Chester CountyPRESS
www.chestercounty.com
Covering Avon Grove, Chadds Ford, Kennett Square, Oxford, & Unionville Areas
Volume 157, No. 45
Wednesday, November 8, 2023
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Kennett board authorizes township to advertise 2024 budget by vote of 2-1 Scudder Stevens dissents, says township Manager Eden Ratliff’s recommendation to maintain current police staffing levels ‘is unreasonable and irresponsible and unjustified’ By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer In what may be the last controversial action of his 12-year tenure on the Kennett Township Board of Supervisors – which comes to an end on Dec. 31 -Scudder Stevens was the
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lone dissenter at a Nov. 1 meeting that authorized the township to advertise the adoption of the township’s 2024 budget. While board chairman Geoffrey Gamble and supervisor Richard Leff gave their approval to move forward on to the final adoption of
next year’s budget, Stevens objected to Manager Eden Ratliff’s recommendation that the township maintain its current staffing level for the Kennett Township Police in 2024. Currently, the department’s nine-member staff consists of Police Chief Matthew
Gordon, Corporal Amanda Wenrich, Detective Miguel Continued on Page 2A Photo by Richard L. Gaw
Kennett Township Board of Supervisors Geoffrey Gamble, Richard Leff and Scudder Stevens discuss the township’s proposed 2024 budget on Nov. 1.
The 35th Kennett Run will take place on May 4, 2024
Kennett Run Charities gifts $19,900 to 12 agencies By Richard L. Gaw Staff Writer
With the season of giving soon to be here, Kennett Run Charities – the fundCecil County Life raising wing of the annual Kennett Run – got a recent jump on the holidays by awarding a total of $19,900 to one dozen area agencies at its annual presentation meeting on Nov. 2 at the Kennett Library & Resource Center. Those organizations receiving contributions were: A Child’s Light ($2,000); Arts Holding Hands & Hearts, Inc. ($1,500); Camp Dreamcatcher ($1,400); Kennett After School 8th Mushroom Cap 5K Association/After the Bell Half Marathon...1B
($2,000); Kennett Education Foundation ($1,500); Meals on Wheels of Chester County, Inc. ($2,000); the New London Counseling Center ($1,000); the Rotary Club of Kennett Square ($1,500); The Barn at Spring Brook Farm ($2,000); the Unionville Community Fair ($1,000); Walk in kNowledge ($2,000); and Young Moms ($2,000). Since its founding in 1989, Kennett Run Charities has raised more than $1.4 million for organizations throughout southern Chester County. In his presentation before recipient agencies and race sponsors, Kennett Run President Robert Merkle said that the 2023 Kennett
Run – held on May 6 – raised over $30,000 for the Kennett Square community, as well as the $2,500 investment Kennett Run Charities made to improve trail conditions in Anson B. Nixon Park prior to the event. In addition, the organization is investing $7,800 in high school sports booster programs to help fund equipment needs, create scholarship opportunities and increase student participation. Merkle said that through effective marketing – due in part to Kennett Charities’ partnership with Launch Collective and Chavez Communications – the Kennett Run increased its
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Clarissa Sherrow is ecstatic to be able to host the Veterans Breakfast again this year. The popular annual event will take place on Saturday, Nov. 11 from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. at the Oxford Senior Center at 12 E. Locust Street in Oxford. Sherrow has been doing this for years, with the help
of many friends, organizations, and volunteers. “This is something I look forward to every year,” Sherrow said. “We need to remember the veterans and this breakfast is a chance to give back to them. The most important thing about the breakfast is it gives the veterans an opportunity to talk with other veterans. We always get someone who is new to the breakfast and it is great to see them finding
Blazing a new trail in New Garden
Continued on Page 3A
Oxford Veterans Breakfast at Senior Center to be held on Nov. 11 By Betsy Brewer Brantner Contributing Writer
FROM OUR LENS
friends they haven’t seen in a long time. We continue to lose veterans every year, so we need to honor them and help them in any way.” The Oxford Veterans Breakfast brings veterans in from the local Oxford area, as well as veterans from Chester County, other places in Pennsylvania, plus Maryland and Delaware. Sherrow said, “We normally serve up to 200 people. Veterans are invit-
Photo by Richard L. Gaw
Elizabeth Buck holds the hands of her mother, Bridget and her father, Mike, the Parks and Open Space Superintendent for New Garden Township, at the official opening and health and wellness hike for the Kaolin Trail at New Garden Hills on Nov. 5. The 1.5-mile-long trail is part of the first phase of projects for the 137-acre property and includes forest and meadow trails as well as a riparian buffer display and a live stake nursery.
ed to bring a guest with them. We serve scrambled eggs, toast, bacon, sausage, potatoes, gravy and coffee. They do come for all the good food, but they also come to talk to others who know what they have been through. It’s really important for veterans to talk to other veterans.” People are eager to volunteer their time to help
with the breakfast. Local scouts usually participate as well as the Oxford Area Chamber of Commerce. The breakfast also gives local groups who help the veterans an opportunity to share information with the local men and women who served their country. Sherrow explained, “I know our community suffered a Continued on Page 3A
Royal Ruse wins Pennsylvania Hunt Cup By Marcella Peyre-Ferry Contributing Writer The 89th running of the Pennsylvania Hunt Cup on Sunday, Nov. 5 featured not only the excitement of horses racing over fences, but it also took place on a perfect fall afternoon in the Chester County countryside. The featured race of the day was the Pennsylvania Hunt Cup, which was run over four miles and 18 fences for a purse of $35,000. The winner was Royal Ruse, owned by Charles Fenwick, trained by Sanna Neilson and ridden by Gerard Galligan. Galligan was a last-minute replacement for Parker Hendriks, who had taken a fall racing last week.
“I didn’t know I was riding until last night,” Galligan said in a post-race interview. “I’m very lucky to ride such a good horse. It’s so much fun riding over those big fences on such good horses. It’s the best feeling in the world.” Awesome Adrian placed second and third-place finisher Shootist was disqualified. Most of the race was led by Monbeg Stream, ridden by Freddie Procter, until he fell at the secondto-last fence. To the relief of the crowds, the horse got back on his feet and was walked back to the staging area. The first timber race of the day was the Lewis C. Ledyard Maiden Timber Continued on Page 3A
Photo by Marcella Peyre-Ferry
Royal Ruse was this year’s winner of the prestigious Pennsylvania Hunt Cup.