senior center network, and the Lower Nazareth Senior Center and the Northampton Senior Center will close as of June 30, 2026.
The reason for this funding gap is that the Commonwealth has eliminated a key revenue generating function previously available to county Agencies on Aging: aging well “desk reviews.” Desk reviews are review and comparisons of data from Functional Eligibility Determination assessments that Area Agency on Aging staff still complete to determine eligibility for long-term care services, in home or in a nursing facility. In 2025 alone, Northampton County’s AAA completed 1,440 of these reviews, generating $373,464 in revenue that directly supported services for local seniors. The loss of this function represents a loss of capacity that will force difficult decisions.
Executive Zrinski expressed her dismay at this immediate and significant funding gap—which she says arrives at the exact moment when state leaders are expressing concern about oversight, performance, and outcomes in elder protection.
“Across Northampton County, these centers are a lifeline for older adults, providing not only meals, but connection, wellness support, and a place to engage with their community and live vibrant, healthy lives,” said County Executive Tara Zrinski.
Northampton County’s AAA serves thousands of older adults each year. The professionals doing this work are navigating complex cases involving medical fragility, cognitive decline, isolation, and, at times, individuals who are unable or unwilling to accept help. These are not simple interventions, and outcomes are not always within an agency’s control.
“We must be honest about the broader system in which these agencies operate” said Zrinski. “When funding is reduced at the scale we are experiencing, the impact is not theoretical. It means fewer home visits, slower response times, reduced oversight, and fewer opportunities to intervene before situations escalate. It means a system that is being asked to do more with less—something that is true not only in Northampton County, but across many aging agencies in Pennsylvania.”
For seniors now attending the Lower Nazareth Senior Center and the Northampton Senior Center, the County will make accommodations to help them attend a neighboring Senior Center.
Dixie Cup TIF - Developer Nat Hyman Sez Dixie Can Be Developed With NO Government Assistance
I've told you why NorCo Exec Tara Zrinski supports a tax break to convert Wilson Borough's vacant Dixie Cup factory into 405 luxury apartments. I've shared arguments of three Council members who voted for the tax break (called a TIF) when it failed last year. Now I'll share the views of someone who actually knows what he's talking about. Allentown developer Nat Hyman has done 40 projects similar to Dixie, and here's what he shared with NorCo Council.
I write you regarding the TIF you are considering giving to the developer of the Dixie Building in Wilson Township. Please keep in mind that a TIF is the MOST generous form of tax incentive, far more so than a LERTA ! There are a few fundamental facts I believe you should consider before giving this money to Skyline Investment Group:
1. This will do absolutely NOTHING to address the affordable housing crisis. This developer has repeatedly said that they will be spending $185,000,000 for 400 apartments. That is a staggering $462,500 per apartment !!!! Basic math tells you that the interest costs alone will be $2,500 per apartment / per month (without including any amortization and all of the other operating expenses). These numbers will require rents north of $6,000 per month just to break even…..hardly affordable ! And the fee in lieu of $1.2 million that they propose paying toward affordable housing is nothing. This would build 8 affordable apartments and, more importantly, they are paying you out of the $29 million you are giving to them ! They are paying you with your money !!
2. Some have tried to claim that this project will create many jobs. The reality is that Dixie will create some construction jobs on a very short term basis. It seems to me that some people are pushing this TIF to curry favor with those construction unions. After that, there will be virtually no jobs created. Two or three full time people will be needed to run this apartment complex once it is built. This is not a project like Eli Lily which will create 1,000 good paying and long term jobs.
3. This “developer” has actually NEVER DEVELOPED ONE BUILDING. While they did list one project on their website called “The Louis” that they said they had developed, that was a lie. When confronted with this lie, they removed the project from their website. In addition, they had listed 5 offices around the country all with the same phone number which is the principal’s cell phone number. Those offices have likewise now been removed from the website. Finally, their supposed office in NYC is simply a shared executive office where they use a community receptionist. Do you really want to give $29,000,000 in taxpayer dollars to someone who has never built anything and is clearly a scam?
4. Skyline is presently in DEFAULT of its purchase agreement of the Dixie property with Wilsonpark. To date, they have paid ZERO principal or interest on the $11.5 million purchase price. So you are considering giving money to a borrower who has shown their inability and/or unwillingness to honor its obligations. There is not a lender in the world who would loan money to a borrower with a history of not paying its debts.
5. As I said, Skyline has said that this Dixie project will cost $185,000,000. ANY lender loaning or granting money to a borrower would want to be 100% assured that the project will be fully funded. There is NO WAY you should consider giving Skyline the $29,000,000 unless and until they can prove they have a firm commitment for the other $156,000,000 to complete this project.
6. Having done 40 developments similar to the Dixie building, I can tell you , unequivocally, that this project can be done beautifully with absolutely no government assistance. It would seem to me that the $29,000,000 is better spent on Gracedale, budget deficits or a reduction in your constituents’ taxes.
Finally, a disclaimer …..despite what some have said, I have ABSOLUTELY NO vested interest in this project and nothing to gain or lose by your choosing to give or not give them this money. This building has been sold and the title transferred to Skyline Investment Group and nothing you do will change that. I will not own this building regardless of your decision. I am simply a taxpayer upset by seeing my tax dollars wasted and I do have a philosophical disagreement with the concept of giving taxpayers’ money to a private developer to build luxury apartments. That said, I come at this from a unique perspective as the Lehigh Valley’s largest developer of adaptive reuse projects ….I have done 40 projects virtually identical to Dixie and have never taken one dime of government money or any incentive. As an example, I am converting the former Crayola headquarters in Palmer Township (only 3 miles from Dixie) into 94 affordable apartments with absolutely no taxpayer money. This developer could do the same with Dixie and he has told Council that he can indeed build Dixie without this TIF!!! So why would you give it to him??!
Ask yourselves, if I am correct and you give this untested “developer” $29,000,000 in tax payer dollars and, as I predict, the project is never completed, what legacy you will have created for this Council?
Dixie Cup TIF - Three Council Members Reiterate Support
A TIF tax break to convert Wilson Borough's vacant Dixie Cup factory into 405 luxury apartments was defeated in November in a close, 5-4 vote. Yesterday, I told you about Executive Tara Zrinski's fallacious ceteris paribus argument for the TIF. Today, I'll shre the views of three of the Council members who voted Yes in November. - Ken Kraft, Kelly Keegan and Jeff Warren, All three reiterated their support at the April 16 public hearing.
Kraft, in his own inimical style, argued that we should take the $2 million up-front (legal) bribe being offered by the developer. Here's what he said: "What kind of skin do we have in the game? Which is really minimal. But now we got a number on it. $2 million. They're giving it to us. So, our saying no to this project would be the most bonehead thing you could possibly do, because you're not losing anything. ... We're not even impacted anymore. I mean, we have no impact at all. You've given us the money up front, that, you know, I don't know, not a financial person, but supposedly we can leverage to loan more money at no percentage, you know, to do affordable housing somewhere. ... So we're not losing a dime."
He's right, too. It's not a dime. It's a lot more. According to the TIF ordinance, which he really should read, the county is giving up $5.6 million in real estate tax revenue over the next 20 years.
That seems pretty boneheaded.
Keegan played a math game. "All right, so Wilson Borough Council approved the TIF in 2024 and then again in 2025, and 9 members sit on the council. It was unanimous. Wilson Area School District approved the TIF. All 9 supported it. It was unanimous. They lived there in Wilson. They were elected officials for Wilson. My district is, uh, Wilson is part of my district as a district 2 commissioner. If 5 out of 9 of us on this board votes no, then out of 27 elected people, 81.4% support it, and if 5 of us vote no, 18.6 will not."
Although Keegan's math is correct, she misses the point. The TIF is authorized by the state Urban Redevelopment Law, which requires the approval of a majority of all three separate taxing districts impacted by the handout. These taxing bodies all serve different taxpayers. The representatives of taxpayers in Upper Mount Bethel Tp and Lower Saucon should have a say in decisions that give their money away.
Finally, Warren had something to say, too. He said he "wasn't planning on speaking," which is code for "Get the NoDoz out." This time he did spare us from his argument that we should grant a TIF because his grandfather worked at Dixie. Now he's likening government to mechanics, saying that a TIF is just a "tool in the toolbox." I'm a terrible mechanic myself, but even I know that you do not use an allen wrench to put air in a bicycle tire. And you don't kiss away $26 million in tax revenue to an inexperienced out-of-town developer who has admitted a few times that he doesn't really need the county's participation.
Warren commended developer Brian Bartee, who he said has "truly given so much to the community by what he has done with that building already."
Say what? There are still gaping holes instead of windows. And what has government already done for Skyline's Bartee? Skyline has already been awarded $1,000,000 from an RACP application in 2024 and this year. It has received $163,257 from a DCED Multimodal Transportation Funding Grant and a $175,000 Greenways, Trails and Recreational Program grant. It is seeking even more grant money from PennDOT, DCED Mixed Use Housing Development, another DCED Greenways grant, another DCED multimodal transportation grant, and Pa Historic tax credits
WaPo Picks Up on Inconvenient Truths About Congressional Wannabe Bob Brooks
Journalist Dan Merica, a co-anchor of the Early Brief at The Washington Post, has picked up on some of the more outrageous and Trumpesque social media posts that Pa. 07 Congressional candidate Bob Brooks posted before he announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination. Of course, before Brooks announced, he gave his Facebook page a good scrubbing.
Although WaPo is kind enough to credit this blog for at least some of what I found, I got a lot of my material from Rich Wilkins' Apocalypse Vibes. He has a pretty good summary of his and my previous stories, which are now being picked up by more mainstream outlets after months of hesitation.
They didn't want to piss off Governor Josh Shapiro, who handpicked Brooks so he could get his hands on firefighter union campaign donations.
I don't know about you, but I tend to resent it when a Governor or the DCCC powerbrokers attempt to inject themselves in a primary.
Let us make our own mistakes.
Monday, April 20, 2026
Dixie Cup TIF - The Illogic of Zrinski's Logic
I have written numerous times about a special tax break known as a TIF for the redevelopment of the long vacant Dixie Cup factory, located in Wilson Borough, into 405 luxury apartments. At a time when many families are facing increased housing costs here in the Lehigh Valley, it seems like a sick joke. Northampton County rejected this boondoggle in November in a narrow, 5-4 vote. But three of those no votes are no longer on Council, so like the Terminator, pitchman Brian Bartee was back again before a new County Council on Thursday night to sweeten the deal with a little more sugar to make the medicine (or should I say poison?) go down. Instead of a scant $1.2 million in county coffers, he's now willing to offer $2 million up front if the county would agree to a tax break that allows him to float bonds for $26.4 million in construction costs for the nesting perches of our well-too-do betters. We'll get the money back in 20 years. What could possibly go wrong?
While running for office and after taking the helm as county exec, Tara Zrinski has stated she'd be no Lamont McClure 2.0. That may be true, but she certainly seems like at least a Lamont McClure 1.5. Instead of proposing to tax the rich, the owners and renters of luxury apartments, she wants to give them a tax break
She started off by warning everyone, "I'm going to say some pretty unpopular things." But it was sweet music to the ears of private equity and developers whose bottom line is and always has been, "What's in it for me?" It was honey on the lips of trade unions who want the temporary construction jobs. And those trade unions, by the way, have bankrolled Zrinski's political ambition.
She acknowledged that she went on a tour of the site, and as she was perched on the roof or perhaps even the Dixie Cup with the raptors and vultures, she could see the state of disrepair of Wilson Borough homes. Some are in need of new roofs. Others need siding. That alone should have told her all she needed to know. This project will do nothing but create more disparity between the haves and the have nots.
She argued that the developer is willing to make public improvements to the property that will spare the county the expense of doing so. That's a flat-out canard. She knows that the county has nothing to do with roads, power lines or sewer. Moreover, the developer has proposed these changes for his own benefit, to make the luxury apartments more attractive. In reality, his apartment is going to create an even bigger traffic nightmare along 25th Street.
Her biggest and most illogical argument is that building 405 luxury apartments will ease the Lehigh Valley's housing shortage of 9,000 units. It will in fact exacerbate the problem.
Let me give you her argument, as she states it herself. "The Lehigh Valley Planning Commission says that we need 9000 units. That's not all affordable housing. There's a downward pressure that exists that is pushing people who can afford higher level into lower level. So while it doesn't intuitively make sense that if we put this higher priced apartment in, it makes sense if somebody who is occupying a $2,000 or $1,800 apartment or a $1,600 apartment, who could move into a $2,400 apartment, would be able to move because there's a place to go. Thus freeing up the other spaces. That is the logic here."
And that logic, as she puts it, is completely illogical. It assumes, and you know what happens when you assume, that the population remains constant. And that is belied by the very same Lehigh Valley Planning Commission, who notes we are adding 4,300 people every year, most from other states. So these luxury apartments will not be attracting affluent Lehigh Valley residents who will ditch a $1.600 a month apartment for one that rents at much higher rates for that cathedral ceiling. It will instead attract NY and NJ residents fleeing a higher cost of living there. It will make housing less affordable.
Take a look at nearby Easton, beautiful river town that is beginning to rival Frenchtown, Lambertville and New Hope. There are now several luxury apartments in what was once called Fishtown. Has that eased affordable housing there? The opposite has happened. It has attracted NY and NJ tenants who can commute or work from home. This in turn has made rentals there ridiculous. That problem is just made worse by giving a tax break for more luxury apartments even when a developer is willing to give you a pittance to ease your conscience at what you must know is wrong.
And what about nearby landlords like the Wilson Borough landlord who gobbles up properties at tax and sheriff's sales and then rents them out? They are delighted and one of them actually appeared at the TIF hearing in November. They can now demand even higher rents.
The only real way to ease the housing crisis is by encouraging more smart development that includes tiny homes, a reduction in minimum lot sizes and setbacks, an ease in tariffs on construction materials, accessory dwellings and more mixed-use development. County government has no say in any of these things.
As government screw-ups go, this would be the biggest one since the swaption debacle. And to make things worse, I have serious doubts that this great developer that Zrinski touted, will ever complete the project. More about that tomorrow,
Friday, April 17, 2026
PoliticsPa Posts, Deletes, Then Reposts Negative Story About Pa. 7 Congressional Candidate Bob Brooks
PoliticsPa yesterday posted, then deleted, then reposted a negative story about Pa. 7 Congressional candidate Bob Brooks yesterday. The story, entitled "Questions Beginning to Arise Around Brooks Campaign in PA-07," was deleted shortly after publication. Then it reappeared, with the explanation that it had been deleted to give both Brooks and the DCCC time to respond.
I suspect power brokers in Harrisburg and DC were applying pressure because this happened at another new outlet yesterday
The story suggests that Brooks had a "difficult evening" during a recent debate at Cedar Crest. It was apparently so bad that the DCCC told debate organizers that they did not want the public to see a video of his performance. The account also cites several MAGA social media memes that Brooks posted on his Facebook page. It cites the $130,000 judgment his mother-in-law obtained as well as a new lawsuit claiming shenanigans in the transfer of real estate from his name to make him judgment proof. Finally, it notes his recent refusal to sit down with Lehigh Valley News for a one-on-one interview after agreeing to do so.
Interestingly, another news outlet, WFMZ-TV69, posted and then quickly deleted a negative story about Brooks yesterday as well. This one, entitled "Congressional candidate Bob Brooks faces lawsuit over property dispute and unpaid loan debt," can still be found on a google search engine. But when you click on the link, the story went Poof!
It's pretty clear to me that our fearless news sources are unwilling to serve the public interest when pressured by the powerful.
This is all very shady ... just like Brooks.
Zrinski Proposes "Continuum of Care" Director at Gracedale
Whistlin' Dixie in Wilson Borough: "I'll Give You $2 Million for $20 Million"
At last night's NorCo Council meeting, a TIF for the Dixie Cup factory building in Wilson Borough was once again on the agenda. A state-required public hearing was conducted on the proposal to provide a tax break to a non-local developer with no experience to convert a vacant factory into 405 luxury apartments. A vote is scheduled for May 7.
This break is supported by Council members Ken Kraft, Kelly Keegan and Jeff Warren. Executive Tara Zrinski also offered her support. To sweeten the pot, developer Brian Bartee has suggested he's willing to give the county $2 million in exchange for $20-29 million.
Makes perfect sense, doesn't it?
I'll have a complete summary of the lengthy public hearing available early next week.
NorCo Council Member Discloses Possible Conflict With Wife's Appointment as Deputy Controller
At last night's meeting of NorCo Council, member Jason Boulette disclosed that his wife Vanessa has taken on a new role as NorCo's Deputy Controller. A Villanova graduate (and member of the Big Easy Easton Jazz Band), she had been employed for 16 years by BNY, a financial services firm. Boulette said he'd recuse himself from all matters involving the Controller's office, which is an independent arm of county government. I appreciate his transparency and disclosure.