Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania House candidates prepare for Democratic primary battle in ‘new’ Allentown district
That is one in a collection of 2022 main election previews.
Allentown will quickly quickly have three voices within the state Home, slightly than two, and both Saeed Georges or Josh Siegel has a powerful shot at changing into that third voice.
The 2 Democrats will compete within the Might 17 main election for the nomination within the newly drawn twenty second Home District, which covers the jap finish of Allentown and a part of Salisbury Township.
The voting-age inhabitants is about 70% Democratic and 30% Republican. Robert Smith, a former longtime Allentown Faculty Board member, is the one Republican searching for the seat.
Siegel, at age 28, already has political expertise. A five-year resident of the town, he ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 2017, then gained a seat on Metropolis Council in 2019.
Georges, 32, a lifelong East Aspect resident who has by no means run for public workplace, describes himself as “a born and bred child who desires to make a distinction.”
The twenty second District received particular consideration in current months when the state’s political maps have been redrawn and the Legislative Reapportionment Fee divided Allentown between three Home districts, slightly than the present two.
It additionally harassed that the “new” twenty second had no incumbent, a minority voting-age inhabitants of about 67% and a Hispanic voting-age inhabitants of about 53%.
These elements, the fee mentioned, made the twenty second a “majority-minority” district that offered a powerful alternative for election of a minority candidate.
Democrat Norberto Dominguez, who’s Hispanic, additionally filed nominating petitions to run within the twenty second however ended his bid as a result of there have been issues with signatures on these petitions.
Georges, whose mother and father have been born in Syria, considers himself a minority group member as a first-generation Syrian-American.
In separate interviews, Siegel and Georges shared their views on some challenges going through the roughly 62,000 individuals of the twenty second District.
If Georges will get the job in Harrisburg, the very first thing he mentioned he’ll do regarding inflation and gasoline costs is decide what sources can be found to scale back the worth of gasoline.
In keeping with AAA, the common value of gasoline in Pennsylvania Tuesday was $4.22 a gallon, about 40% larger than a yr in the past. There have been a number of proposals in Harrisburg for a discount within the state’s gasoline tax, however none has been permitted.
“There must be coordination amongst state and nationwide authorities” on an answer, Georges mentioned. “Some kind of aid package deal.”
Georges, 32, is a helps coordinator for individuals with particular wants in Lehigh and Northampton counties. He’s coming into his fifth season as head ladies volleyball coach at Dieruff Excessive Faculty — the place he as soon as performed volleyball — and “I take plenty of satisfaction in that.”
Lawmakers in Harrisburg have been slowed down by a failure to pay attention intently to political opponents, in accordance with Georges.
“They’re so caught of their ways in which there is no such thing as a mediation-like assembly within the center,” he mentioned.
A prison justice main at West Chester College, Georges did an internship with District Choose Michael D’Amore.
Requested whether or not crime was an issue in Allentown, Georges mentioned, “I can solely communicate for what I see” on the East Aspect. That, he mentioned, is extra break-ins, extra robberies, extra petty crimes than there have been 5 years in the past.
The Allentown police, he mentioned, have at instances had their picture unfairly tarnished.
“Typically the general public opinion of them is skewed by what they see in a video or what they learn in an article,” Georges mentioned. “We don’t at all times get the background of what occurred.”
He mentioned he has “at all times been a supporter” of the police. In the event that they got higher respect, he mentioned, the bond between them and the general public could be strengthened in a method that would cut back crime.
A urgent difficulty Georges sees is group enter in selections on main adjustments. He cited the continuing overhaul of the previous Allentown State Hospital property for example.
The hospital, which featured a essential constructing constructed in 1904, closed in 2010 and was demolished in 2020. Redevelopment eventualities are into consideration.
He remembers sledding on the property as a baby and the employees welcomed the actual fact children had enjoyable there.
That connection between the final word makes use of of the property and the encircling group shouldn’t be misplaced, he mentioned.
Specifics come to thoughts when Siegel thinks about how you can fight the financially crippling results of excessive gasoline costs and inflation on the twenty second District.
The primary is elevating the Pennsylvania minimal wage from its present $7.25 an hour to $15, then indexing it to inflation so individuals get will increase in keeping with costs.
He additionally desires to dispose of the tipped minimal wage, which may be as little as $2.83 an hour and impacts an enormous variety of individuals within the service trade.
“These are the people who find themselves the spine of the financial system,” Siegel mentioned.
Siegel, 28, is chief of employees and assistant operations supervisor within the Lehigh County controller’s workplace. He’s thought of a progressive on Metropolis Council.
Council not too long ago killed a controversial accountable contractor ordinance co-sponsored by Siegel that might have imposed a listing of necessities that might have eradicated many contractors from doing work for the town. Final yr, he known as for much less spending on metropolis police and extra on social companies.
Just lately, requested about crime, he distinguished between what he described as a spike in “violent crime” and a far much less regarding fee of lesser crimes.
“Normally, we’re safer as a metropolis than we have now ever been,” mentioned Siegel, who has a bachelor’s diploma in worldwide relations from Seton Corridor College and is pursuing his grasp’s diploma in public coverage at Lehigh College, in accordance with his web site.
In an interview, he mentioned he advocates for extra collaboration between police and social staff, specialists who join individuals with jobs, and those that join individuals to help companies.
“Crime is usually very concentrated geographically and population-wise. So it’s typically a only a few metropolis blocks the place it’s occurring, the place most of it’s coming from, and it’s a very small subset of the inhabitants,” Siegel mentioned.
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These locations, Siegel mentioned, can be the place sources ought to be centered.
Inexpensive housing is an awesome drawback in Allentown, in accordance with Siegel, and what’s wanted to take care of it’s “a historic funding of unprecedented scale.”
He helps a multipronged method that features utilizing unspent federal COVID aid cash to renovate or repair rental properties and single-family houses, and in addition giving monetary help to supply legal professionals for tenants who become involved in landlord-tenant court docket proceedings and don’t have counsel.
On his web site, Siegel advocates totally funding public faculties and taking over the constitution faculty trade. He additionally favors common youngster care and long-term take care of seniors and says the state ought to make a “huge generational funding in union-built and maintained social housing.”
Morning Name Capitol correspondent Ford Turner may be reached at fturner@mcall.com
The place the Democratic candidates for Lehigh Valley’s new 14th Senate district stand on voting points, training, gasoline costs and extra
The place the Republican Senate candidates for Lehigh Valley’s new 14th District stand on election integrity, training, gasoline costs and extra
Pennsylvania
Live updates: Winter storm brings snow to Philly, NJ, Del. and Pa. suburbs
What to Know
- A major snowstorm is moving through South Jersey, Delaware, Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania suburbs overnight into Monday, Jan. 6, 2025.
- A winter storm warning went into effect through 1 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, for some of South Jersey, Delaware and parts of Chester and Delaware counties, while a winter weather advisory for Philadelphia and the surrounding suburbs lasts through 10 p.m. on Monday.
- Parts of South Jersey and Delaware should see 5 to 8 inches of snow; Philadelphia and the surrounding Pennsylvania suburbs should see 3 to 5 inches of snow; Bucks and Mercer counties and the northern parts of Berks and Montgomery counties should get 1 to 3 inches; and the Lehigh Valley should see a coating to an inch.
The first major winter storm of 2025 is moving through South Jersey, Philadelphia, Delaware and the Pennsylvania suburbs.
Snow began to fall during the early morning hours of Monday, Jan. 6, 2025, in southern Delaware and New Jersey and will continue throughout much of the day.
A winter storm warning is in effect for parts of South Jersey and Delaware, while a winter weather advisory is in effect in Philadelphia and the surrounding suburbs through late Monday night.
Ahead of the storm, dozens of schools across Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware — including Philadelphia public schools closed, while several snow emergencies were declared.
Follow along for live updates on the storm, including radar, snow totals, timeline, closures, photos, videos and the latest forecast.
Pennsylvania
ALERT Monday: Widespread accumulating snow across south-central Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
What to know about bird flu in Pennsylvania
As more cases of bird flu are reported across species and locations, states across the country are taking precautionary measures to prevent the spread of the virus.
Hundreds of thousands of people will gather at the Pennsylvania Farm Show beginning later this week—a potential breeding ground for virus transmission, which the state Department of Agriculture has taken extra steps to try to prevent.
Here’s a look at how Pennsylvania and Gov. Josh Shapiro’s administration are responding to the bird flu and trying to prevent a widespread outbreak among cattle and humans.
What is the status of the avian flu outbreak in Pennsylvania and across the United States?
As of Dec. 31, there have been no reported cases of bird flu in cattle or humans in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania has been fighting the avian flu outbreak since 2022. To date, 32 commercial flocks, 39 backyard flocks, and a total of more than 4.7 million birds in Pennsylvania have been affected by the outbreak—mostly in early 2023—resulting in one of the worst outbreaks of bird flu among commercial flocks across the country.
But Pennsylvania has largely been able to quell the outbreak among poultry since then, spending more than $30 million last year on testing and reimbursement for farmers. According to the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, there have been no cases of bird flu in commercial poultry since February.
The last confirmed infection was in October in Venango County, in a backyard flock of 20 birds that did not produce eggs or other products, Department of Agriculture spokesperson Shannon Powers said in an email.
Nationally, farmers have been forced to slaughter more than 100 million chickens and turkeys since 2022 to prevent an outbreak. However, those efforts have largely failed, now that the virus has mutated to infect cows and make it more likely to spread to humans; 875 herds of cattle in 16 states have tested positive for the virus, and more than 60 people have been infected.
Are Pennsylvania residents at risk of contracting the virus?
Risk to humans remains low in Pennsylvania and nationally. Approximately 34 California residents have been infected since March, and symptoms remain mostly mild—although two individuals in Louisiana and Canada experienced severe symptoms. Most of the documented human cases so far are in California, where Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency last month.
What is Pennsylvania’s government doing to prevent spread of the virus?
Pennsylvania has taken “aggressive precautions to protect Pennsylvania’s dairy and poultry industries,” Powers said. Since November, the state has required milk processors and shippers to collect and test milk samples from bulk milk tank trucks. This is at no cost to dairy farmers.
Poultry continues to be tested on poultry farms and at live bird markets, Powers added.
Will the bird flu affect the Pennsylvania Farm Show?
The Pennsylvania Farm Show—the nation’s largest indoor agricultural exhibition—starts this weekend to celebrate the state’s agricultural industries. The Farm Show, which runs Saturday through Jan. 11 at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg, usually attracts more than 500,000 people each year—making it a potential hot spot for virus transmission.
But the Department of Agriculture has taken several precautions to prevent the spread: Live bird exhibits are limited to birds headed to slaughter to stop transmission back to farms, and Farm Show attendees won’t be allowed to handle or pet the birds.
Any live animal at the Farm Show must have a veterinary inspection signed by an accredited veterinarian within 30 days of arrival.
Veterinarians will also check animals for physical signs of disease once they arrive at the Farm Show Complex. The animals will be checked again during daily rounds during the weeklong exhibition.
Are eggs safe to eat, and is milk safe to drink in Pennsylvania?
Yes, egg and pasteurized milk supplies from reputable suppliers that follow state food-safety laws remain safe to consume.
Consumers of raw milk are at a greater risk of contracting the bird flu or other viruses, because raw milk has not been heated and cooled to kill active viruses.
How is Pennsylvania’s medical industry responding?
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania are working on a vaccine to protect humans and animals from the H5N1, or avian flu, virus. The vaccine, which is in clinical trials among cattle, uses the same messenger RNA technology used in COVID-19 vaccines.
2025 The Philadelphia Inquirer, LLC. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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What to know about bird flu in Pennsylvania (2025, January 5)
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