Category: Pennsylvania News

  • Philly region is expected to get snow, sleet, and freezing rain on Friday and Saturday

    Philly region is expected to get snow, sleet, and freezing rain on Friday and Saturday

    The sunshine and relatively mild weather on Christmas in the Philadelphia region and South Jersey will likely be long gone by Friday afternoon, the National Weather Service said in its forecast on Thursday.

    Snow, likely no more than 1 or 2 inches, is expected to accumulate between 1 p.m. and midnight Friday, and become mixed with sleet and freezing rain after 4 p.m. New snow and sleet of 2 to 4 inches is possible between 1 and 4 a.m. on Saturday, forecasters said.

    “The heaviest precipitation will be the late afternoon on Friday, and it will start to wind down on Saturday,” said Nick Guzzo, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mount Holly.

    Temperatures are expected to range from the high 20s to low 30s both days. A mild wind of 5 to 10 mph is also expected.

    Due to the forecast, PennDot is urging drivers to avoid unnecessary travel. The agency expects vehicle restrictions to begin at 10 a.m. Friday on all interstate highways, banning school buses, commercial buses, motor coaches, motorcycles, and many types of commercial vehicles from the roads.

    Speed limits will be restricted to 45 mph. Updates will be available on the 511PA traveler information website.

    Friday could be the second measurable snowfall of the season so far. A storm that swept across the Philadelphia region on Dec. 14 left 4.2 inches of snow at Philadelphia International Airport. Some suburban communities in Bucks and Chester Counties reported more than 8 inches.

    Flying out of PHL and want to know how things are looking at the airport? Check out The Inquirer’s end-of-year PHL tracker to check for delays and cancellations.

  • Christmas Eve fire damages several rowhouses, displaces families in Chester

    Christmas Eve fire damages several rowhouses, displaces families in Chester

    No injuries were reported after a Christmas Eve fire at a rowhouse in Chester spread to neighboring homes, displacing five families, officials said.

    Shortly before 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, firefighters responded to the 900 block of West Seventh Street and found heavy fire in a rowhouse. A second alarm was struck about seven minutes later.

    Mayor Stefan Roots said three homes sustained heavy fire and water damage. He did not provide any information on what caused the fire.

    The American Red Cross responded to the scene and assisted a total of 13 people from five families who were displaced, said spokesperson Alana Mauger.

  • A nurse who ‘came here to make a difference’ was among those killed in fiery explosion at Bucks nursing home

    A nurse who ‘came here to make a difference’ was among those killed in fiery explosion at Bucks nursing home

    As first responders arrived at the Bristol Health & Rehab Center on Tuesday afternoon, they were faced with a nightmarish scene: A nursing facility that housed 120 people had exploded, and dozens were trapped.

    Shards of wood, glass, and paneling littered the lawn. The smell of gas hung thick in the air — and flames were spreading.

    “Send everybody,” an officer immediately radioed, according to the Bristol Township police chief.

    Police, firefighters, and even neighbors and a utility worker rushed into the blaze and began pulling people to safety — hoisting them through busted windows and missing doors, from stairwells and the basement flooding with water.

    Then a second explosion erupted, sparking another fire and raising uncertainty about how many people were stuck beneath the rubble.

    Muthoni Nduthu 52, a nurse at Bristol Health and Rehab Center died in the explosion while working Tuesday, Dec. 23.

    By Wednesday, the scale of the damage and its toll on the Lower Bucks County town had come into focus. Two women had died: Muthoni Nduthu, 52, of Bristol, who worked at the facility as a nurse for over a decade, and a resident whose name had not been released.

    Nduthu had emigrated from Mombasa, Kenya, to the Philadelphia area about two decades ago, and earned her nursing degree from Jersey College, said Rose Muema, a friend who spoke on behalf of Nduthu’s family Wednesday.

    “She came here to work,” Muema said. “She came here to make a difference.”

    Muthoni Nduthu’s eldest son, Clinton, tears up while a family friend spoke of his mother, who was killed in an explosion while at work Tuesday.

    Nduthu, a devout Catholic, had three sons — Clinton, 30; Joseph, 24; and K.K., 18 — and a 4-year-old granddaughter. She was bubbly, hardworking, and committed to the people she loved, her friend said. On the night before she died, she cooked her famous spiced chicken for her family to enjoy.

    As Nduthu’s family grieved on the eve of Christmas, others poured through the doors of area hospitals, visiting with the 19 people who remained hospitalized from their injuries from the blast. One person was in critical condition, police said.

    All other residents and employees of the facility have been accounted for.

    The cause of the explosion remained under investigation, Bristol Township Fire Chief Kevin Dippolito said Wednesday, though bystanders speculated that it could be connected to a gas leak that utility officials had responded to earlier Tuesday.

    First responders work the scene of an explosion and fire at Bristol Health & Rehab Center, Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025.

    The National Transportation Safety Board, which helps investigate explosions, said it could take days to clear the wreckage to allow investigators to safely reach and evaluate the natural gas service line.

    The tragedy has also brought new scrutiny to the facility’s long history of safety and care violations.

    The nursing home, a collection of brick buildings on a two-acre campus in Lower Bucks County, was previously known as Silver Lake and was acquired by Saber Healthcare Group earlier this month. Previously, it was owned by CommuniCare Health Services, a privately run for-profit nursing home operator based in Cincinnati.

    Just two months ago, state inspectors cited the facility for lacking a fire safety plan, failing to maintain extinguishers, and having hallways and doors that could not contain smoke. Corrections were ordered to be made by the end of November.

    Federal inspections also flagged substandard healthcare, poor infection control, and mismanaged medical records, earning the facility a one-star rating. Operators were fined more than $418,000 in 2024, records show, due to ongoing violations.

    It remains unclear whether the fire safety deficiencies were addressed.

    Bristol Township Fire Chief Kevin T. Dippolito said the cause of the nursing home explosion remains under investigation.

    Peco crews had responded to the nursing home earlier Tuesday on reports of a gas odor, a spokesperson for the utility said, adding that “it is not known at this time if Peco’s equipment, or natural gas, was involved in this incident.”

    One Peco employee who was on site working to stop the gas leak was seriously injured, said Larry Anastasi, president of IBEW Local 614, the union that represents Peco workers.

    The technician was working alone in the basement of the nursing home, then left to get more tools from his truck. As the worker was walking back into the building, Anastasi said, it erupted.

    The worker then rushed into the building to help others escape, Anastasi said.

    “He was trying to go in and get more people,” the union chief said. “[First responders] had to grab him and said, ‘Brother, you need to stop and go in the ambulance.’”

    The technician, whom Anastasi declined to name to protect his privacy, suffered burns to his face and hands, as well as injuries caused by shrapnel, he said. He remained hospitalized at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital’s Burn Center but was expected to be released later Wednesday.

    Also among the wounded was a 35-year-old certified nursing assistant who was nearly finished with her shift when the building she had worked at for five years suddenly exploded.

    Andrea Taylor said her daughter Natalie remained hospitalized Wednesday and had suffered a punctured lung and severe bruising throughout her body. She asked that her daughter be identified only by her first name to protect her privacy.

    Taylor said her daughter initially did not remember anything about the explosion, but as Wednesday wore on, her memory started to return.

    Natalie, she said, had gone into the cafeteria to heat up some soup when she said she smelled something strange.

    “What’s that smell?” Taylor said her daughter asked a colleague just before the floor fell out from under them.

    The explosion appeared to come from the basement, she said, collapsing the floor of the kitchen and cafeteria. Natalie and a colleague fell into the basement, she said, and hoisted themselves out over debris with the help of first responders. She said Natalie helped pull out her coworker, who suffered a fractured leg.

    She said her daughter is in pain, with bruising across her face and back, but lucky to be alive.

    “We’re lucky to have her,” she said. “We’re not asking for anything, just for prayers.”

    Throughout Wednesday, cranes continued to lift debris from the wreckage as local, state, and federal investigators worked to make sense of the disaster.

    Wheelchairs and other debris are scattered outside Bristol Health and Rehab Center after an explosion on Dec. 23.

    Donna Straiton, 67, watched from behind a line of yellow caution tape, staring at what remained of the nursing home where she had worked for 20 years.

    Straiton worked in the dementia unit, she said, before retiring in February 2024. In her final years working there, fire alarms routinely went off, she said. She estimated the facility locked down no less than twice a month as the smell of gas wafted in the air.

    Most often, she said, the alarm system indicated the issue was in the basement, but she never saw a fire.

    “The fire department would come and we’d get an all clear, and then it would be back to business as usual,” she said.

    In a statement, Saber Health called the explosion devastating and said the company was determining the extent of the damage. Staff at the nursing facility had reported a gas smell to Peco, and the utility company had been investigating prior to the explosion, Saber said.

    “Just 24 days ago, Saber Healthcare Group became affiliated with Bristol Health and Rehab Center,” the company said. “We have worked to improve and fix prior issues, and we will continue that work in the wake of this event.”

    Bristol Township Police Chief Charles “CJ” Winik lauded the first responders who he said sprinted toward danger, through collapsing walls and ongoing explosions. Initial officers were overwhelmed, he said, and it was a team effort to pull injured residents, including those who could not walk or used wheelchairs, from the wreckage.

    “I’ve never seen such heroism,” he said.

  • White Christmas in Philly? Probably not. But snow is expected Friday.

    White Christmas in Philly? Probably not. But snow is expected Friday.

    Philadelphia is unlikely to have a white Christmas, but snow is on the horizon for the weekend.

    The National Weather Service on Wednesday afternoon issued a winter storm watch for much for eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The watch will be in effect from Friday afternoon through Saturday morning.

    From Friday into Friday evening, forecasters are “near 100% confident” that most of the Philly area will get some form of winter precipitation, according to the National Weather Service. But exactly what type of precipitation, how much, and the precise timing remains uncertain.

    “We’re likely going to see an impactful winter storm,” said Eric Hoeflich, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mount Holly.

    Philadelphia may get between 1 and 4 inches of snow Friday into the night, according to the National Weather Service. Light precipitation could linger into Saturday morning.

    Forecasters expect between 1 and 3 inches of precipitation in northern Delaware, far southern New Jersey, and Southeastern Pennsylvania. Eastern Pennsylvania and much of New Jersey may see 4 to 7 inches. Actual precipitation totals and types, however, may vary. Some areas could get snow, sleet, freezing rain, or plain rain depending on temperatures and timing.

    Ahead of the expected weekend storm, Philadelphians are unlikely to be greeted with snow-dusted streets on Christmas morning.

    After sun and high temperatures in the 40s on Wednesday, Christmas Day may also bring above-average temperatures, with highs forecast in the mid-40s and a potential for light showers in the morning.

    It will be “not great weather, but not bad either for late December,” according to forecasts from the National Weather Service.

    Friday’s winter weather event would mark the second measurable snowfall of the season in Philly. The snowstorm that swept across the Philadelphia region on Dec. 14 dumped 4.2 inches of snow at Philadelphia International Airport. Some suburban communities in Bucks and Chester Counties recorded over 8 inches.

    If you’re planning to travel on Friday evening, expect impacts to your plans, as roads may get snowy and icy.

    Flying out of PHL and want to know how things are looking at the airport? Check out The Inquirer’s end-of-year PHL tracker to see how delays and cancellations are stacking up.

  • Local pro athletes bring Christmas surprise to Chester County family

    Local pro athletes bring Christmas surprise to Chester County family

    They almost didn’t put up a Christmas tree this year.

    R.C. Wilson Sr. knew things were going to be tight for his family this holiday, with him starting a new job and “life just being hard,” he said. It was a week before Christmas when he reached out to Justin Brown, who leads an organization that connects athletes with community initiatives and had arranged several holiday donation drives this season, asking if Brown knew of any agencies that might donate some gifts to Wilson’s six kids.

    Brown reached out to the Chester County community, and he got an outpouring of support. He asked NFL tight end Kenny Yeboah, a former Temple player who later joined the New York Jets and Detroit Lions, and former Phillies pitcher Tommy Greene to be part of a surprise. He told Wilson to put up the Christmas tree.

    And on their quiet Coatesville street a few days before the holiday, the community showed up at Wilson’s doorstep with bags upon bags of gifts — essentials like clothing and shoes and food, plus toys and more than $500 in gift cards.

    “We always try to do what we can for [the kids] to give them the best, but they also understand life gets hard for everybody. We went from, I feel like, being up top to rock bottom,” Wilson said Tuesday. “It’s amazing to get to see in person. Seeing it in person, especially when I needed the help, was a blessing from the community and for my family.”

    Nevaeh Miller-Wilson, 8, organizes presents after a Christmas surprise from former Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Tommy Greene and New York Jets tight end Kenny Yeboah at her home in Coatesville, Pa. Greene and Yeboah surprised the family, which includes six children, with a full Christmas celebration, providing gifts and holiday essentials.

    The gifts were stacked under the Christmas tree and through the living room. It was overwhelming, said his wife, Chelsea Miller.

    Yeboah, a new resident of Downingtown, and Greene signed footballs, baseballs, and the backs of T-shirts and posed for photos with the family.

    It was cool to see, said Aadan Miller-Wilson, 15.

    “I’ve never met an athlete, and I play two of the sports they play, too,” he said.

    Yeboah, out with an injury, offered to coach the kids while he recovered. He had wanted to give back to the community he was now part of, and was connected with Brown.

    New York Jets tight end Kenny Yeboah interacts with members of a family of six children, from left, Nevaeh, Robert, Bryden, Jacob, David and Aadan, during a Christmas gift surprise at their home in Coatesville, Pa.

    “To come here and see all these people help out and give back to the community that they’re in, it’s just an amazing feeling,” Yeboah said. “It’s really, really cool to see that everyone’s here just to help out.”

    Greene credited his “better half,” Wendy, for quickly becoming involved with the surprise. When you help each other out, you help everyone out, Greene said.

    “When you get a chance to make a difference, you do,” he said.

    Wilson, who kept the surprise a secret from his family until the community showed up at their door, also found the support overwhelming.

    “It’s a blessing,” he said.

    This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.

  • Residents could be given bottled water after a ‘significant’ amount of gasoline leaked at Delco tank farm

    Residents could be given bottled water after a ‘significant’ amount of gasoline leaked at Delco tank farm

    Hundreds of thousands of gallons of gasoline leaked over a period of months at a Monroe Energy petroleum tank farm in Aston, Delaware County, according to company and state officials.

    The leak was first identified in August, and it was traced in December to a one-quarter-inch hole in the bottom of a tank. It totaled about 9,000 barrels, or 378,000 gallons, at the Chelsea Pipeline Station and Tank Farm.

    The facility contains 12 aboveground tanks and is operated by MIPC LLC, a subsidiary of Monroe Energy. It is about five miles north of the company’s Delaware River refinery, which is in Trainer, Delaware County.

    The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) said Tuesday it has ordered that some nearby homes with wells within 1,000 feet of the facility’s western border be provided bottled water if requested. And it ordered that the company “begin an interim cleanup plan and thorough investigation.”

    MIPC said in a statement that it had notified local, state, and federal authorities. It said that on Dec. 13 crews determined that the source of the spill was traced to one tank.

    It further said that an EPA-approved lab it had contracted tested residential wells, “and all results have shown no petroleum related compounds.”

    MIPC said that the tanks are routinely inspected and that the company is conducting daily testing of monitoring wells along its fence line and inspecting local waterways.

    “No further releases have been found,” the statement said.

    “We sincerely apologize for any concern that this may be causing our neighbors,” the statement continued. “MIPC is committed to ensuring that the entire affected area is remediated and returned to its original condition.”

    Adam Gattuso, a Monroe Energy spokesperson, said the leak is “considered one cumulative event, over the course of several months.”

    He said that if people are within 1,000 feet of the facility’s western border and have a potable groundwater well and would like bottled water delivered to their home, the company would do so within 24 hours. He said the company will soon mail letters to those residents.

    DEP Secretary Jessica Shirley said in a statement Tuesday that “swift action by the company is necessary to fully investigate the extent of damage and address the community’s needs.”

    According to the DEP order, the first report of an issue came over the summer at the facility, where a series of aboveground tanks are part of a pipeline network.

    The company notified county officials on Aug. 19 of hydrocarbons found in a storm sewer at the facility. It said no leaks were found, but there was “sheening” on the water.

    MIPC did not know the source of the gasoline on the water and said it would continue investigating.

    On Sept. 3, the company notified officials it “had discovered water with petroleum odors discharging from a concrete drainage pipe” leaking unleaded gasoline at a rate of five gallons per minute.

    The DEP ordered MIPC to treat and discharge the contaminated water.

    The agency said the company’s investigations from September through November found no signs of additional leaking.

    The DEP had not heard from MIPC regarding any leaks until Dec. 5, when the company reported to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s National Response Center “that the amount of gasoline released may be significant and was impacting soil and groundwater.”

    It notified officials that the source of the leak had been found in the tank.

    As a result, the DEP has ordered MIPC, in addition to supplying bottled water, to identify residents with private wells within 1,000 feet of the facility that spans Bethel, Upper Chichester, and Aston Townships.

    And it ordered the company to sample private wells for petroleum, submit a plan to detect potential vapors near homes, schedule environmental investigations, submit a remedial plan, and communicate with officials and the public.

    As of yet, the DEP has not cited any violations or issued any fines.

    Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to include additional information about water bottle availability for residents.

  • Local business openings and closings to know | Inquirer Chester County

    Local business openings and closings to know | Inquirer Chester County

    Hi, Chester County! 👋

    Small businesses continue to shape the county. We take a look at recent openings and closures. And with the new year just over a week away, we’ve rounded up more than a dozen ways to celebrate 2026 nearby.

    This is our final Inquirer Chester County newsletter of 2025, but we’ll be back in your inboxes on Jan. 7. Thanks for reading and happy new year!

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    Recent small business openings and closings to know about

    West Chester saw changes to its small businesses late this year.

    The entrepreneurial spirit is alive and well in Chester County, with the county’s economic development council noting that it’s provided service to a number of “Main Street mom-and-pop businesses” in 2025, The Inquirer’s Brooke Schultz reports.

    Among this year’s openings: Stubborn Goat Brewing in West Grove, eateries The Local and Our Deli & Cafe, both in Phoenixville, and charcuterie board business Olive & Meadow in West Chester.

    While new businesses opened, some also closed their doors.

    Read more about the county’s small business changes here.

    18 ways to celebrate the new year

    A giant lighted mushroom will be dropped in Kennett Square on New Year’s Eve.

    The countdown to 2026 is on and there’s no shortage of ways to celebrate the end of one year and the start of another.

    We’ve rounded up over a dozen celebrations throughout Chester County, including noontime events for kids, DJ parties, and the iconic mushroom drop in Kennett Square.

    Check out the events happening around Chester County here.

    📍 Countywide News

    • Fallout from a longtime Coatesville VA Medical Center chaplain’s sermon last year led to a battle over religion at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Last year, Russell “Rusty” Trubey included a reading that denounced same-sex marriage, leading some congregants to walk out and the chaplain to be temporarily pulled from his assignment. The Inquirer’s Fallon Roth delves into how the incident and its aftermath helped inspire an “Anti-Christian Bias Task Force.”

    💡 Community News

    • With the year coming to a close, area townships are adopting their 2026 operating budgets, with some notable changes. Kennett Township’s board of supervisors approved a 2.8% increase on real estate taxes. West Whiteland Township residents face a trash and recycling base fee hike from $89 to $223, as well as a per-bag fee. The township expects the average household to spend $353 annually. Refuse fees are set to rise next year in Downingtown to $360 from $240. Residents in West Vincent Township won’t see a tax increase next year. The township’s new budget, adopted last week, notably allocates nearly three times the funds for EMS services than it did this year, and over $1 million for open space preservation. In Tredyffrin Township, the 2026 real estate millage will be 2.811 mills, 0.657 for stormwater, and 0.845 for fire and EMS, for a combined millage of 4.313. That’s up slightly from 2025, when the township mill rate was 4.162.
    • Last week, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court unanimously voted to reverse a Commonwealth Court decision. The reversal allows the state’s Public Utility Commission to approve East Whiteland Township’s sale of its public sewer system to Aqua Pennsylvania.
    • Municipalities throughout the county have been awarded $2.1 million in state funding for a number of projects. Shamona Peck Park in Uwchlan Township will get a new nature playground, while Uwchlan Ambulance Corps will get funds to purchase two ambulances and four new heart monitors. Funding will also go toward Downingtown’s flood mitigation strategy, the purchase of two electric vehicles in Caln Township, and traffic signal improvements in Upper Uwchlan Township. The borough of West Chester has received a separate grant of more than $800,000 to replace an old fire truck. And parts of the Brandywine Battlefield Heritage Interpretation Area, which straddle Chester and Delaware Counties, will get three new digital kiosks and 64 interpretive wayfinding kiosks at historically significant sites.
    • In case you missed it last week, East Vincent Township’s board of supervisors scrapped a draft ordinance that would impose restrictions on data center developments. The decision comes after community pushback over a proposed data center at the Pennhurst State School and Hospital site, an application for which will now go through a months-long review process.
    • West Vincent Township will hold a Board of Supervisors meeting on Jan. 5 to consider an ordinance that would grow its Open Space Review Board from five members to seven members and create a trails subcommittee.
    • The Malvern man who brought guns to the “No Kings” protest in West Chester earlier this year pleaded guilty Thursday in federal court to possessing an unregistered firearm or explosive device. Kevin Krebs, 32, is scheduled for sentencing in March and faces a maximum of 10 years in prison.
    • Valentin Lubinski, 26, of Malvern, was sentenced last week to 20 years in prison and $28,000 in restitution for the online sexual exploitation of minor girls and child pornography offenses.
    • Margaret Curran, 40, of Honey Brook, has been charged with arson and other offenses after allegedly starting a fire at Green Meadows Rehabilitation Center in Paoli, where she was a resident. (NBC10 Philadelphia)
    • A former West Chester University men’s basketball assistant volunteer coach placed nearly 500 bets on professional and collegiate games in 2022 amounting to over $176,000, a new NCAA report found. Khalif Wyatt has been suspended from 15% of the regular season during the first season of his employment if he’s hired by any other NCAA school. He currently works in the NBA’s G League.
    • There are updates on three roadwork projects in the county. Last week, PennDot completed its more than $2.6 million safety improvement project along the High Street corridor in West Chester and West Goshen Township, which includes new traffic lights at the University Avenue and Sharpless Street intersection, as well as pedestrian countdown timers, curb extensions, high-visibility crosswalks, and roadway resurfacing nearby. The department also completed repair work to the bridge on Swan Road over Officers Run in West Sadsbury Township, which had been closed since mid-October after damage from a crash. And Pennsylvania Turnpike has selected a contractor to widen the road, including between Valley Forge Road in Tredyffrin Township past Howells Road and into East Whiteland Township. Work to add one lane in each direction is expected to begin in late January or early February and will last about four years.
    • Was 2025 the year of the Philly crime show? The Inquirer’s Stephanie Farr makes the case that it was, thanks in part to HBO series, Task, which was created by Berwyn native Brad Ingelsby. The drama has been picked up for a second season.
    • It’s become increasingly difficult to score holiday tickets for Longwood Gardens. Can’t get into the Kennett Square mainstay? We’ve rounded up other holiday displays throughout the Philadelphia area.
    • Have dead strands of holiday lights? Several townships will recycle them, including Easttown (through Jan. 12), Upper Uwchlan (through Jan. 15), and West Whiteland (through Jan. 20).
    • As for Christmas tree recycling, East Pikeland Township residents can leave them curbside on Wednesdays in January or drop them off at the township yard waste recycling facility. Spring City residents can place trees curbside daily through Jan. 30 for pickup. West Vincent Township will recycle trees at the township building from Dec. 26 through Jan. 23.
    • Looking to join a “First Day” hike on Jan. 1? French Creek State Park in Elverson and White Clay Creek Preserve in Landenberg are among the state parks with guided options.

    🏫 Schools Briefing

    • Coatesville Area School District opened a new STEM center at Rainbow Elementary School last week. The new center was funded through a partnership between the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation and Peco.

    🍽️ On our Plate

    🎳 Things to Do

    🎤 Dan and Dan: The acoustic duo will perform tunes at The Creamery. ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 27, 7-10 p.m. 💵 Free 📍 The Creamery, Kennett Square

    🍷 Chocolate Truffle Pairing: This tasting pairs Swiss chocolates with local wines. ⏰ Sunday, Dec. 28, 1 p.m. 💵 $25 📍 Harvest Ridge Winery, Toughkenamon

    🪄 Brandywine School Wizard Camp: Kids ages 6 to 15 can spend the day making a wand, learning to cast spells, and playing quadball. ⏰ Tuesday, Dec. 30, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 💵 $107 📍 West Chester Municipal Building

    🏡 On the Market

    A five-bedroom home with a pool near Radnor Hunt

    The home, which sits on 4.2 acres, has ample privacy.

    Situated across from Radnor Hunt and on 4.2 acres, this sprawling stone and stucco Malvern estate has ample privacy. The five-bedroom, four-and-a-half bathroom gated home has a two-story foyer, a sunken living room with a fireplace, a formal dining room, an office with vaulted ceilings, a two-story family room with a stone fireplace, and an eat-in kitchen with high-end appliances. The first-floor primary suite has its own fireplace and deck access, as well as dual walk-in closets and a jetted tub. Other features include a finished walk-out basement, a screened-in porch, and a pool.

    See more photos of the property here.

    Price: $1.975M | Size: 6,278 SF | Acreage: 4.2

    🗞️ What other Chester County residents are reading this week:

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.

  • Property taxes are going up next year | Inquirer Lower Merion

    Property taxes are going up next year | Inquirer Lower Merion

    Hi, Lower Merion! 👋

    Township commissioners recently passed the 2026 budget, which includes a tax hike. Here’s what you need to know. And with the new year just over a week away, we’ve rounded up nearly a dozen ways to celebrate 2026 in and around town.

    This is our final Inquirer Lower Merion newsletter of 2025, but we’ll be back in your inboxes on Jan. 8. Thanks for reading and happy new year!

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    Lower Merion Township property taxes will jump 8% in 2026

    Lower Merion officials recently approved a tax hike for 2026.

    Lower Merion residents can expect to see their property taxes go up in 2026 after the township’s board of commissioners approved an 8% increase in the upcoming budget.

    Commissioners said the increase was necessary following 13 years of stagnant tax revenue from 2011 to 2024, when there were no increases. Property taxes went up 6.5% in 2025 and commissioners acknowledged next year’s increase comes with some “sticker shock,” The Inquirer’s Denali Sagner reports.

    Still, it’s not as high as an initially proposed 9.5% hike. The township taxes will come on top of a 4% tax increase recently passed by Montgomery County officials.

    Read more about the tax increases here.

    Where to ring in the new year around town

    Ardmore cocktail bar Izzy’s will have a special menu and champagne toast to ring in the new year.

    The countdown to 2026 is on and there’s no shortage of ways to celebrate the end of one year and the start of another.

    We’ve rounded up 11 celebrations in and around Lower Merion, including noontime events for kids, specialty and buffet dinners, plus concerts for kids and adults.

    Check out the events happening here.

    💡 Community News

    • Trash and recycling dates will have altered schedules due to Christmas and New Year’s Day. See how your household is impacted here. The township also released its 2026 collection schedule, which you can see here.
    • Narberth passed its 2026 budget last week, which includes a higher earned income tax. The EIT will jump from 0.75% this year to 1% next year and is aimed at improving the borough’s capital fund. The new budget also adjusts solid waste fees so that condos and apartments pay a flat $250 per living unit. Sewer fees are also set to rise from $5.25 to $6 per 1,000 gallons. See the full budget here.
    • Narberth council has also voted to make permanent the no-parking zone pilot at the intersection of Price and Essex Avenues. Signage is expected to be installed in January and February, with painting set for spring.
    • What does $390,000 get you? In Lower Merion, a budget that size can buy a two-bedroom, two-bathroom unit along Haverford’s “golden mile” of condominiums. See how that compares to neighboring areas, including Northeast Philadelphia and South Jersey.
    • Bryn Mawr Hospital is among the quietest hospitals in the region at night, according to newly released federal data. Patients from October 2023 to September 2024 reported Bryn Mawr being “always quiet” overnight 61% of the time, “usually quiet” 29% of the time, and “sometimes or never quiet” 10% of the time. See how Bryn Mawr compares to other regional hospitals.
    • Speaking of hospitals, Lankenau Medical Center made the Forbes Top Hospitals list for 2026.
    • Woman’s World Magazine recently caught up with Bryn Mawr native Kat Dennings to chat about her newest project, Shifting Gears, as well as her early roles and sitcom success.
    • A Bala Cynwyd dad launched a program in 2024 after seeing demand for Cub Scout activities on non-Sabbath days. Philadelphia Jewish Exponent recently profiled Michael Kopinsky about his inspiration and how the program quickly gained popularity among Orthodox and Sabbath-observant Jewish families.

    🏫 Schools Briefing

    • Winter break is officially here, with students and staff returning Jan. 5. The school district’s offices will be closed Dec. 24-26 and Jan. 1-2 during the break. Lower Merion High School’s pool will be closed those same days, as well as on Dec. 31.
    • Lower Merion High School skating duo Justin and Suri Lue took home third place in the regional level of the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Nevada last month, and sixth place nationally in the intermediate division.

    🍽️ On our Plate

    🎳 Things to Do

    🎤 Start Making Sense: Hear the seven-piece Talking Heads tribute band perform. ⏰ Friday, Dec. 26, 8 p.m. 💵 $33.38 📍 Ardmore Music Hall

    🐑 Meet the Menagerie: Meet some of Harriton House’s farmstead animals. There will also be hot chocolate and s’mores available for purchase. ⏰ Tuesday, Dec. 30, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 💵 Free 📍 Harriton House

    🏡 On the Market

    A castle-like Merion Station home

    The home spans nearly 6,700 square feet and has a distinctive turret.

    This Merion Station property, built in 1888, is reminiscent of a castle. The home has a modern interior while paying homage to its roots by way of exposed stone walls, fireplaces, millwork, and stained glass windows. Some of its features include a curved tower, a formal dining room, and an eat-in kitchen with a large island. It also has seven bedrooms spread across the second and third floors. Outside, there’s an in-ground saltwater pool, a basketball court, multiple covered sitting areas, and a deck with a built-in kitchen.

    See more photos of the home here.

    Price: $2.196M | Size: 6,694 SF | Acreage: 0.92

    🗞️ What other Lower Merion residents are reading this week:

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.

  • 13 ways to ring in the new year nearby | Inquirer Greater Media

    13 ways to ring in the new year nearby | Inquirer Greater Media

    Hi, Greater Media! 👋

    With the new year just over a week away, we’ve rounded up over a dozen ways to celebrate 2026 in and around town. Also this week, a shop with two local spots is among the region’s best independent wine stores, new license plate readers are coming to Nether Providence, plus how Task helps make the case that 2025 was the year of the Philly crime drama.

    This is our final Inquirer Greater Media newsletter of 2025, but we’ll be back in your inboxes on Jan. 8. Thanks for reading and happy new year!

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    Where to celebrate the new year around town

    Ship Bottom Brewery will host a “keg drop” to usher in the new year.

    The countdown to 2026 is on, and there’s no shortage of ways to celebrate the end of one year and the start of another.

    We’ve rounded up over a dozen celebrations nearby, including Media’s annual ball drop, Ship Bottom’s keg drop in Swarthmore, noontime celebrations for kids, as well as spots to dine on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

    Check out the events happening in and around Media here.

    💡 Community News

    • Trash and recycling pickup days will be impacted for the next two weeks for Christmas and New Year’s Day. Not sure when your holiday collection will be? Check the Media or Swarthmore websites. If you live in Nether Providence Township, check with your private trash collector.
    • Was 2025 the year of the Philly crime show? The Inquirer’s Stephanie Farr makes the case that it was, thanks in part to the Delco-based HBO series, Task, which has been picked up for a second season.
    • Three area projects have been awarded Local Share Account grants, including $28,000 to install 16 license plate readers at four intersections in Nether Providence Township. Other funding includes $454,604 to replace equipment at the Fair Acres Pump Station and $150,000 for lighting updates at the Delaware County Emergency Services Center, both in Middletown Township.
    • Friends of Ridley Creek State Park is hosting a “First Day” hike on Jan. 1 along a 3.5-mile loop with creek views and a stop at historic hilltop Russell Cemetery. Looking for other locations to get outdoors? We’ve rounded up 10 walking and hiking spots in the area.
    • Rose Valley Borough recently adopted its 2026 budget, which calls for a slight increase in the millage rate, from 1.32 this year to 1.39 next year. See the borough’s budget here. (The Swarthmorean)
    • L.L. Bean is planning to open a 20,300-square-foot store at the Concordville Town Centre in Glen Mills next year, taking over a former Staples. (Philadelphia Business Journal)
    • Wawa is the 21st largest private company in the country based on revenue, according to the latest Forbes ranking of America’s Top Private Companies, released last week. The beloved convenience chain reported $18.639 billion in revenue in its most recent fiscal year and is the largest private company in Pennsylvania.
    • The Media Theatre’s main stage is currently hosting Broadway hit Annie, which continues its run through Jan. 4. NBC Philadelphia recently caught up with Violet Roche and Faye Lorena Stockmal, who share the titular role, along with director Hannah Catanoso, about lessons they’ve learned from the musical, favorite songs, and more. See the segment here.

    🍽️ On our Plate

    • Looking for a great natural wine? Residents don’t need to look further than 320 Market Cafe. Jack Cunicelli’s shop, which has locations in Media and Swarthmore, is one of the best independent wine shops in the Philadelphia area, according to Inquirer contributor Sande Friedman. It showcases minimal-intervention wines with a global representation.

    🎳 Things to Do

    🍿 Movie Matinee: See a screening of the 1980s holiday classic Gremlins. Registration is required. ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 27, 2-4 p.m. 💵 Free 📍Helen Kate Furness Free Library, Wallingford

    🎭 Little Women: There are just a few days left to catch Hedgerow Theatre’s adaptation of the popular Louisa May Alcott novel. ⏰ Through Sunday, Dec. 28, times vary 💵 $20-$35 📍Hedgerow Theatre, Rose Valley

    🏡 On the Market

    A five-bedroom home tucked in a Media cul-de-sac

    The home spans over 4,100 square feet.

    This Media home has a classic look thanks to a combination of brick and siding on its façade. Spanning five bedrooms, it has an eat-in kitchen with granite countertops, living and dining rooms, an office, as well as a family room with vaulted ceilings and a fireplace. The finished basement has an additional family room, a bedroom, a bathroom, and a bar. Other features include a deck, patio, and covered front porch.

    See more photos of the home here.

    Price: $1.075M | Size: 4,135 | Acreage: 1.3

    🗞️ What other Greater Media residents are reading this week:

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.

  • From undercover stings to a marijuana museum: Inside the haphazard crackdown on Pennsylvania’s smoke shops

    From undercover stings to a marijuana museum: Inside the haphazard crackdown on Pennsylvania’s smoke shops

    The word was out among Chester County teens: West Grove Smoke Shop wasn’t checking IDs.

    “Many students frequented it,” a student told a Pennsylvania State Police officer investigating how scores of local high schoolers were getting their hands on an array of marijuana products. “So many, in fact, that there were long lines at the smoke shop after school.”

    The tip — revealed in a grand jury report released in October — launched one of the largest stings of smoke shops in Pennsylvania this year. While those shops are allowed to sell hemp-based THC products that fall below a certain potency threshold, undercover detectives found widespread deception. After investigators made purchases from 19 stores in Chester, Delaware, and Lancaster Counties, lab tests determined all but one were selling unregulated marijuana falsely labeled as hemp.

    It was a striking, if rare, example of local law enforcement cracking down on smoke shops selling hemp-based THC products, which an Inquirer investigation this year found are often just black market weed, sometimes contaminated with harmful toxins and chemicals. Several teens in Chester County told police they got sick from such products, with one landing in the hospital.

    A view looking into the front window of the former West Grove Smoke Shop in West Grove, on Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025.

    Confusion over federal hemp law, and the inability of lawmakers in Harrisburg to pass regulations in a state lacking a recreational cannabis program, has led to smoke shops popping up all over Pennsylvania. But the emerging effort to police these shops has so far been inconsistent and haphazard.

    Philadelphia City Councilmember Katherine Gilmore Richardson has advanced a series of bills designed to crack down on scofflaw operators, who typically pull fraudulent grocery store licenses to open up shop. An Inquirer analysis found that the city has taken a stricter approach to smoke shops that operate under grocery store permits while peddling drug products and paraphernalia — with investigators doubling violations for improper licensing over the last two years.

    “[It] marks important progress in the city’s efforts to better enforce against illegal smoke shops and nuisance businesses devastating our neighborhoods,” Gilmore Richardson said.

    But block after city block, smoke shops remain open and continue to operate with relative impunity — sometimes within view of a similar shop that authorities have closed down.

    Many use thinly veiled references in their names, such as “High Time Convenience” or “Hi Baby,” the latter featuring a logo meant to resemble the popular RAW rolling paper brand. Since 2022, nearly 100 zoning permits filed by the Frankford-based permit expediter Tina Accounting & Tax Services on behalf of would-be grocery store proprietors were later cited by inspectors as invalid, an Inquirer analysis found. (“There is no assumption that they are aware that these businesses may later become nuisance businesses,” a city official said.)

    With the city short of investigators, many shops simply reopen even after they are shut down. Philadelphia has cited at least 42 stores, many of them smoke shops, for resuming operations after receiving an official shutdown order from inspectors over the last two years. One store, Market Mini Mart, located in the shadow of the 52nd Street El station, was cited 10 times for illegally reopening, records show.

    City officials said the lack of a specific “smoke shop” permit makes it difficult to track the scope of the problem. Yet an Inquirer analysis of the city’s list of top 35 “nuisances businesses” found more than a third either had “smoke shop” in their names or advertised drug paraphernalia.

    Going after technical violations remains one of the few tools available to local authorities, short of conducting raids and lab tests to determine if the over-the-counter products comply with federal law.

    The supply line for smoke shops, however, could dry up next year. A provision in a federal spending bill would ban intoxicating THC products derived from hemp nationally, potentially closing a loophole that has created a glut of these quasi-legal products across the country.

    The grand jury investigation acknowledged that the growing number of smoke shops presents a daunting challenge. The lead investigator in the Chester County case “quickly realized the sheer number was overwhelming, and many stores were interconnected, operating across multiple counties,” according to the grand jury report.

    That investigation resulted in the September arrest of Satish Parsa, 33, the owner of three establishments, including the West Grove Smoke Shop, a redbrick storefront that now sits empty. Parsa faces more than 60 counts of drug trafficking and related charges, according to court records.

    His attorney, Elliot Marc Cohen, said Parsa, who has pleaded not guilty, intends to “vigorously” fight the prosecution.

    Ellie Siegel, CEO of Longview Strategic, a Philadelphia-area cannabis consultancy firm, argued that selective enforcement is ineffective.

    When the federal ban goes into effect late next year, she reasoned, many smoke shops will shut down as the supply line dries up, while others will attempt to pivot toward the regulated marijuana market.

    “The manufacturers won’t have a way to manufacture the intoxicating hemp products they’re making now,” she said. “It’s the closing of a loophole.”

    A sample of hemp-based THC flower that was purchased by The Inquirer and sent for lab testing this summer.

    The rise and fall of the Philly smoke shop

    In interviews with about a half dozen Philly-area smoke shop owners over the last month, several told The Inquirer that they are bracing for closure, saying survival is nearly impossible in an already saturated market.

    Others said they are confident they can endure.

    On South Street, more than a dozen smoke shops crowd the mile-long stretch east of Broad Street. The longtime operator of Munchies Reloaded recalled thriving years when bongs and pipes brought in roughly $600,000 annually, before he expanded into hemp.

    Now, he said, business has plunged nearly 80%. City inspectors have increasingly fined and shuttered stores for selling glassware used for smoking. Those items are easier to classify as “drug paraphernalia” prohibited by city codes, rather than quasi-legal hemp, which is superseded by federal laws.

    “There used to be good money in it,” said the store owner, who declined to give his name. “Now there is no money.”

    Smoke shops proliferated during the pandemic, often launched by marijuana enthusiasts, immigrant entrepreneurs, or small grocers looking to replace revenue lost to increasingly strict tobacco sale regulations.

    Pedestrians walk along South Street by Two J’s Pushin’ Weight shop in Philadelphia, on Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025.

    Some shop owners have migrated to Philadelphia from the New York City area, lured by lower rents and higher demand in a state without legal recreational cannabis. A business permit for Green Broad Smokeshop on Broad Street, for instance, lists an owner based in Queens.

    At the peak, a single shop could net between $250,000 and $1 million annually, depending on foot traffic and product line, according to two owners who spoke with The Inquirer on the condition they not be named so they could speak frankly about their businesses. Low overhead and high demand made for a tempting copycat model — a cheap pound of hemp might cost $600 in bulk but retail for more than $5,500.

    On the same block as Munchies Reloaded, Abtein Jaeger and his brother in January opened Two J’s Pushin’ Weight. Jaeger said he sources high-grade hemp from West Coast farmers, positioning his store as a premium dispensary amid competitors selling a lower-quality product.

    He said he is upbeat about surviving a potential crackdown on stores like his next year.

    “It’s not the worst thing in the world,” Jaeger, 34, said.

    He added that he would comply with any testing requirements and try to apply for a license, and that he already enforces a 21-plus age limit.

    Reforming the Wild West of weed

    Unlike in state-run cannabis programs, which mandate costly contaminant testing, hemp products need only carry a certificate of authenticity showing the flower tested under 0.3% Delta-9 THC at harvest.

    The Inquirer, in its investigation earlier this year, commissioned a lab to test 10 products. Nine of them exceeded that limit, and most were tainted with banned pesticides, harmful mold, or heavy metals. Manufacturers had also used forged certificates to make their products appear safe and legitimate, The Inquirer found.

    But the complexity of federal drug law makes it difficult to prove products are illegal, as many hemp-based products use THC variants like Delta-8 or Delta-10 that are not specifically banned.

    For now, most shop owners say, local police leave them alone. Undercover stings, like those led in the suburbs, remain rare because they demand expensive lab testing and significant resources.

    One South Street establishment has a singular strategy for surviving a potential crackdown.

    South Street Cannabis Museum, whose logo includes a Liberty Bell festooned with marijuana leaves, exhibits a small collection of Reefer Madness-era newsprint, historical pamphlets, and other weed-themed memorabilia.

    Exterior view of South Street Cannabis Museum in Philadelphia, on Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025.

    “We are a museum, first and foremost, where we can engage with the public about the history, science, culture, and art of cannabis,” said owner Kristopher Wesolowski, 42, a former neuroscience lab manager and event planner, who pivoted into hemp sales after the pandemic.

    The back half of the museum is a gift shop where visitors can buy hemp-derived THC flower under glass display cases.

    “It’s almost like a simulated dispensary,” Wesolowski said. “But it’s not like some spot where people can just go and get high. … You can get historically stoned at our museum, in a sense.”

    Like other proprietors, Wesolowski said the hemp industry has been “screaming for regulation,” as “bad actors” gave well-intentioned store owners a bad name.

    But he also cautioned that overregulation would only create new problems, like increasing demand for unpredictable designer drugs on the black market.

    “When you close one door, another will open,” he said. “And that one might be a little bit more dangerous.”

    This article was supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism