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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

Northampton County: Council weighs in on grant uses

By a 8-1 vote, North-ampton County Council voted July 2 to require their approval of any grants that might come from the nearly $3 million in table games revenue that is currently sitting in county coffers. An additional $1.2 million in revenue is anticipated this year.

Glenn Geissinger was the sole council member to vote against this proposal, which was sponsored by Lamont McClure and Ken Kraft. Even Executive John Brown said he didn't really have any concern with giving council a say in how that money is spent. "We're just looking to get that money into circulation and put it to good use," he explained.

Brown has announced a $1 million grants and loan program designed to focus more on the aging boroughs than on Bethlehem and Easton. On the campaign trail, he had argued that "[w]e have to get away from Allentown, Bethlehem and Easton, and focus on the rest of the community." His plan, called the Community Investment Partnership Program (CIPP), will actually give priority to applications from the smaller communities. At an economic development hearing, DCED Director Diane Donaher indicated that 80 percent of the grants and funds awarded will go to what she calls the aging communities in contrast to the urban core.

Saying he had no intention of throwing a wet blanket on the spending plan outlined by Brown, McClure argued that there's too much money in table games revenue for it to be discretionary. Hayden Phillips likened McClure's ordinance to what goes on in open space, where money is allotted in the budget every year but specific projects are voted up or down. Calling it a check on large sums of money, Seth Vaughn also agreed it sounds good.

In other business, council heard from two Freedom HS students. Alexis Connolly, who will be starting as a Freshman this year, was invited to sing in honor of Independence Day. Walter Ogozaly, who just graduated and will be attending Tulane, was commended for his award-winning essay on patriotism, which was inspired by a visit to Independence Hall. "We are the strange ones," he observed, noting "democracy without corruption is a reality for a lucky few, not a deserving many." He graduated in the top 5 percent of his class, noted Lamont McClure, who presented the proclamation on behalf of council.

Alexis Connolly, a freshman at Freedom HS, sang the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution.