Pennsylvania
East Palestine train derailment made Pa. residents sick
This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, independent news organization that covers climate, energy, and the environment. It is republished with permission. Sign up for their newsletter here.
On March 20, 2023, Hilary Flint uploaded a new video to her TikTok account. The clip starts with a close-up of her face, her cheeks flushed and her gaze trained on the camera. The post is tagged #eastpalestine. “I live in Enon Valley, Pennsylvania,” she says. “Less than five miles from the Norfolk Southern train derailment.”
“Since the train derailment, my skin has been red like a lobster, especially any time after I shower. I’ve been breaking out, I’m incredibly congested, and I have psoriasis, but now it’s so bad that it bleeds,” she says, pressing one finger to her pink face, leaving a white impression behind. “So when they tell me that everything is safe here, that’s really hard to believe.”
A year after the derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, and seven months after her first post about her symptoms, Flint is still sharing videos tagged with #eastpalestine, and she is still experiencing health effects that she says began at the time of the accident.
On Feb. 3, 2023, 38 train cars derailed in East Palestine, just a few hundred yards from the Pennsylvania border. Twenty of the cars contained hazardous chemicals like vinyl chloride, ethylhexyl acrylate, and butyl acrylate. Vinyl chloride is a known human carcinogen, and exposure can also cause fatigue and dizziness as well as irritation to eyes, mucous membranes, and the respiratory tract.
Some of the cars’ contents caught on fire, others spilled into nearby streams, and on Feb. 6, the owner of the railway, Norfolk Southern, conducted a controlled burn of the cars that were originally carrying 115,000 gallons of vinyl chloride.
In an interview in January, Flint said she has rented a house in western New York in order to limit her time at her home in Pennsylvania. But whenever she returns, her symptoms do, too. “Within three days I’ll start to get nosebleeds, constant congestion, sinus issues, pretty much all the same problems that we’ve had for the past year,” she said. “They all resurface within about three days in my home.”
Flint is not alone: Other Pennsylvanians living near the accident site say they are suffering from alarming symptoms like hair loss, tremors, and migraines. They fear for the long-term health of themselves and their families, and they wonder if their properties’ water, soil, and air are truly safe. Many of those affected are women and children, groups who tend to be more vulnerable to chemical exposure. Because they live outside the one-by-two-mile radius set by the Environmental Protection Agency as a protective zone around the fire, they have often been stymied in their efforts to access resources like testing, medical guidance, and funds for cleanup and relocation meant for victims of the accident.
In their quest for answers, residents like Flint have spent months contacting a laundry list of government officials and agencies, from state lawmakers and the governor’s office to the Environmental Protection Agency and the Pennsylvania Departments of Environmental Protection and Health.
“When you call, they ask for your address. And if it is outside of that one-by-two-mile radius, they go, ‘OK, sorry, I can’t help you.’ And that’s it,” Flint said, of calling EPA and DEP not long after the derailment. “Even though I understood they weren’t testing in the area, there was just no guidance at all.”
Carly Tunno, a resident of Beaver County, said she’s been directed from one department to the next in her attempts to find testing and gain a better understanding of the symptoms that she and her children have been dealing with since the derailment last year.
“You just get the runaround, and then they give you another number to call and you never get anywhere. They take a message, say somebody will call you back. It’s very frustrating,” Tunno said. “We haven’t really gotten any answers; there’s not really any urgency or concern.”
In a statement about the governor’s response to the accident over the past year, Shapiro’s press secretary Manuel Bonder said that “Governor Shapiro has been focused on delivering the support and resources Western Pennsylvania needs, protecting the health and safety of our communities, and holding Norfolk Southern accountable for the impacts of their derailment” from “the very beginning of Pennsylvania’s response to the Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine.”
Bonder said that the governor had “directed the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection to conduct independent water and soil testing in close proximity to the derailment site and post the results online for residents to see for themselves, already delivered more than $1.4 million for first responders to recoup equipment losses from responding to the derailment, and ensured Pennsylvanians were not picking up the tab for the derailment.”
“More than one year after Norfolk Southern’s train derailment, the Shapiro Administration continues to work with local communities in Beaver and Lawrence counties to ensure Pennsylvanians are safe and deliver resources those communities need to recover,” he said. “The Administration will continue that work for as long as it is necessary.”
A press release from the governor’s office from Feb. 2 outlining the response to the derailment listed a train derailment dashboard created to connect residents with resources, a health resource network, and continued testing by DEP and the Department of Agriculture, which has not found “any long-term contamination” in western Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania’s DEP and Department of Health say it is “extremely unlikely” that anyone farther than two miles from the accident site was “exposed to chemicals or particles of concern.”
“Due to the relatively short duration exposure from this incident, health effects consistent with long-term exposure are not expected to occur,” the two agencies wrote in a Frequently Asked Questions document about the derailment. In February, DEP published an interim report on the past year of testing in western Pennsylvania that found “no evidence of contamination in Pennsylvania’s private water wells, surface water, and soil” related to the derailment.
In a statement provided for this article, an EPA spokesperson said that “no lingering volatile organic compounds would be present in Pennsylvania based on our monitoring, sampling, and scientific understanding of these chemicals.”
But a University of Kentucky health tracking study found that 64% of adults and 63% of children in the area around the site had experienced a new upper respiratory symptom since the derailment. Survey respondents included residents living in Ohio and Pennsylvania, both close to the site and more than 10 miles away. Other symptoms included rashes, sore throat, nausea, eye irritation, headache, cough, lethargy, and shortness of breath.
Paul Horn / Inside Climate News
Erin Haynes, director of the University of Kentucky Center for the Environment and the leader of the study, said it was significant that 80% of those reporting an upper respiratory symptom lived within one mile of the accident and that the number decreased as you moved away from the site. “That’s what I would expect, but then, just to see it was like, ah, it’s there,” she said. “People aren’t just reporting. They’re not lying. They’re telling the truth.” In the fall, half of respondents who reported symptoms said they were still experiencing them.
Some people living near the site are doing fine, Haynes said, and not everyone is worried about contamination in their homes or on their land. But based on the information provided by residents who have participated in her study so far, she believes there is a need to gather more data. “Not everyone is experiencing a health effect, but there are some who are, and we need to take that very seriously,” she said.
“Assuming that there’s some tight, confined area within which problems occurred is not very realistic,” said Beatrice Golomb, professor of medicine at University of California San Diego and the principal investigator for an ongoing public health study on the impacts of the derailment on people living in East Palestine and the surrounding areas, including Beaver County.
“We’ve heard from people all the way up into Canada, initially reporting seeing the same strange coloring in their water, and animals sickening,” she said. “The idea that, gee, just at the same time, similar things have been reported that far, with a pathway that was consistent with wind directions—for that to be unrelated would seem pretty unlikely. That there’d be no possibility that those chemicals can produce health effects is also just not a sensible inference to draw.”
Golomb said that the number of women who are experiencing symptoms has contributed to skepticism about long-term health effects’ relationship to the derailment. “We had heard from the East Palestine community that people were saying, ‘Oh, but it’s mostly women, so it must be all in their heads,’’’ she said. “But women are more chemically vulnerable than men for a number of reasons,” and children are, too.
Residents point to the Environmental Protection Agency’s plume map of the soot released by the vent and burn, which shows the highest concentration of surface deposition in Beaver County on the Pennsylvania side of the border. Using meteorological data, the map models how soot released by six hours of burning traveled and then fell to the ground over time.
“We were just told you can’t possibly be affected because you’re too far away,” said Flint, who lives less than five miles from the site of the derailment and fire. “And it wasn’t until many months later that the plume map came out, and there you see the evidence that this plume went directly over all these PA communities. Yet none of those communities had access to help, especially early on.”
Unlike the circle of the official one-by-two-mile protective radius, the plume map depicts an oblong, irregular shape of potential contamination extending southeast into Pennsylvania. The EPA spokesperson said that early air monitoring confirmed “the presence of low levels of hydrogen chloride (below the health-based action level) and particulate matter” after the vent and burn, but that these contaminants “were no longer present after a few days.” Soil testing conducted after the burn on land affected by the smoke plume “indicated no additional risks to these areas.”
“I think it’s really important that regulatory agencies not look at this as black and white but rather look at this as a level of risk,” said Heather Hulton VanTassel, the executive director at Three Rivers Waterkeeper, a regional water quality and watershed health organization that has carried out recent testing on water and soil in the area. “We cannot argue that that community is at the same risk of exposure to these harmful contaminants as they were prior to the derailment. That’s false.”
Hulton VanTassel said that exposure levels differ based on air and water flows, and that some populations, like those with chronic illnesses, were more vulnerable to harm from the contaminants released by the derailment. People living near the derailment are going to have an increased risk, she said. “That does not mean every person who is exposed is going to get sick. It’s just that there’s an increased risk.”
For Hilary Flint, who is a cancer survivor, the seriousness of the derailment became tangible when she returned to her home for the first time after self-evacuating during the vent and burn. “All it took was opening the door to our house. The smell was so strong, it just immediately enveloped you,” she said. Flint said that within an hour of being home, she began to experience headaches, eye irritation, and rashes, and that some of these symptoms — and the strange “sweet bleach” odor clinging to the rugs, fabric, and furniture in her house — still linger, even now.
Hulton VanTassel said that Flint’s symptoms and experience of feeling sicker when she is at home are consistent with exposure to the kinds of chemicals released by the vent and burn. “That’s a pretty cause-and-effect relationship there, when that didn’t happen prior to the derailment,” she said. “Those are the types of symptoms that would occur with the contamination that we found in the sediment.”
Golomb said that participants in her study have reported similar experiences to Flint’s, of leaving town only to be sickened again when they returned. And there are other stories of potentially contaminated furniture and clothing. “We’ve had people who felt sick move to a relative’s house, and the relative opens the suitcase and throws up,” she said.
Flint started her search for testing by calling a phone number for the Norfolk Southern assistance center listed on television during a press conference. The number was wrong. When she eventually got the right number, she was dismissed as soon as she gave her address. The EPA and Pennsylvania DEP responded similarly, she said.
Commonwealth Media Services
In May, after weeks of trying to reach state officials and legislators, Flint heard that the Shapiro administration would be hosting a small business resource fair in Darlington Township, close to where she lives, focused on economic recovery from the derailment. Flint suspected that the governor might be there, and she was determined to speak to him. She worked in her car in the parking lot until she saw Shapiro, and she and another resident approached him.
“We explained to him where we’re from, what we’re experiencing, how we’re not getting any help,” she said. “He was really receptive. He said, ‘I have gotten Pennsylvania residents money, and you just have to fill out this form.’” She said that someone from DEP then gave her a paper titled Business Loss Claims Information Sheet.
“I immediately read it, and I say, ‘Are you sure that this is right?’” Flint remembered. “Shapiro was assuring me, yes, and he was also with the DEP Secretary at the time, Richard Negrin. They were both telling us yes, this is the form, you just have to fill it out. That’s all you have to do.”
After she met Shapiro at the fair, Flint posted another video to her TikTok account. Sitting in her car, Flint holds up the paper from DEP. She says she questioned Shapiro when he handed it to her, asking how residents were supposed to know that this business-related form applied to them. “I will say, he was very kind,” she says. “I really do believe Governor Shapiro is an ally. But I hope he understands that this is not intuitive to anyone. No one knew this existed.”
Later, when Flint called the phone number on the form, she was told that she was not eligible to receive assistance this way.
The DEP form was a dead end, but during Flint’s brief meeting with the governor, she got a business card from Patrick Joyal, Southwest Region director for the governor’s office. Joyal put her in touch with a representative for Norfolk Southern, and in August, after seven months of persistence, she received some financial assistance from the company for the hotel bills she accumulated while trying to stay away from her Enon Valley home. The check did not cover all of her travel expenses.
Flint’s home has since been tested by Wayne State University, which she says detected vinyl chloride and ethylhexyl acrylate on her property. She is working a second job to pay for the rent on the house in New York, but she feels she has no choice. She still can’t get the smell out of her home despite many attempts to clean it. “The minute that laundry linen scent comes off, the sweet bleach scent is back,” she said.
Flint’s long battle for access to assistance is a testament to the difficulties residents have faced over the past year navigating the tangle of federal, local, and state government agencies, departments, and offices that are responsible for the response to the derailment.
Tunno lives in Beaver County, seven and a half miles from the derailment site. When the vent and burn began, “the sky was so dark,” she said. “You could see the clouds roll in.” Her family was not told to evacuate, and they did not leave. “It was hard to breathe,” she said. “My kids had respiratory illnesses for the following days after that. My father-in-law was hospitalized, and he was diagnosed with pneumonia. I got respiratory distress, but I also threw up for days.”
For the next week, the birds she normally saw outside her house were gone. “You’d go outside, and you wouldn’t hear any. It was eerie and quiet. It was unsettling,” she said. When she went to empty out a bucket of her vomit, she noticed an oily sheen floating on the top of the bile.
Tunno said that her hair has been falling out since March, and she’s still beset by a sense of fatigue that wasn’t there before the derailment. Doctors were unable to explain her hair loss, telling her to wait four to six months to see if it grows back. She said she didn’t “jump to the conclusion right away” that her symptoms could be connected to the vent and burn, but when preliminary tests came back normal, she wondered.
“If you were losing your hair, you would want to know why,” said Tunno, who is 35 and works as a bartender and waitress not far from her home. Her extended family also lives nearby. “This was new for me. I’m generally healthy. I don’t really get sick that often,” she said. After she posted photos online of her hair loss, she said she’d heard from three other women in the area whose hair was falling out, too.
Tunno is also concerned for her three small children. “My children have been sick more in the past year and missed more school than they ever have,” she said. She is afraid there could be long-term consequences for their health and doesn’t know how she’ll afford to pay for medical care if they need it.
Tunno said her attempts to communicate with EPA, DEP, the Department of Health, and local health care providers have yielded little clarity so far, and she is wary of signing up for university-led studies that publish results but may not hold anyone accountable for what they find. “I don’t feel like that should be the only option,” she said.
Christina Siceloff, who lives about five miles from the derailment site, in Darlington Township, still remembers the panic of the day of the vent and burn. “I was running all over the house,” she said, calling family and looking up hotels, trying to figure out where she, her son, and her father could go if they needed to leave. “Finally, like 15 minutes before they did the release, I said to my dad, well, I don’t know where to go,” she said. “So I guess we’re just going to stay here and see if we die.”
After the vent and burn started, Siceloff went outside and walked up the hill from her house. “You could see this cloud across the sky,” she said, “and it would get closer and closer.” Within an hour, she said, her eyes were watering, her nose burned and she had a migraine and a cough, symptoms she said lasted for five months or more. The migraines persist, and she’s now taking allergy medication and on two inhalers. She was diagnosed with a fine tremor in December.
“All of that is new since the derailment happened,” she said. Siceloff twice visited a health clinic set up in Darlington by the governor’s office and the Pennsylvania Department of Health but found few answers there. She was told to visit her primary care doctor, who said she had an upper respiratory infection. “They diagnosed me with exposure to toxins that were non-occupational,” she said.
Siceloff contacted EPA, DEP, and Norfolk Southern asking for testing of her soil and water, and was turned away every time because she lives too far outside the radius. She was eventually able to get testing done by Purdue University, which did not detect contaminants in the well water but did find evidence of dioxins in the soil. She worries that her water could still be contaminated because the test sample came only from the top of the cistern. She would like to have more extensive testing of her water and better answers to her medical questions about what it means to be exposed to multiple chemicals at one time.
“Many of the symptoms that we’re hearing now, we saw before,” said Golomb, who previously studied Gulf War illness, a set of symptoms affecting veterans of the Gulf War that is linked to chemical exposure and especially to multi-chemical exposure. “We already have people that are fully meeting the symptom criteria for so-called Gulf War illness, which is a chronic multi-symptom health problem,” she said.
Migraines, fatigue, asthma, and respiratory issues, as well as dermatological problems like rashes and hair loss, are all consistent with reactions to multi-chemical exposure, Golomb said. “People are sick,” Siceloff said. “And some people seem to be getting sicker.”
Misti Allison, an East Palestine resident who has become a community and public health advocate in the wake of the derailment, said that “health care monitoring is an unmet need” in both Ohio and Pennsylvania. “I want to have some type of framework in place so that the medical providers in the area know what they should test for and the questions that they should be asking,” she said. “Because in the very beginning, a community health needs assessment was not done. There has not been a database that has been created.”
A database could be used to monitor long-term health impacts of the derailment on the population, Allison said, and keep track of residents, like Siceloff, who have developed new chronic conditions since the vent and burn. Allison also believes that medical care should be covered for people whose health has suffered because of environmental exposure.
“I don’t feel like anybody is looking for a handout,” Allison said. “I know there’s some people that will say that we are trying to take advantage of a bad situation. I don’t feel that way. I feel like the overall sentiment in town is that people are just scared.”
Although Darlington Township is a rural area with fewer than 2,000 residents, the rail lines carrying vinyl chloride and other hazardous chemicals extend across Pennsylvania, through much more densely populated parts of the state. The same train tracks also run west and then south, through Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, and Texas, according to a new report from Toxic Free Future, an environmental health research and advocacy organization.
“At any given moment up to 36 million pounds of toxic vinyl chloride are being shipped via rail by America’s largest producer, OxyVinyls,” the report explains. In Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, more than 14 million people live within one mile of an active rail line, recent research from FracTracker shows. An East Palestine-like derailment in a more urban area could be catastrophic.
After the derailment, Flint co-founded a community grassroots group, the Unity Council for the East Palestine Train Derailment, that has advocated for the needs of impacted residents in Ohio and Pennsylvania and to improve the systems currently in place to respond to environmental disasters like East Palestine.
But she still feels that some Pennsylvanians are being left behind. “It’s not the majority of the community or every single person, but it’s a lot of women and children and people with preexisting health conditions, because we are more susceptible to certain chemicals and chemical exposure,” Flint said. “Just because we’re not the majority, it doesn’t mean that our needs don’t matter.”
“The impact on people’s lives has really been the most heart-wrenching part of this,” Golomb said. “The stress and worry about, what does this mean? What will happen? Do we need to move?”
Most people cannot afford to leave their homes, no matter how sick they feel there, and the lack of aid from the government has led to a “loss of faith in their country’s institutions,” Golomb said. Even if they do manage to leave, they still face difficulties in finding work and the grief of saying goodbye to their homes, belongings, and extended families. “They’re really feeling left behind and forgotten by the government,” she said.
When Darlington Township received $660,000 from Norfolk Southern for “community relief” in July, the money was deposited into a high-yield savings account for first responders and future emergencies. “I want everyone to have access to resources, but what about the people?” Flint asked. She wanted to know: where was the assistance for people who are not farmers, small business owners, or firefighters?
“We’re sitting here poisoned in our homes, and no one’s helping us, and everyone’s just pointing the finger at the other person,” she said. “It’s been a year now. This has been happening for too long.”
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Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania House approves bill to restrict cellphones in schools
Pennsylvania is another step closer to restricting cellphone usage in schools after the state House passed a bill on a bipartisan vote on Monday, June 1, 2026.
House Bill 1814 would prohibit students in Pennsylvania’s public schools from using or possessing a cellphone during the school day. Under the bill, students would be required to secure their phones in a way that prevents access until the end of the day with exceptions being for certain emergency and medical needs approved by school administrators.
The bill now moves to the Pennsylvania Senate for consideration. The state Senate had previously passed legislation back in 2024 that encouraged school districts in Pennsylvania to start a pilot program that effectively banned cellphone use during the school day in an effort to improve the mental health and academic performance of students.
Governor Josh Shapiro and multiple Pennsylvania educators have also called for restrictions on cellphone usage in schools.
“Our children need this bill,” Rep. Mandy Steele (D-33rd District) said. “It’s taken a lot of hard work to get this bill to this point, but it’s been worth the effort. Research shows that unfettered access to devices is harming our children, and many educators tell me this bill is desperately needed. Governor Shapiro has urged the General Assembly to send him a bill banning cell phones in schools, and I urge the Senate to send this bill to his desk for the benefit of our children.”
Currently, at least 38 states and the District of Columbia restrict cellphone usage in schools, according to Education Week.
Pennsylvania
12 Things To Do in Hershey, Pennsylvania, This June 2026
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Top Events and Attractions in The Sweetest Place On Earth this month
Happy June! The summer season in Hershey, Pennsylvania, is in full swing with so many things to do all month long. Keep reading for some of our top picks.
1. Spend The Day at Hersheypark
Open Daily; Hours Vary
Hersheypark amusement park is now open daily for its 120th summer season, with special events and activations in celebration of America’s 250th anniversary.
The largest amusement park in Pennsylvania features three parks in one this summer – all accessible via a single admission. Guests can enjoy more than 70 rides, including the most coasters in the Northeast, a full water park and an 11-acre zoo.
2. Cool Off at The Boardwalk
Open Daily, Weather Permitting; Hours Vary
Make a splash this summer at The Boardwalk at Hersheypark water park! Enjoy thrill rides like the Whitecap Racer and Breaker’s Edge Water Coaster, or relax on the 1,360-foot Intercoastal Waterway lazy river. Plus, experience our two new water play areas, The Inlet and The Island at Bayside Pier, or get drenched by the massive East Coast Waterworks and its 1,000-gallon tipping bucket. Access to The Boardwalk is included with general Hersheypark admission.
3. Visit ZooAmerica
Open Daily; Hours Vary
ZooAmerica North American Wildlife Park is open every day in June for guests to explore a variety of habitats filled with North American animals such as river otters, Canada lynx and a black bear. The zoo offers daily summer activities, such as special animal enrichment and training sessions for guests to watch, weather permitting.
Hersheypark tickets include entry to ZooAmerica only by accessing the Zoo through the bridge inside Hersheypark during posted Park hours. Those interested in visiting ZooAmerica in the morning before Hersheypark opens must purchase separate Zoo admission tickets online or at the Zoo Admissions Building.
4. Jazz On The Veranda at The Hotel Hershey
June 5 & 12; 7 to 10 p.m.
Unwind on the veranda at The Hotel Hershey on select Fridays this summer for live music, sweet views, cocktails and light shareables available for walk-up service. Seating is first-come, first-served.
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6. Learn About Milton Hershey at the 1893 World’s Fair at The Hershey Story Museum
June 13 & 14; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Step into the excitement and innovation of the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair at The Hershey Story Museum! Discover how the historic event shaped Milton Hershey’s future and the future of chocolate during a two-day, immersive event. The family-friendly indoor-outdoor experience features hands-on activities and interactive “innovation stations” inspired by the groundbreaking inventions and technologies showcased at the original 1893 fair.
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7. Father’s Day Celebrations at Hershey Gardens
June 21; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Treat Dad to a stunning display of classic Rolls-Royces and Bentleys at Hershey Gardens while learning the history of these luxury vehicles from the Rolls-Royce Owners’ Club. Afterward, stroll through the grounds to enjoy 3,000 vibrant roses in full bloom just in time for the first day of summer. As a special gift, all dads receive free admission to the Gardens on Father’s Day, and the car display is included with general admission.
Butterfly Atrium at Hershey Gardens
8. Youth Takeover Day at The Hershey Story Museum
June 27; 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Experience Hershey history through the eyes of the community’s youth on Youth Takeover day at The Hershey Story Museum. As part of this annual national event, local students will take center stage to highlight young voices, ideas and leadership within the museum. Guests are invited to engage in hands-on activities, explore the Museum Experience and gain fresh perspectives on our region’s past through the unique insights of our local participants. This special programming is included with general Museum Experience admission.
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9. Enjoy Outdoor Dining
Daily; Reservations Available at Selection Locations
As the weather gets warmer and the days get longer, join us for sweet outdoor dining (weather permitting) at the locations below across the destination:
10. Relax With A Summer Spa Treatment
Daily; Appointments Highly Encouraged
The Spa At The Hotel Hershey and MeltSpa by Hershey mark the return of their summer seasonal treatments this month! Treat yourself to a day of pampering at The Spa At The Hotel Hershey with summer spa packages like the Vacation For A Day Package or indulge in the Summer Strawberry Collection at MeltSpa by Hershey with treatments including the Summer Strawberry Immersion, Scrub, Manicure and Pedicure.
11. National Rose Month at Hershey Gardens
June is National Rose Month, and there’s no better place to celebrate than Hershey Gardens, home to 3,000 blooming roses in 115 stunning varieties. To mark the occasion, any guest named “Rose” (or a variation thereof) will receive free admission all month long.
Plus, in honor of National Red Rose Day, Hershey Gardens is hosting special 30-minute guided tours of the Historic Hershey Rose Garden on Saturday, June 13, at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tours are included with general admission.
Roses at Hershey Gardens 2024
Roses at Hershey Gardens 2024
Roses at Hershey Gardens 2024
Roses at Hershey Gardens 2024
12. Book A Getaway at an Official Resort of Hersheypark
Extend your visit to The Sweetest Place On Earth with an overnight getaway to one of The Official Resorts of Hersheypark! Save with popular summer packages, including the guest-favorite Kids Stay, Play & Eat FREE Package – back for a limited time at The Hotel Hershey, Hershey Lodge and Hershey Inn & Suites. Or, celebrate National Camping Month with the Hersheypark Summer Camping Package, including Park tickets and accommodations at Hersheypark Camping Resort.
Resort guests can make a splash at the outdoor pool complexes, open daily through Labor Day. Plus, enjoy daily resort activities, including Hershey Character appearances, s’mores roasts, chocolate bingo and more.
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Pennsylvania
Luzerne County Sports Hall of Fame induction June 7 at Mohegan Pennsylvania
The Luzerne County Sports Hall of Fame’s 42nd annual induction banquet will be held Sunday, June 7, at Mohegan Pennsylvania, where 10 new inductees will take their place among the region’s greatest athletes across all sports.
The inductees are: Bree Bednarski, Brianna Pizzano and Frank Redmond, graduates of Wyoming Area; Allie Barber, Pittston Area; Ed Keil, West Side Vocational-Technical School; Joseph Kemmerer, Crestwood; Karen Krysiewski Day, Wyoming Valley West; Addy Malatesta, Berwick Area; Bobby Sura, Wilkes-Barre GAR; and Eddie White, III, Bishop Hoban.
The hall will also present the following honors: Neil Corbett, founding member of The Citizens’ Voice and its longtime sports editor, will receive the Media Award; Mary Kelly, Hazleton Area’s winningest field hockey coach, will receive the Tracey Tribendis “Profile of Courage” Award; and Jeffrey Swire, co-founder and president of Patriots Cove, will receive the Sam Falcone Community Service Award.
Additionally, the hall will recognize this year’s scholar-athletes — Tucker Blasi of Sullivan County, Addisyn Bly of Wyalusing Valley, Joseph Mayernik of MMI Prep — and Evelyn Sheer of Hazleton Area, winner of the HERizon Award, presented to the most outstanding female wrestler in the Wyoming Valley Conference.
“The Luzerne County Sports Hall of Fame has been busy in recent weeks presenting scholarships to graduating high school seniors, donating supplies and funds to community organizations and making all preparations that need to be in place for this year’s banquet,” said James T. Martin, Jr., president. “It promises to be a fun night of camaraderie and appreciation for some of the men and women who have greatly impacted local and national sports over the past few decades.”
Inductees
• Allie Barber
A Pittston native, Barber played a key role in major team successes in multiple sports in high school and college. She developed her athletic foundation at an early age through constant exposure to sports alongside her family.
Barber scored a Pittston Area record 159 career goals in soccer and was a 2013 Pennsylvania Soccer Coaches Association all-state selection. She also led the Patriots to the District 2 Class 3A championship. In basketball, she scored over 1,000 career points and won a district title. She also competed in track and field for three seasons at Pittston Area, which won a district title in that sport, as well.
Barber continued her soccer career at Bloomsburg University, where she appeared in every game, recorded 19 goals and 20 assists and started the final 59 consecutive contests of her career. She was part of teams that won a regular-season title, a conference championship, an Atlantic Regional title and made the Elite Eight. She also played one season of basketball.
While at Bloomsburg, Barber was named a United Soccer Coaches second-team All-American and a first-team Scholar All-American. She also earned the school’s Eleanor Wray Senior Female Athlete of the Year award.
• Bree Bednarski
One of the Wyoming Valley’s most accomplished multi-sport athletes, Bednarski established herself as one of the nation’s premier field hockey players while also excelling in softball and track and field.
Bednarski concluded her remarkable field hockey career at Wyoming Area with 127 goals and 37 assists, setting program records for goals in a game, season and career. Her 67-goal senior season in 2015 set a state record and earned her Wyoming Valley Conference Player of the Year honors from The Citizens’ Voice. She was also a three-time all-state selection and member of the U.S. U17 national team. Bednarski continued her collegiate career at the University of Michigan and Penn State.
In addition to her field hockey success, Bednarski was an all-state softball player and was named the Times Leader’s 2016 WVC Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year. In that postseason, she won four medals at the District 2 championships — gold in the 100-meter dash, 200-meter dash and 4×100 relay and silver in the javelin.
As Bednarski’s playing career ended, her coaching career began. She was named Wyoming Area’s head field hockey coach in 2022 and has led her Alma mater to new heights, including multiple district and WVC championships.
• Ed Keil
Keil’s life in golf is a story of service and lasting impact, beginning at West Side Vocational-Technical School. Keil was a golf captain and team MVP at West Side Tech before serving in the U.S. Air Force, where he competed on the golf team at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.
Returning home in 1978, Keil began working as the golf course superintendent at Lehman Golf Club and enrolled at Penn State Wilkes-Barre, where he obtained a degree in engineering while continuing to work.
Keil was named Penn State Wilkes-Barre’s head golf coach in 1988, beginning a historic career that has included 38 years at the helm with 51 tournament victories and eight conference championships. In 2025, he was named head golf coach at Penn State Hazleton while continuing his duties at Penn State Wilkes-Barre. Between the two programs, he has coached 137 all-conference or all-state golfers and 195 academic all-conference selections. He has also coached bowling at Penn State Wilkes-Barre.
Beyond coaching, Keil built a parallel legacy in golf operations and instruction as a superintendent and instructor. He has also won more than 100 individual and team tournaments as a golfer, including two club championships at Lehman Golf Club.
• Joseph Kemmerer
Kemmerer was introduced to wrestling at age 6 at the Wilkes-Barre YMCA. In addition to making lifelong friends at an early age, Kemmerer learned skills and techniques that set the foundation for a long and successful career in a sport that influenced virtually every aspect of his life in some way.
Kemmerer wrestled at Crestwood High School. As a senior, he went undefeated (38-0) and won the 2004 PIAA Class 3A state championship at 119 pounds. He also won three District 2 championships and graduated with a 102-7 record.
Following high school, Kemmerer first attended the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He was the Southern Conference champion at 125 pounds as a freshman. He transferred to Kutztown University, where he won two NCAA Division II national championships and compiled a 60-4 record. Kemmerer furthered his education at Liberty University, where he served as a graduate assistant coach while training and ultimately competing on an international stage.
Kemmerer remains involved in the sport. He runs a successful wrestling club — Nova Wrestling Club — that has won championships in folkstyle, freestyle and Greco-Roman.
• Karen Krysiewski Day
A standout swimmer at the high school and collegiate levels, Krysiewski Day’s competitive swimming career began at the Wilkes-Barre YMCA. Soon, she entered the USA swimming circuit with the newly formed FAST Swim Club and emerged as an elite distance swimmer.
After helping Wyoming Valley West win four consecutive District 2 girls swimming team championships — and graduating as the program record-holder in six events with four individual district gold medals as a senior — Krysiewski Day matriculated to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
At UNC, Krysiewski Day competed under legendary coach Frank Comfort and she transitioned into the grueling world of collegiate long-distance swimming. She remembers this as one of the most challenging and transformative periods of her life. She was a member of two ACC championship teams. She graduated in 1999, carrying into her professional life the discipline and integrated approach to wellness that she developed as a Tar Heel.
• Adelene Addy Malatesta
Malatesta has dedicated nearly five decades to education, coaching and athletic leadership, leaving a lasting impact on student-athletes at Wilkes University and across Northeastern Pennsylvania and beyond.
Malatesta was a standout student-athlete at Berwick Area High School, where her coaches served as significant influences. Malatesta’s basketball coach, Joan Voveris, was an accomplished musician and teacher. Her field hockey coach, Dr. Betty Henry, rose to the title of superintendent of Berwick Area schools. Her softball coach, Paul Stenko, was a former Chicago Bear who returned home to teach and coach.
Malatesta pursued a degree from Slippery Rock University before returning to Berwick as a teacher and coach. She guided Berwick’s field hockey program in 1981 to a PIAA District 4 championship while also earning a master’s degree from East Stroudsburg University.
After coaching and teaching at SUNY Potsdam, Malatesta returned home in 1989 as head field hockey coach at Wilkes. Over 14 seasons, her teams won 140 games and multiple conference titles. She also served 23 years as Wilkes’ director of athletics, overseeing major facility enhancements and the growth of the athletic department to 23 varsity sports.
Malatesta is a member of both the Wilkes and Berwick Area Athletic Halls of Fame.
• Brianna Pizzano
Pizzano began playing tennis at age 3, taking her first lesson at Kingston Indoor Tennis Club. She quickly demonstrated the ability to compete beyond her age and was playing in — and winning — local and regional tournaments by age 8.
At Wyoming Area, Pizzano competed in both tennis and softball. She won two District 2 championships as a freshman and sophomore in singles play as a Warrior. In softball, she was an all-state shortstop who posted a .457 batting average as a junior; her senior season was canceled due to COVID-19.
Pizzano continued her tennis career at Misericordia University, where she was named MAC Freedom Player of the Year in all four seasons. She was also recognized as the conference’s Senior Scholar-Athlete and ranked No. 36 among the university’s top athletes of the century. She won conference championships in singles and doubles play and lost only once in regular-season play throughout her career.
She remains actively involved in the sport she loves, providing private tennis instruction to children and adults of all ages.
• Frank Redmond
Having been introduced to track and field as a seventh-grade student at Wyoming Area, Redmond soon captured a junior high championship that set the tone for an impressive high school and collegiate career.
Redmond recorded three top-10 finishes for the Warriors at the District 2 Cross Country Championships. On the track, he steadily improved each season and his achievements included qualifying for the PIAA state championships in the 800-meter race as a junior.
Redmond continued his running career at Misericordia University, where he took a significant step forward. He was named Misericordia’s Most Valuable Player four times in cross country and three times in track. He earned All-America honors in 2010 with a fifth-place finish in the 800-meter race at the NCAA Division III national championships. He earned 20 All-MAC honors across indoor and outdoor track and was a six-time All-ECAC selection. Following graduation, Redmond served as a graduate assistant coach at Misericordia while completing his master’s degree and competing in regional road races.
• Bobby Sura
A native of Wilkes-Barre, Sura is among the most decorated high school, collegiate and professional basketball players to ever come out of Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Sura’s GAR Grenadiers won three District 2 championships in four years and advanced to the PIAA state championship game his junior and senior seasons. As a senior, he averaged 34 points per game and was named the Associated Press Small School Player of the Year in Pennsylvania. He scored a GAR record 2,468 points.
From GAR, Sura enrolled at Florida State and was named the ACC Rookie of the Year as a freshman. As a sophomore, he scored 19.9 points per game and helped the Seminoles make the Elite Eight. He remains Florida State’s all-time leader in career points and minutes played.
The Cleveland Cavaliers selected Sura in the first round of the 1995 NBA Draft. He competed in the 1996 All-Rookie Game, the 1997 Slam Dunk Contest and the 2000 Three-Point Contest. He retired after 10 seasons in the NBA, recording 5,654 points, 2,474 assists and 2,240 rebounds.
In 1999, Times Leader readers participated in a poll that ranked Sura the No. 6 local athlete of the century. In 2002, The Citizens’ Voice ranked Sura as the No. 2 athlete of all-time from the Wyoming Valley. He was inducted in 2003 into the Florida State Athletics Hall of Fame.
• Eddie White III
White’s prolific and distinguished career has been defined by a deep-rooted passion for sports, shaped in the Wyoming Valley as a graduate of Bishop Hoban High School and Wilkes University.
After graduating from Wilkes, where he worked as an undergraduate with the school’s athletic office, newspaper and radio station, White served his Alma mater as a full-time director of sports information. White quickly rose through the ranks of sports communications and marketing, working for major brands and organizations in college and professional athletics, including Notre Dame and the Miami Dolphins.
White moved to Indiana, working for the sportswear company Logo 7/Logo Athletic. He was eventually hired by the first all-sports radio station in Indianapolis — ESPN The Fan — and hosted its afternoon drive show while also working numerous Super Bowls and then landing at Pacers Sports and Entertainment. He has worked the last 15 years for the NBA’s Pacers and WNBA’s Fever in various media and public relations capacities and he currently hosts Pacers Overtime, the team’s postgame radio show.
White’s grandfather, Eddie White, Sr., the legendary Wilkes-Barre Barons basketball coach, was inducted into the Luzerne County Sports Hall of Fame in 1986.
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