Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania
Will Sheetz open a location in Delaware County, Pennsylvania?
Sheetz, the Western Pennsylvania convenience store chain, is eyeing a location near Wawa’s corporate headquarters in Delaware County.
The store would be located at Wilmington Pike and Brandywine Drive in Painter’s Crossing in Chadds Ford Township, Delaware County. It would include made-to-order food and beverages, limited indoor and outdoor seating, two mobile pick-up windows (no drive-thru ordering) and six gas pumps, according to a sketch plan application on Chadds Ford Township’s government website.
Sheetz would need to get zoning approval for the store. It was listed on the agenda of a planning commission meeting in Chadds Ford Township for Feb. 4. CBS News Philadelphia reached out to Chadds Ford for comment, but we’ve yet to hear back.
“While Sheetz can confirm its interest in this location, it is still very early in the process to provide details or comment on this project,” a spokesperson for Sheetz said.
The store would be the first Sheetz location in Delco, where Wawa opened its first location on MacDade Boulevard in Folsom in 1964.
The location at Painter’s Crossing is about five miles from Wawa’s headquarters in Chester Heights.
Last week, Sheetz opened its first location in deep Wawa territory in Limerick, Montgomery County. The two convenience store rivals have continued to expand over the years. Coincidentally, the Sheetz store opened up right across the street from a Wawa.
In 2024, Wawa began to break ground in West Virginia, where Sheetz already operates dozens of stores.
Sheetz, which is based in Altoona, Pennsylvania, operates more than 800 stores in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio and Michigan.
Pennsylvania
Philly culture leaders ‘gravely concerned’ about changes to state arts funding
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Arts funding from the state of Pennsylvania is changing, which could make some artists and arts organizations ineligible for grant funding.
The Pennsylvania Council on the Arts is rebranding its granting operation as a new entity called Pennsylvania Creative Industries. The new granting guidelines are in line with a new strategic plan that leans more heavily into creative entrepreneurship and economic development.
“We identified five key areas that we would be investing in, including asset development, workforce development, community development, visibility and policy,” said Karl Blischke, executive director of Pennsylvania Creative Industries.
“We’re looking at those areas as a way to raise the impact of the creative sector in Pennsylvania, and to support all the participants in it as they look to grow and be impactful for Pennsylvania,” he said.
Pennsylvania Creative Industries will distribute $9.59 million in arts grants this year, according to the state budget.
Many stakeholders across the state say the changes will remove state support for most organizations. In the Philadelphia region, about 60% of small arts organizations that had benefitted from small state grants will no longer be eligible, according to the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. In York County, that number rises to 80%.
Alliance President and CEO Patricia Aden Wilson is “gravely concerned.”
“Our smaller arts organizations are those organizations that very often define our neighborhoods,” Wilson said. “Those are those programs that are in church basements and community rec centers and are often volunteer-led. They are the touch point for arts and culture for so many people across the state. We are very concerned that these changes will eliminate or diminish the capacity of these organizations that are the life blood of our creative sector.”
Wilson said the lobbying efforts by the alliance and other arts groups across the state contributed to the Pennsylvania Creative Industries budget, which increased 12.5% over last year. But the new funding guidelines were drafted without consulting local arts leaders.
“As we lobby for their funding, where’s the transparency in how they’re going to use that funding?” Wilson said. “Where’s the accountability to their stated mission of empowering the arts and culture community?”
Pennsylvania
‘Quiet’ Pennsylvania father allegedly stabbed 3-month-old son, threw him in the snow as part of ‘sacrifice’
A “quiet” Pennsylvania father allegedly stabbed his baby son and tossed his tiny, injured body into the snow last week as part of a “sacrifice,” prosecutors chillingly revealed Thursday.
Michael Phillips, 44, was arrested after police responded to a call about a stabbing on Wednesday at an apartment complex in Coatesville just before 11:40 a.m., according to the Chester County District Attorney’s Office.
After arriving at the home, police discovered that Phillips had allegedly stabbed his 3-month-old son in the abdomen after the infant’s mother said he made comments about “having to sacrifice the baby” and had come at her with a knife, the DA said.
Philips allegedly tried to stab his baby son several times, but only managed to strike him once, the mother told police.
After the father launched the alleged freak assault, the terrified mother grabbed the injured child and her 9-year-old son to flee the residence, prosecutors added.
As the older son ran to get help, Philips allegedly followed the mother outside, grabbed the baby from her arms, and “threw the infant in the snow.”
The mother heroically “used her body to shield her child from further harm” until first responders arrived at the scene.
Officers quickly got the infant medical attention and flew him to a local hospital in “very serious condition,” according to the Coatesville police department.
As of Thursday, the baby boy was listed in critical but stable condition, police said.
One of Phillips’ neighbors, Edward Rivers, told NBC10 that he saw the father with his baby and older son around 8 a.m. on the day of the stabbing.
“He’s always been a quiet, nice guy,” Rivers told the outlet.
“Every time I see him, he says, ‘What’s up?’ This morning I saw him. He walked outside with his son and I saw him. He smiled to me, said goodbye like normal and walked out. To me, it was surprising because he seemed like a really nice guy. He was really a good neighbor.”
Phillips had been charged with attempted homicide, aggravated assault, endangering the welfare of a child, simple assault, possessing an instrument of crime, and recklessly endangering another person, the DA’s office said.
He is currently being held without bond at Chester County Prison.
“Coatesville Police and local EMS heroically worked to give this infant a chance to survive. Our thoughts go to the family during this incredibly difficult time,” Coatesville District Attorney Christopher de Barrena-Sarobe said in a statement.
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