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  • Owner of failed Philly real estate firm ABC Capital fined $350k by AG

    Owner of failed Philly real estate firm ABC Capital fined $350k by AG

    Editor’s note: An earlier version of this story included a photograph of a woman who had been a victim of the scheme and she was identified as such in the caption. The photo was removed because the juxtaposition of the headline and the image made it appear as the victim was the perpetrator.

    The Pennsylvania attorney general has issued a six-figure fine to the former CEO of ABC Capital, a failed real estate firm behind an $82 million scheme that saw overseas investors snap up hundreds of homes in the city’s poorest neighborhoods — only to leave them to rot.

    During the 2010s, ABC facilitated the sales of over 1,900 distressed homes billed as “turnkey rental” opportunities to investors in Asia, Europe, and South America. The company promised to purchase, renovate, and manage the rentals in exchange for up-front cash, but often reneged — bilking investors out of their money and sometimes stranding tenants in crumbling rental homes.

    Tenants rights advocates and lawsuits from investors later described the business as a “scam” or “Ponzi scheme.”

    Attorney General Dave Sunday said on Tuesday that former ABC Capital CEO Jason “Jay” Walsh had violated the terms of a 2024 settlement agreement negotiated by the attorney general’s office in response to these complaints.

    That agreement, which described ABC’s business practices as “deceptive and unfair,” prohibited Walsh from managing and maintaining rental properties in Pennsylvania. But a Common Pleas Court judge earlier this week ruled that Walsh violated the agreement by continuing to perform “management services for a property he owned,” communicating with tenants, and providing “inaccurate information” to the attorney general’s office.

    Sunday issued a $350,000 fine in response.

    “We are grateful that the Court recognized blatant breaches of this agreement, and imposed a serious penalty against Mr. Walsh,” Sunday said in a prepared statement. “We will continue to hold Mr. Walsh accountable under this agreement that clearly prohibits him from managing properties in the Commonwealth.”

    Walsh could not be reached for comment. His attorney did not immediately respond to requests for information or comments.

    Walsh’s crumbling empire was chronicled in 2022 reports by The Inquirer and the Baltimore Banner. His company decamped to the latter city as rising property values made the City of Brotherly Love less attractive to investors seeking cheap real estate.

    But during the 2010s, ABC facilitated more than $82 million in property sales involving 600 different companies in Philadelphia alone, Inquirer reporting showed. Walsh and his partners — Israeli expats Yaron Zer and Amir Vana — later faced numerous lawsuits filed by investors alleging the company left units unfinished or fell far short of promised 40% returns on investment, leaving them saddled with debt.

    Some of the homes that were ostensibly renovated, leased, or managed by ABC eventually became uninhabitable, due to either shoddy work or poor maintenance, according to tenants, investors, and the attorney general.

    “It’s almost always in poor communities, with high rates of people of color,” Karla Cruel, a former staff attorney at Tenant Union Representative Network, told The Inquirer in 2022. “But they were screwing over the tenants and the investors at the same time. It was just a big old scam.”

    Last September, the Banner reported, Walsh was convicted of acting as an unlicensed contractor in Baltimore and ordered to pay $20,500 in restitution — the only criminal action brought against him to date.

    The Pennsylvania civil settlement — brokered by Pennsylvania Attorney General Michelle Henry in 2024 — banned Walsh and his wife, Blanca, from acting as landlords without the use of a third-party property manager. The duo, who appeared to have decamped to Aruba by 2024, were also not to have any contact with tenants for periods of 25 and 15 years, respectively.

    But court filings show that Walsh violated that agreement by continuing to directly lease out and manage two properties not far from the company’s defunct headquarters in Northern Liberties.

    One was his former residence, and another was a property he acquired under the moniker Nolo Investments LLC. Walsh had reported to the attorney general that while he and his wife co-owned both properties, they were managed by an outside company called “My Mega Realty.”

    While Walsh did discuss such an arrangement, the company’s owner said he never completed the deal. Former tenants also reported to the attorney general that Walsh and his wife were directly managing the property and collecting rent.

  • Jean E. Corrigan, former Montgomery County manager and longtime assistant to then-State Rep. Josh Shapiro, has died at 70

    Jean E. Corrigan, former Montgomery County manager and longtime assistant to then-State Rep. Josh Shapiro, has died at 70

    Jean E. Corrigan, 70, of Roslyn, Montgomery County, retired fleet and operations manager for the Montgomery County Department of Assets and Infrastructure, onetime constituent services representative for then-State Rep. Josh Shapiro, hair salon owner and operator, disability services advocate, and award-winning volunteer, died Saturday, Nov. 22, of non-alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver at her home.

    A lifelong resident of Glenside and nearby Roslyn, Mrs. Corrigan was vice chair of the Abington-Rockledge Democratic Committee from 1995 to 2013, and served as Gov. Shapiro’s constituent service agent when he represented the 153rd Legislative District in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from 2004 to 2012.

    “Jean was the very first volunteer on my very first campaign,” Shapiro recalled. “We knocked doors together, met our neighbors together, and, after winning, served our community together.”

    In addition to breaking down bureaucratic delays and solving all kinds of constituent problems for Shapiro, Mrs. Corrigan doggedly championed fair wages, reproductive freedom, increased funding for special education and disability services, and improved healthcare. Colleagues called her a “super volunteer” and a “campaign mom” because she helped so many candidates win elections.

    Gov. Shapiro said Mrs. Corrigan “made her neighbors’ lives better.”

    She hosted visiting campaign workers at her home for years, took charge of distributing lawn signs and sample ballots, and organized other preelection events at her dining room table. She was named the local committee’s Democrat of the Year in 2002 and earned several awards from community service organizations.

    “Through that work, I got to see just how much of herself she gave to others,” Shapiro said. “Where there was a need in the community, she worked to address it. When someone needed help, she lent a hand. She made her neighbors’ lives better, and I will forever be grateful for her life of service.”

    In 2001, Mrs. Corrigan ran unsuccessfully for Abington Township commissioner, finishing second among three candidates and losing to a long-entrenched incumbent. In a preelection profile in The Inquirer, she listed “responsible growth” as a top value and “maintain integrity of Abington Township” as a main goal.

    “Jean was passionate about serving others,” her family said in a tribute. “She believed that politics and civic activism could make a positive difference in people’s lives.”

    Mrs. Corrigan was called a “super volunteer” by colleagues and friends.

    At work, Mrs. Corrigan managed Montgomery County’s fleet of vehicles from 2015 to her retirement in 2022. She joined the county’s assets and infrastructure department in 2012 as operations manager for public property and supervised the county’s building services, construction carpenters, project collaboration, and computer-aided design.

    She studied beauty science and hair styling in high school, attended the Willow Grove Beauty Academy, and ran her own salon called Shears to You from 1993 to 2001. As a volunteer, she was one-time president of the Abington School District Special Education Parent Advisory Council, copresident of the Abington Junior High School parent-teacher organization, and chair and vice chair of several Abington Township community initiatives.

    She raised funds for school events and served on the board of the Abington YMCA. “Jean was selfless, empathetic, blunt, affectionate, caring, plainspoken, honest, and incredibly hard-working,” her family said. “There was no ego, no vanity.”

    Jean Elizabeth Fanelli was born Aug. 30, 1955, in Abington Township. She grew up with a brother, Angelo, and graduated from Abington High School in 1973. She was interested in clothing design as well as beauty culture and took classes at Temple University.

    Mrs. Corrigan stands with her husband, Peter, and son David

    After a brief marriage to Bruce Cunningham was annulled, she married Peter Corrigan — an usher at her first wedding — in 1977, and they had sons Joseph and David and a daughter, Pauline. They lived in Glenside for decades, in the same house in which she grew up, and moved to Roslyn a few years ago.

    Mrs. Corrigan enjoyed shopping trips with her daughter and baking holiday cookies. She liked to entertain and cook for everybody.

    She doted on her two granddaughters and spent memorable summers near Arrowhead Lake in the Pocono Mountains. She could talk to anybody, her family said.

    “She was a wonderful mother,” her daughter said. “I learned to have respect and manners from her.”

    Mrs. Corrigan (front right) enjoyed time with her family.

    Her son David said: “She taught me to be considerate and understanding of everyone I encounter, a lesson I will never forget.”

    Her son Joseph said: “She was incredibly generous with her time and resources. She could build relationships, and a theme of her life was caring for people.”

    Her husband said: “She was one of a kind.”

    In addition to her husband, children, granddaughters, and brother, Mrs. Corrigan is survived by other relatives.

    A private celebration of her life is to be held later.

    Donations in her name may be made to Hedwig House Inc., 1920 Old York Rd., Abington, Pa. 19001.

    Mrs. Corrigan’s smile could light up a room, her family said.
  • ‘New Heights’ to host ‘belly bucking’ Black Friday tailgate; plus, why Jason Kelce remains confident in Eagles

    ‘New Heights’ to host ‘belly bucking’ Black Friday tailgate; plus, why Jason Kelce remains confident in Eagles

    Jason Kelce used the latest episode of his New Heights podcast to break down what went wrong for the Eagles on Sunday. After the Birds blew a 21-point lead to fall to the Cowboys, Kelce identified the core of the loss as a limited running game and crumbling second-half offense.

    But alongside his brother, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, the former Eagles center also gave fans reason to be optimistic about the team’s potential in the latter part of the season. He also announced a free tailgate for fans before Friday’s game against the Chicago Bears.

    Here’s what you missed …

    ‘New Heights’ to host Black Friday tailgate

    Jason Kelce is hoping to stir the energy back up around the Birds before their game against the Bears with a Black Friday tailgate hosted by New Heights. The tailgate will begin at 11 a.m. in Lot K outside Lincoln Financial Field, with free admission for fans on a first-come, first-served basis.

    And it sounds like it’s going to be a wild affair.

    “I don’t know how many people we can admit or how many people will show up, but we do know we’re going to be drinking, eating, and having a gay old time,” Kelce said. “That’s right, we’ll have food, merch giveaways, photo booth, DJ, games — and of course a belly bucking competition! They’ve allowed us — I never thought legal would let this happen. Thank you to the legal team at Wondery.com and whoever is doing it on our behalf.

    “We’ve already picked vetted contestants, so you can’t apply, but you can witness the festivities. If you want to see mostly fat guys rub bellies into each other to see who can win some type of prize that we have yet to determine, if you want to show up and see these bellies get bucked, show up in Lot K on Friday. … We’re going to have a [expletive] blast!“

    What’s “belly bucking?” Good question …

    Fixing the Eagles offense

    When it came to breaking down the Eagles’ collapse on Sunday, Kelce largely blamed the offense’s inability to keep up with the Cowboys in the second half on a severely lacking running game.

    Kelce pointed out how Lane Johnson’s absence has further hampered the Eagles’ ground attack. The veteran offensive tackle, who suffered a foot injury during the team’s Week 11 win over Detroit, is expected to be sidelined for several weeks.

    “I know it’s very fashionable to blame Kevin Patullo and the play-calling, but the passing game felt like it was pretty good in this one,” Kelce said. “The thing that is really hurting this offense right now is the run game. It has not been clicking for the majority of the year. It’s multifaceted. The offensive line has been banged up, there’s been guys in and out. … It’s been hard to build cohesion as a unit.”

    Eagles offensive tackle Fred Johnson has been filling in for injured starter Lane Johnson.

    Kelce also addressed the self-inflicted wound of the Eagles’ pair of turnovers in the fourth quarter, granting the Cowboys ample opportunity to make a comeback.

    “Outside of the run game, the ultimate thing that killed this team was … the turnovers at the end of the game, which were extremely costly,” Kelce said.

    However, the former center attempted to quell some concerns by assuring that the offensive line will improve as the team adjusts from the injury misfortune.

    “I think that this offensive line, as they continue to get the reps together, they will block better as a unit, and that will make a huge difference in the ways these plays get executed,” Kelce said. “I feel confident about the Eagles moving forward.”

  • WMMR’s ‘Preston & Steve’ losing another cohost following surprise announcement by Nick McIlwain

    WMMR’s ‘Preston & Steve’ losing another cohost following surprise announcement by Nick McIlwain

    The Preston & Steve Show is losing another personality.

    Longtime cohost Nick McIlwain, who has been a fixture on Preston Elliot and Steve Morrison’s popular WMMR morning show for 21 years, announced Wednesday would be his last day on the show.

    The surprise announcement comes a little less than a month after the sudden death of beloved WMMR host Pierre Robert. McIlwain made the decision to leave the station before losing his friend and colleague, but made clear it impacted his choice. McIlwain said he was also motivated by the departure of former colleague and current B101 host Kathy Romano, who was forced out in May as part of cutbacks by parent company Beasley Media Group.

    But mostly, McIlwain thought it was time for a change.

    “Kathy and I are really close, but I don’t know if things would be different if she were still here,” McIlwain told The Inquirer. “One of the main factors was I’m 50 years old, and if you’re going to make a change in your life, the older you get the harder it gets.”

    Playing in the background is the long decline of radio (and just about every other form of media) in a digital world, which has led to a continuous cycle of cutbacks and layoffs. Unlike Romano’s departure, it is entirely McIlwain’s decision to leave WMMR, where he began as an intern in 1999 and spent more than half his adult life.

    Though he has some things he plans to pursue, McIlwain doesn’t really know what comes next, though he doesn’t think his future will be on the radio. The only concrete plans he has is to take the next few months off to figure stuff out and come to terms with the death of his friend and mentor.

    “Losing Pierre was really tough. It’s taken a real big toll on me and hurts all the time,” McIlwain said. “I haven’t had a ton of time to grieve and mourn properly yet, so I’m gonna do that for myself.”

    Elliot admitted he was confused when McIlwain first approached him about leaving the show. McIlwain, like the rest of Preston & Steve’s close-knit crew, was under contract for another four years. But both he and Morrison have come to terms with McIlwain’s decision and have already settled on a path forward.

    Replacing McIlwain in the studio will be Preston & Steve producer Marisa Magnatta. Replacing her will be Robert’s former midday producer, Ryan Shuttleworth.

    “This is what you need to do,” Elliott said to McIlwain on the air Wednesday. “Given our druthers, you would stay right here. We’d have you on board. Things would be business as usual. But you know, this is a decision that you came to, and he presented us with it, and who are we to say, ‘How dare you?’”

    More radio personalities on the move

    Paul Kelly (left) will take over Matt Cord’s spot as morning host of 102.9 WMGK.

    Robert’s death last month stunned the music world and left WMMR’s midday spot vacant for the first time in more than four decades.

    Fortunately, WMMR found the perfect replacement in Matt Cord, a veteran Philly voice and the longtime PA announcer for the Sixers. Cord and Robert were close friends for years, and program director Chuck Damico said “Pierre would absolutely 100% approve of the move.

    “No one will ever replace Pierre Robert but I promise I’ll carry his spirit into the ‘Pierre Robert’ studio everyday and do my best to make him proud,” Cord wrote on social media earlier this week.

    Taking over Cord’s morning show at 102.9 WMGK will be another radio veteran — Paul Kelly, a Philly native who’s been a utility infielder at the station since 2019, hosting just about every shift.

    Kelly’s been on the air since 1989, hosting shows in Atlantic City, Wilkes-Barre, Scranton, and Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and is proud of the fact his family has been Eagles season ticket holders since their Franklin Field days.

    Both start their new gigs Monday.

  • Two New Yorkers found dead in Atlantic City Borgata hotel room

    Two New Yorkers found dead in Atlantic City Borgata hotel room

    Atlantic City Police are investigating the deaths of two New Yorkers who were found dead in a casino hotel room Sunday afternoon.

    Police were called to the Borgata Hotel Casino and Spa around 5 p.m., where they found the bodies of Baoyi Bowie Zheng, a 36-year-old woman from Staten Island, and Wei Guo Liang, a 68-year-old man from Brooklyn.

    An autopsy determined Bowie Zheng died of a broken neck. Guo Liang was found to have died from self-inflicted stab wounds.

    Many details regarding the individuals, including their connection, if any, and how long they’d been at the Borgata, had not been made public as of Wednesday, when the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office encouraged people with information about the incident to call in.

    A spokesperson for the hotel could not be reached for comment.

  • ‘It’s Always Sunny’ star Rob Mac will create and star in a ‘Far Cry’ video game adaptation for Hulu

    ‘It’s Always Sunny’ star Rob Mac will create and star in a ‘Far Cry’ video game adaptation for Hulu

    Philly’s own Rob Mac, the actor formerly known as Robert McElhenney III, and fellow thespian Noah Hawley are teaming up to create the television adaptation of the Far Cry video game, according to Variety.

    The new show, aptly named Far Cry, was recently ordered by FX and will stream on Hulu in the United States and Disney+ internationally.

    Mac will also star in the adaptation.

    Far Cry is an anthology franchise of first-person shooter games created by French-based company, Ubisoft. The details for the television adaptation are still unknown, but it will be action packed, featuring a different cast and setting each season.

    “Getting to work alongside Noah Hawley is a dream realized,” Mac, a South Philly native, told Variety. “Ubisoft has been remarkably generous, entrusting us with one of the most iconic video game worlds ever created. And through it all, my FX family continues to lift me up with their constant belief and support.”

    Mac created and stars in It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, which aired its 17th season earlier this year. He also stars in and executive produces the Emmy-winning FX docuseries Welcome to Wrexham.

    The forthcoming series, Mac told Variety, stands to deepen his friendship with Hawley, who also has a long-standing relationship with FX as the creator of Fargo and Alien: Earth

    “Each game is a variation of a theme, the same way each season of Fargo is a variation on a theme,” Hawley told Variety. “To create a big action show that can change from year-to-year while always exploring the nature of humanity through this complex and chaotic lens is a dream come true.”

    Mac will executive produce under his More Better Productions banner.

  • Over a dozen holiday events in and around Media you won’t want to miss this season

    Over a dozen holiday events in and around Media you won’t want to miss this season

    The holiday season is officially upon us and with it, a slew of festive events. From Santa sightings to a cocoa crawl, here’s how and where to celebrate in and around Media.

    Christmasland

    Linvilla Orchards will transform for the holidays, complete with a Winter Makers Market on most Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays throughout December. There will also be ice skating, live music, and visits with Santa. Plus, you can cut your own Christmas tree.

    ⏰ Through Sunday, Dec. 21, times vary 💵 Pay as you go 📍Linvilla Orchards, 137 W. Knowlton Rd., Media

    Holiday Tree Lighting at the Promenade at Granite Run

    See the tree lit and explore area small businesses, which will have tables set up for the occasion.

    ⏰ Saturday, Nov. 29, 5-6 p.m. 💵 Free 📍Promenade at Granite Run, 1067 W. Baltimore Pike, Media

    Santa’s Parade, Fun Run, and Block Party

    Get into the holiday spirit with a free block party at Veterans Square, where attendees are asked to contribute goods to the Media Food Bank or an unwrapped gift for Toys for Tots. There will be a holiday costume contest at 4 p.m., followed by a fun run and walk at 4:15 p.m. Festivities conclude with Santa parading along State and Front Streets, complete with mummers, musicians, classic cars, and fire trucks.

    ⏰ Sunday, Nov. 30, 2:30-7 p.m. 💵 Free, donations to Media Food Bank or Toys for Tots encouraged 📍Downtown Media

    The Festival of Lights returns to Rose Tree County Park.

    Rose Tree Festival of Lights

    Marking its 50th anniversary this year, the festival will be open nightly for a month, with food trucks, vendors, and live entertainment on Dec. 4, 6, 7, 13, and 14. The tree lighting takes place Dec. 4 at 5 p.m.

    ⏰ Thursday, Dec. 4-Saturday, Jan. 3 💵 Pay as you go 📍Rose Tree County Park, 1671 N. Providence Rd., Media

    Community Arts Center’s Holiday Sale

    The Community Arts Center and the Potters Guild are teaming up for a holiday sale of pottery and other crafts.

    ⏰ Friday, Dec. 5-Sunday, Dec. 14, times vary 💵 Pay as you go 📍Community Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Rd., Wallingford

    Home for the Holidays

    This annual tradition returns with an all-day celebration that includes the Reindeer Dash one-mile walk and run at 11:30 a.m. Participants are encouraged to dress for the season. From noon to 4:30 p.m., the Winter Village will take over the borough parking lot, complete with a pub, food vendors, and crafts. There will also be a Kwanzaa celebration, trolley rides, and caroling, capped by a fire truck parade with Santa that ends with the town’s tree lighting.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 6, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. 💵 Pay as you go 📍 Swarthmore town center

    Holiday Artisans Market

    Shop from local artisans selling goods like candles, ceramics, wine, soap, and art in Tyler Arboretum’s historic barn.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 6, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 💵 $10-$18 admission required for non-members 📍 Tyler Arboretum, 515 Painter Rd., Media

    Middletown Township Tree Lighting

    See the tree lit for the first time this season, accompanied by tunes from Penncrest High performers. There will also be treats and a special visitor.

    ⏰ Sunday, Dec. 7, 5:30 p.m. 💵 Free, but new toy donations are encouraged 📍Middletown Township municipal building, 27 N. Pennell Rd., Media

    2025 Cookie Walk

    Love holiday cookies but don’t love baking? Or just want to sample an array of treats? This annual event lets attendees pick and pay for the homemade cookies they want.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 13, 9 a.m. 💵 Pay as you go 📍Middletown Church, 273 S. Old Middletown Rd., Media

    Cocoa and Photos with the Clauses and Friends

    Write a letter to Santa, decorate cookies, and pose for festive photos with Olaf, Jolly Bear, and the big man himself. Register online in advance.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 13, 10 a.m.-noon 💵 Free 📍Media Community Center, 301 N. Jackson St., Media

    Brunch with Santa

    Enjoy brunch, crafts, and face painting in a festive environment, take a picture with Santa during timed slots, and shop from a selection of vendors.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 13, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 💵 $5-$20📍St. George Greek Orthodox Church of Media, 30 E. Forge Rd., Media

    The Grinch Visits State Street

    The infamous star of the popular Dr. Seuss book will be around town.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 13, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 💵 Free 📍State Street, Media

    Victorian Holiday Tea

    Tea, tea sandwiches, holiday confections, and a glass of bubbly will be served during this Victorian-style holiday event.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 13, 2-4 p.m. 💵 $46 📍Park Avenue Community Center, 129 Park Ave., Swarthmore

    Lenora: A One-Woman Christmas Carol

    Kate Brennan puts a modern twist on A Christmas Carol with this show centered on a woman who gets trapped in her apartment on Christmas Eve and ends up assessing how technology and devices both connect and disconnect us.

    ⏰ Thursday, Dec. 18, 12:30 p.m., and Friday, Dec. 19, 7 p.m. 💵 $21 📍Park Avenue Community Center, 129 Park Ave., Swarthmore

    Santa Strolls State Street

    Catch up with the big man before his journey around the globe to deliver gifts.

    ⏰ Friday, Dec. 19, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 💵 Free 📍State Street, Media

    State Street Cocoa Crawl

    Nearly a dozen participating restaurants will be offering free hot chocolate to shoppers.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 20, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 💵 Free 📍Downtown Media

    Lights Out: A Very Valli Holiday

    This tribute to Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons features classic hits and festive tunes, as well as audience participation.

    ⏰ Saturday, Dec. 21, 7 p.m. 💵 $41 📍The Media Theatre, 104 E. State St., Media

    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.

  • Temple Health reported a $15 million operating loss in the first quarter of fiscal 2026

    Temple Health reported a $15 million operating loss in the first quarter of fiscal 2026

    Temple University Health System reported a $15 million operating loss in the three months that ended Sept. 30.

    The result for the first quarter of fiscal 2026 was an improvement from the North Philadelphia nonprofit’s $17 million loss last year.

    “We’re pretty happy where we are,” CEO Mike Young said Wednesday. Revenue was above budget and labor costs were on budget in the first quarter for the first time in several years.

    Here are some details:

    Revenue: Total revenue was $800 million, up 13% from $712.5 million a year ago. Outpatient revenue increased by nearly $62 million, much of it from the health system’s specialty and retail pharmacy business.

    Temple participates in a federal program for safety-net hospitals that allows it to buy certain drugs at a discount and then get full reimbursement from insurance companies.

    Expenses: Temple noted in its report to municipal bond investors Tuesday that salaries, including higher pay rates for nurses, and higher drug spending for outpatient infusions and other pharmacy business were the biggest expense increases.

    Notable: On the labor front, several job categories remain hard to fill, Young said. Those are CT techs, nurse anesthetists, and lab techs. “Other than those three [specialties], it’s not where it was three years ago, where you couldn’t find anybody,” he said.

  • Villanova beats Old Dominion despite first-half struggles, extends winning streak to five games

    Villanova beats Old Dominion despite first-half struggles, extends winning streak to five games

    With Villanova without the nation’s leading rebounder, Duke Brennan, on Tuesday night, 7-footer Braden Pierce started in his place in the Wildcats’ 89-75 win over visiting Old Dominion.

    The change forced Villanova coach Kevin Willard to play a small lineup more than he would have preferred.

    “I mean, I think that’s something that we’re still not very good at,” Willard said. “Because we just haven’t had time to practice. I think the more we practice it, the more we will be comfortable with having five guys out there that can shoot, pass, and dribble.”

    Brennan was sidelined with a right ankle sprain he suffered last week in a win over La Salle. The Grand Canyon transfer has averaged a double-double while leading the country with 14.4 rebounds per game.

    With Pierce starting, Villanova (5-1) struggled to find a rhythm on either side of the court. Forward Tafara Gapare ended up getting more playing time off the bench, with 31 minutes to Pierce’s 12.

    Brennan’s absence was noticeable early in the first half. Villanova gave up a few offensive boards that could have been hauled in.

    Villanova tied a season-low with nine offensive rebounds but still won the battle on the boards, 34-29. Entering the game, Villanova had double-digit offensive boards in each of its games, including a season-high 22 against Queens University on Nov. 8.

    Beyond the arc, Villanova allowed an Old Dominion team that averages 32.7% on three-pointers to shoot 47.8% (45.3 overall). How does Willard think Villanova should address that?

    “Don’t schedule good shooting teams,” he said.

    Early shooting woes

    Villanova opened the game shooting a sloppy 1-for-7 on three-pointers but spun it around in the tail end of the first half and closed it with marks of 35.7% from beyond the arc and 45.2% from the field. Overall, the Wildcats shot 53.6% from the field, including 38.5% from deep.

    Bryce Lindsay knocked down a three-pointer to open the second half. With the help of an Acaden Lewis steal, Tyler Perkins broke away on the next possession and finished it on the other end of the court, forcing a timeout by Old Dominion (3-5).

    All told, the Wildcats opened the second half with a 15-3 run.

    Villanova guard Bryce Lindsay during the game against Duquesne on Nov. 15.

    Perkins scored a season-high 21 points, shooting 8-for-13 from the field, including 3-for-4 on three-pointers.

    “Tyler just gives us great energy,” Willard said. “I think that’s something that he’s still trying to figure out, a little bit of what he’s doing and what we need him to do. To start the second half, he gets two big steals, gets a layup, and a good pass. Tyler just gives us energy and some toughness. And I think he’s really starting to figure out, ‘How do I play in this system?’”

    Ball screens and movement

    Midway through the second half, Willard motioned to forward Matt Hodge to set a pick for Perkins at the top left of the arc in front of Villanova’s bench.

    Hodge set the pick. Perkins shifted left, then Hodge drove to the basket while hauling in the pass from Perkins and was met at the rim with a foul, stopping him from capping the pick-and-roll with a dunk.

    “I feel like we moved the ball well,” Hodge said. “It allows me to be very versatile.”

    Villanova dished out 16 assists and limited its turnovers to seven. It has been a successful early start for a squad with 13 new faces and a starting freshman point guard in Lewis. The team has had at least 15 assists in its last five games.

    Lewis, who had 20 points, led Villanova with four assists. He is averaging 5.2 assists on the season.

    “Well, he’s super talented,” Willard said. “If you look at college basketball this year, the freshman class is loaded. This is probably one of the best freshman classes, probably about five to 10 years. I mean, the draft can be loaded. He’s going to get better and better every game. He’s getting a little bit more comfortable.”

    Up next

    Villanova is on five-game winning streak. Next up is a Big 5 clash at home against Temple (4-2) on Monday (6:30 p.m., FS1). The winner claims a spot in the championship game of the Big 5 Classic on Dec. 6 at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Villanova leads the all-time series, 51-43.

  • Steve Sillman, beloved Joseph’s Pizza Parlor manager and a fixture of the Northeast Philly restaurant scene, dies at 70

    Steve Sillman, beloved Joseph’s Pizza Parlor manager and a fixture of the Northeast Philly restaurant scene, dies at 70

    In his prime, Steve Sillman worked nights, Thursday through Monday.

    And he was usually late coming in, despite only a 10-minute walk separating the front door of his impeccably preserved Fox Chase twin and the double red doors of Joseph’s Pizza Parlor.

    The dayside managers would be tapping the toes of their dark work shoes, and Mr. Sillman would just glide in. He’d start turning radio dials in search of disco hits or a 1970s station, resetting the vibe with work-appropriate dancing to classic hits from Carole King and James Taylor. He’d remind anyone listening that he wanted disco played at his funeral.

    And at the end of the night, hours after the other staff members had gone home, he’d pour himself a glass of red wine and close out the register, and then he’d call a few of the staffers and leave a message. He’d tell them to call back: “It’s important.” And when they called back, he’d say they missed a spot sweeping.

    “You work with people so long,” said current Joseph’s co-owner Matt Yeck, “that you become like family.”

    For the better part of four decades, and until the 70-year-old received a terminal brain cancer diagnosis earlier this year, Mr. Sillman was the face of the neighborhood’s trademark pizza place.

    He started working there shortly after graduating from Northeast High School in the 1970s, and floated among the pizza parlor, neighboring Italian restaurant Moonstruck, and the once-wild Ciao nightclub above it.

    He’d often speak of waiting on entertainment icon Elizabeth Taylor. (He would say he got lost in her transfixing blue eyes.) Over the course of those 40ish years, he became intimately familiar with the building’s quirks, and attended to its every need, from fixing broken faucets to decorating it for Christmas.

    At the front of the house, he was the manager who would chat up customers before their order was ready. They always remembered his name, and sometimes he’d have to pretend to know theirs. In the back of the house, he was a peacekeeper, confidant, psychiatrist, dance partner, friend, and brother.

    It was Mr. Sillman who raised an entire generation of neighborhood kids who came to Joseph’s for work. He watched them grow up, and then he folded them into his restaurant family.

    He met his best friend of 40 years, Jane Readinger, through her siblings. They worked with Mr. Sillman at the restaurant, and over the years they folded him into their wider familial unit.

    “A lot of his friendships came through that building,” said Jane, who is eight years younger. “And he had those friendships for life.”

    It started with “P.L.P.’s,” or parking lot parties, after Joseph’s closed for the night. It grew into group ski trips and shared shore houses.

    As his friends started getting married and having kids and growing up, Mr. Sillman, a lifelong bachelor, bought a Sea Isle house so they all had a place to stay.

    But it was the twin on the corner of Jeanes Street and Solly Avenue that was his legacy. His grandparents built the house in 1914, and only his family — three generations — had called it home. He maintained its original layout and finishes and flourishes from the turn of the 20th century.

    The home was a marvel at Christmas, as Mr. Sillman would decorate his and the adjoining twin together. Draping them in handmade ribbons, and bestowing showstopper wreaths made of fresh fruit.

    After he was diagnosed in the spring with glioblastoma, members of that restaurant family would stop and see him on Jeanes Street, even as Mr. Sillman could no longer climb the three flights of stairs, and after he transitioned from the recliner to a bed setup in the dining room.

    Even the new owners came. Yeck and his partner, Jimmy Lyons, awkwardly inherited Mr. Sillman when they bought Joseph’s in 2021. But it didn’t take long for both to see his indistillable value.

    “Steve came with the building,” Yeck said.

    As Mr. Sillman took his last breaths on the morning of Sunday, Nov. 23, with Jane cradling his head in her arms, Carole King’s 1971 classic played through the house: “You’ve Got a Friend.”

    The outpouring of support in person and on social media was a nice reminder to Jane that people don’t need to be blood to be family. There’s family you’re born with, and then there’s family you collect along the way.

    “He was never alone during this fight,” Jane said. As a registered nurse, she volunteered to help attend to Mr. Sillman as he entered hospice care at home.

    Mr. Sillman is survived by his sister-in-law, Harriet Sillman; nieces and nephews; great nieces and nephews; and generations of former co-workers. His neighbors are planning to decorate the twin Jeanes Street houses in his absence this holiday season.

    Services for Mr. Sillman will be held Saturday, Nov. 29, at the Wetzel and Son Funeral Home, 419 Huntingdon Pike in Rockledge. The viewing will be held from 8 to 10 a.m., followed by a funeral ceremony.

    And then his extended family will honor Mr. Sillman’s wishes with an appropriate send-off: They’re throwing a disco party.

    Donations in his name may be made to the American Cancer Society, Box 970, Fort Washington, Pa. 19034, or to the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation, 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 414, Wynnewood, Pa. 19096.