Pennsylvania
These Small Towns in Pennsylvania Come Alive in Summer
Jim Thorpe’s outfitters check the Lehigh River gauge three times a day in May. The spring melt and the upstream dam releases conspire to either deliver a perfect Class II run or pin a raft against a midstream boulder, and there is no in-between. Mt. Gretna’s Playhouse season opens around the same time, in a building that has been throwing summer plays since 1927 and still doesn’t have a proper green room. Eagles Mere’s August Water Carnival, going since 1908, is the kind of small-town tradition where cottage families spend July building floats out of plywood and Christmas lights for one night on the lake. Nine Pennsylvania towns below, each with a summer reason worth showing up for.
Jim Thorpe
You come off the Lehigh wet and shaking and find that the Victorian downtown is right there waiting, two blocks of brick and mansard roofs steaming in the afternoon sun. The town wraps a river gorge so steep that the 1820s funicular hauling coal up the mountain ran cable-and-pulley because no horse could climb it. Whitewater season runs May into October. Dam-release weekends, when the upstream Francis E. Walter Reservoir lets extra flow downstream, are when the trips get serious. Pocono Biking on Susquehanna Street shuttles riders to Rockport or White Haven for the 25-mile downhill back along the Lehigh Gorge Trail, an old rail bed that still feels like one. The Lehigh Gorge Scenic Railway makes a 16-mile round trip from the restored 1888 Central Railroad of New Jersey station, and the Asa Packer Mansion at the top of Packer Hill (built in 1861 for the founder of the Lehigh Valley Railroad and Lehigh University, sealed shut since the family closed it in 1912) opens for guided tours through the warm months. The interior has not been modernized. The Packers’ last Christmas tree is still on the parlor table where they left it.
Mt. Gretna
Three working summer institutions and almost nothing else. That is the entire point. The Playhouse has run a professional summer season since 1927, in a building that goes back to 1892, when the Pennsylvania Chautauqua Society first set up here to lecture and stage plays for self-improving Victorian families. New show every week. Comedies one week, musicals the next. The open-air Tabernacle, all rough wooden pews and a band shell, fills with summer concerts and lectures in that same Chautauqua tradition. The lake and beach is a private swimming association. Memorial Day through Labor Day, members and day-passes only. which is exactly why the water stays clean and the crowd stays sane. The Mt. Gretna Bike Trail follows an old narrow-gauge rail bed through state forest for a couple of slow miles, perfect for a loop after the Playhouse lets out at ten and the night air smells like white pine.
Eagles Mere
Population 120 in winter. A few thousand in summer, and most of them are the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of people who’ve been coming here since their own grandchildren were children. The lake is the entire reason: clear, spring-fed, with a sandy swim area you wade out into until the cold makes you laugh. The Water Carnival, on a Saturday in August every year since 1908 (with maybe two pandemic-year exceptions), is what holds the place together. Cottage families spend July building themed floats out of plywood and Christmas lights, paddle them around the lake at dusk to a sound system rigged on a dock, and a small panel of locals picks winners. The Eagles Mere Inn on Mary Avenue runs travelers through at a pace that lets you nap before dinner. Hunters Lake five miles south is the spillover option when the main lake feels crowded. The main lake almost never does.
Wellsboro
People in this part of the country call Pine Creek Gorge the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania, and the comparison happens to be earned. The gorge runs about 47 miles through Tioga and Lycoming counties, with the most-photographed overlooks at Leonard Harrison State Park on the east rim and Colton Point on the west, both about 10 miles from town. The Pine Creek Rail Trail runs 62 miles along the gorge floor. The busiest section is the 17 miles between Ansonia and Blackwell that drops most of the elevation, and the outfitters in town shuttle riders to the top so you can coast back without earning it. Hills Creek State Park’s lake holds the calmer swimming for the day after. The Wellsboro Diner on Main Street has served the same diner-counter rotation since the late 1930s. pancakes, coffee, and a meatloaf plate that hasn’t needed updating. Penn Wells Hotel a few doors down keeps gas lamps lit along the sidewalk after dark, a holdover from when the town ran a working gaslight system in the 1890s and the engineers apparently liked it enough to keep some lit.
Somerset
The Whiskey Rebellion. That’s Somerset’s claim, and it mostly gets skipped in school textbooks. From 1791 to 1794, southwestern Pennsylvania farmers refused to pay the federal whiskey tax (small distillers were getting taxed harder than big distillers. yes, lobbyist-tax-policy was already a thing). It became the first real test of federal authority under the new Constitution. President Washington personally led 13,000 troops west to put it down. The army marched right through Somerset. Uptown Somerset’s historic district still carries that period in its brick architecture, with the Somerset County Courthouse anchoring the square. Kooser State Park nine miles southwest holds a trout-stocked lake and a CCC-era picnic grove from the 1930s. go in June, when the laurel is in bloom along the shoreline. The Somerset Historical Center on Route 985 traces rural southwestern Pennsylvania life from the 18th century forward. And fifteen minutes east, the Flight 93 National Memorial near Shanksville is the other reason people stop here. The two stops together do a strange thing: they remind you that this corner of the state has been a witness to American history in moments separated by 207 years and a kind of weight that doesn’t quite fit anywhere else.
Renovo
About 1,200 year-round residents, and a population that swells with people who come for the trails, the river, and the kind of small Pennsylvania town that hasn’t been rediscovered yet. Renovo runs along the West Branch Susquehanna River in Clinton County. Bucktail State Park Natural Area wraps the corridor and gives the area its mountain-canyon feel. narrow road, no shoulder, deer on the road at dusk. Hyner View State Park six miles east is the regional anchor for hang gliding. A wooden launch ramp sits on a cliff overlooking the river roughly 1,300 feet below. Pilots come from across the eastern US when the wind sits right out of the south, and on a good Saturday in July you can stand at the overlook and count a dozen gliders working the ridge thermals. The Flaming Foliage Festival each October pulls the biggest single crowd of the year. But the summer fly-fishing on the West Branch and its tributaries is what brings the quiet repeat traffic. Local guides will take you out, sell you flies you didn’t know you needed, and leave you on a stretch where you won’t see anyone else for hours.
New Hope
New Hope sits on the Delaware River in Bucks County, with Lambertville, New Jersey, on the opposite bank. A small steel bridge connects them, and pedestrians, cyclists, and car traffic all share it. The two towns together work as one weekend split by water. you cross for breakfast, cross back for dinner, and nobody really tracks which side they’re on. Delaware Canal State Park follows about 60 miles of towpath along the old canal that carried 19th-century coal barges down to tidewater. The trail runs the length of downtown New Hope and is a good post-lunch walk when the heat lifts. Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve a couple of miles south covers 134 acres of native plant exhibits, with peak bloom April into June. The Bucks County Playhouse operates in a converted 1790 grist mill on South Main Street and runs a serious summer professional theater season. actor sightings in the cafes are part of the deal, and locals have learned to keep their phones in their pockets. The New Hope and Ivyland Railroad runs summer steam-train excursions from the 1891 station downtown.
Ridgway
The lumber boom built Main Street, and the lumber boom’s leftovers still walk the streets. The lumber kings of the late 1800s built the Victorians along the stretch known locally as Millionaires Row. money made cutting white pine and hemlock out of the surrounding hills, spent on cupolas and turreted porches. The Clarion River south of town runs Class I-II paddling water that suits canoes and kayaks. Outfitters run shuttles to put-ins and pick you up downstream. The bigger story: Elk County holds Pennsylvania’s only wild free-roaming elk herd. The elk were extirpated from the state in 1867 and reintroduced in 1913 with stock shipped in from Yellowstone, which is the kind of conservation story that nobody outside Pennsylvania knows. Today the Elk Country Visitor Center at Benezette, 30 miles west, runs viewing platforms and timing tips for the bugle in September. Bring binoculars if you go at sunrise. You will need them. And if you’ve never heard a bull elk bugle from a half-mile away in the cold pre-dawn. it sounds like a saxophone being played by something the size of a small truck.
Zelienople
Detmar Basse, a Prussian immigrant, founded Zelienople in 1802 and named it for his daughter Zelie. He thought he was building a New World aristocratic colony. Things did not go to plan. Two centuries later the borough is a 30-mile drive north of Pittsburgh with a Main Street that still carries a 19th-century streetscape and the 1914 Strand Theater as its centerpiece. The Strand was rescued by a community nonprofit in the early 2000s and now books touring music acts and films year-round, with outdoor courtyard programming on summer Saturdays. sit outside on a July evening with a paper plate of food and hear a band you actually came to hear. Connoquenessing Creek runs along the south edge of town for fishing access. Brush Creek Park covers 350 acres of trails and picnic grounds. The Zelienople Historical Society preserves the 1805 Buhl House, the boyhood home of Henry Buhl Jr., whose 20th-century philanthropic legacy through the Buhl Foundation still pays the house’s bills.
A Summer Worth Planning
Pick the weekend by what you actually want to do. Whitewater in early May at Jim Thorpe. Opening night at the Mt. Gretna Playhouse. The Water Carnival at Eagles Mere on a Saturday in August (and book the cottage by April. they go fast). The Pine Creek Gorge overlooks at Wellsboro in any month. The September elk bugle at Benezette outside Ridgway. The hang-glider lineup at Hyner View on a clear July afternoon. The summer band on the Strand courtyard at Zelienople. Each of these nine towns gives you one specific reason to drive, and a downtown holding something worth eating, sleeping in, and walking through when the day’s main event is over.
Pennsylvania
Fifth Time’s The Harm: Pennsylvania Gov. Shapiro Again Signed A Budget With No Money For Transit — Streetsblog USA
Another year, another blow to Pennsylvania transit riders.
Keystone State Gov. Josh Shapiro signed the annual budget into law last Sunday, and for the fifth year in a row, public transportation has been left to financially starve. The approved budget contains no funding for transit operations, continuing a streak that forces every agency to scrounge for its own money, to varying degrees of success.
“We’ve been left out for far too long,” remarked Connor Descheemaker, Statewide Campaign Manager for Transit for All, PA! The organization rallied transit riders to send more than 50,000 letters to state representatives and the White House-eying governor calling for transit funding, reaching every legislative district in Pennsylvania.
Those calls went largely unanswered. Riders in Lehigh Valley are now bracing for route eliminations and trip cancellations, despite already paying increased fares. Lancaster County paratransit riders will pay more as well, beginning next month.
Low-income, disabled, and rural Pennsylvanians will lose access to jobs, healthcare, and loved ones. That reality hasn’t stopped their governor from declaring victory.
In a speech at last week’s budget signing ceremony, Shapiro uttered a total of three words about the state-sponsored mobility crisis: “There’s more I want to do – like raising the minimum wage, funding mass transit, and expanding access to affordable housing,” he said.
Shapiro seems to understand the need for well-funded transit. Last year, he sent $220 million to Philadelphia to boost SEPTA’s barren maintenance fund following a series of onboard fires.
One-time relief won’t keep buses running, though.
Shapiro has failed, and failed, and failed again to pass his landmark transit policy. His initial proposal would increase the share of sales tax revenue going to public transit by 2 percent. The blame isn’t all his: Even after he watered down his proposal to a 1.75-percent increase, statehouse Republicans failed to support it.
Even if it had succeeded, it’s too little, too late: The sales tax change would still be $92 million short of the $384 million that Transit for All, PA! estimates is needed to prevent further service cuts in public transportation across the state.
Transit for All, PA! has previously lobbied for its legislative package, which would have increased taxes on car rentals and leases, and raised a new tax on ride shares.
Like Shapiro’s plan, that failed, too.
“The General Assembly has deferred action to invest fully in public transit,” state Sen. Nikil Saval (D-Philadelphia), who had authored the ride share component of the legislative package. “Despite the continued activation and involvement of tens of thousands of Pennsylvanians … we will once again face this issue in 2027.”
Pennsylvania’s last semblance of adequate transit funding ended in 2021 with the expiration of Act 89. The 10-year allocation covered statewide transportation expenses, including roadway maintenance and transit operations.
As soon as Act 89 money dried up, agencies turned to Covid relief grants to stay afloat. Those grants, provided through the American Rescue Plan, ended in 2024. Several agencies have gone so far as to pillage their own fixed-route budgets to continue federally mandated paratransit services.
Call it luck, a Band-Aid, or a bad omen; riders on Philadelphia’s SEPTA and Pittsburgh’s PRT are momentarily safe from service cuts and fare hikes. Following last year’s budget disaster, Shapiro permitted the two agencies to raid their own maintenance funds to temporarily pay for operations.
Now, both are pausing upgrades, deferring basic maintenance, and reckoning with the realities of operating – but not fixing – a large-scale transit system.
State highways, on the other hand, received $775 million in new funding from Shapiro’s budget deal.
Transit advocates in Pennsylvania are shifting strategies to preserve essential transit services. A June decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, allowed slot machines to be taxed at a higher rate.
Both Democrat and Republican lawmakers have shown interest in using revenue from the so-called “skill games tax” to fund transit. The legislature must agree on a tax rate and structure, but declined to do so before finalizing the budget.
“Anytime that there is a discussion of new revenue in Pennsylvania, it needs to include public transportation,” Descheemaker said. “We are losing public transportation actively, right now in Pennsylvania. Public transportation needs to be at the center of those conversations.”
Pennsylvania
Lawmakers break without addressing unconstitutional murder sentences, leave 1K Pa. lifers in limbo
Pennsylvania lawmakers recessed Sunday without fixing the commonwealth’s unconstitutional sentencing scheme for second-degree murder, making it increasingly likely they will miss a deadline set by the state Supreme Court and leave the issue in limbo.
A killing is considered second-degree murder if it occurs during the course of a violent felony, including robbery, rape, or arson. Someone can be found guilty of the crime if they participated in the underlying felony, even if their actions didn’t lead directly to another person’s death.
Because of this, a person in Pennsylvania who served as a getaway driver during a botched robbery, or caused an injury that later led to death, currently receives the same sentence as someone who knowingly plotted and carried out a killing.
However, in March the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in Commonwealth v. Lee that mandatory life without parole for second-degree murder is unnecessarily cruel under the state constitution.
The court gave lawmakers until July 24 to rewrite the sentencing laws.
“While we have a clear obligation to ensure that constitutional bounds are not crossed, we may not act as legislators, who are best positioned to effectuate penal reform,” wrote Chief Justice Debra Todd for the majority.
They also declined to make the ruling retroactive, leaving it up to the legislature to decide whether people already serving life sentences for second-degree murder convictions should be up for parole.
But months of talks among advocates for criminal justice reform, district attorneys, and members of the split legislature have not produced a compromise.
The state Senate twice tried to move a version of a proposal that would create 35-year mandatory minimum sentences for adults convicted of second-degree murder, with few exceptions, as well as a pathway to release for those already serving. However, state Rep. Tim Briggs (D., Montgomery), a key House lawmaker on criminal justice issues, told Spotlight PA the proposal is too punitive.
If the legislature misses the deadline, the state Supreme Court decision will take effect, leaving individual Common Pleas judges across the state to dole out fair sentences without legislative guidance.
And the fate of more than 1,100 people already in prison on second-degree murder convictions will likely be decided by the state’s highest court, as civil rights lawyers stand ready to petition the body for further clarity.
Should the justices apply their ruling to people who are already convicted, courts across the state will almost certainly be flooded with hundreds of petitions from those serving life in second-degree cases, some decades old.
Some advocates are ready to file those petitions, telling Spotlight PA the courts might produce better outcomes for clients than the state Senate’s proposed path forward.
“We’re not afraid of going to mass resentencings,” said Sean Damon, director of strategic partnerships for Straight Ahead. His organization is the policy arm of the Abolitionist Law Center, the firm that brought the suit in Lee.
Others cautioned against that outcome.
“Inaction is not an option, in fact it is dangerous,” Attorney General Dave Sunday said in a statement sent after the legislature convened.
“Failing to act would leave our communities and victims without needed protections, and it is important that we move forward collaboratively to ensure a responsible solution.”
Lawmakers telegraphed Sunday night that they are willing to keep working on a compromise ahead of the deadline, but did not confirm whether they’d solve the issue in time.
Gov. Josh Shapiro, in a news conference, said he agrees with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s ruling, and wants to see the legislature reach consensus.
“We’re going to continue to work on this issue, and I’m confident, given some of the maneuvering that the majority leader in the House did today,” the Democrat said. “There’s a vehicle ready to go when we have a compromise in place.”
Asked whether lawmakers will pass a bill by the July 24 deadline, state House Majority Leader Matt Bradford (D., Montgomery) twice told reporters: “We’re hoping to get something accomplished.”
Conversations, but no compromise
For decades, Pennsylvania’s justice system has applied second-degree murder to a wide variety of defendants and criminal behavior: a man who killed a 77-year-old woman during the course of a violent rape; an accomplice in the torture and eventual death of an intellectually disabled woman; a man who robbed a tourist who minutes later committed suicide; a 14-year-old with a history of abuse and mental illness, who started an accidental house fire that killed the two boys she was trying to visit.
And for decades, those convicted have all received the same, unmovable sentence: life without parole.
The state Supreme Court in March found this sentencing scheme unnecessarily cruel, and argued that without an individual assessment of culpability, it violates the Pennsylvania Constitution.
“We determine that a mandatory life without parole sentence for all felony murder convictions, absent an assessment of culpability, is inconsistent with the protections bestowed upon our citizens under the ‘cruel punishments’ clause of our Commonwealth’s organic charter,” wrote Justice Todd for the majority.
In the spring, the legislature seemed poised to act.
Lawmakers from both chambers had already proposed legislation, including a bipartisan effort by state Sens. Sharif Street (D., Philadelphia) and Camera Bartolotta (R., Beaver) and another by Rep. Tim Briggs (D., Montgomery).
But at an April meeting of the state House Judiciary Committee, with advocates in attendance eager to celebrate the vote, Briggs tabled his bill. Stakeholders had reached out, he explained, with feedback and a desire to have their positions better reflected in whatever solution the legislature pursued.
“I think we can have a collaborative process to get to a better bill that balances the need to comply with the Lee decision, but also is fair and compassionate, respects victims’ rights, and above all, maintains community safety,” Briggs said during the April meeting.
Then, speaking about people already serving life sentences, he said: “These people – this is emotional – these people have been serving long, unconstitutional sentences, and I will not put them in a worse position than what I believe the Supreme Court would order for them after the (120 day) run.”
In an interview with Spotlight PA months later, Briggs said he had hoped the pause would lead to meaningful cross-party conversations.
“That never happened,” Briggs said.
In spring conversations between Straight Ahead and the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association, the groups tried to reach a framework that would satisfy their respective coalitions. Lawmakers were not directly involved in those conversations, sources confirmed to Spotlight PA.
State prosecutors were most worried about the group of more than 1,100 people serving life sentences, said Kelly Callihan, the executive director of the district attorneys association.
“We like uniformity,” she said. “Victims deserve that, and honestly, perpetrators who have been convicted deserve that, so that it’s not like the Wild West, where every county was just going to be on an island doing what they thought with resentencing.”
Public defenders feel similarly, said Sara Jacobson, the executive director of the Public Defender Association of Pennsylvania. Without a legislative fix, she said, the state would be left with “justice by geography.”
“Without guidance, the results will vary widely in terms of sentences they get handed down,’ Jacobson added. “It will depend much more on the politics of a given county and an individual judge’s perspective.”
A legislative framework would be better for everyone, Jacobson said, because prosecutors, defense attorneys, and crime victims will know what to expect.
But feelings diverge from there.
The district attorneys association feels comfortable with a minimum sentence, after which the convicted person would be eligible for parole, Callihan said.
But Straight Ahead and other advocates found a high mandatory minimum for those sentenced to second-degree murder to be unpalatable.
“We have been advocating for a maximum sentence similar to third-degree,” which carries a 40 year maximum, Damon said.
In June, a compromise had not been reached when, over the course of four days, the Republican-controlled state Senate introduced, voted out of committee, and passed new legislation with bipartisan support.
That bill, SB 1400, would establish a 35-year mandatory minimum for adult offenders and preserve life without parole as an option for offenders who meet certain criteria. It allows for sentences as low as 10 years if a defendant meets a narrow set of mitigating circumstances.
For people already serving life, the bill would permit parole consideration after 35 years for most and 20 years for those over the age of 70.
The court gave the General Assembly a 120-day window “because opening the prison doors and letting out violent individuals back on the streets is unacceptable policy,” said state Sen. Lisa Baker (R., Luzerne), the bill’s lead sponsor, during a news conference after passage. Attorney General Sunday, also appearing at the news conference, supported it.
The state Senate passed a largely similar version of this legislation Sunday afternoon, attached to a House bill aimed at allowing incarcerated individuals to earn credits toward potential earlier parole by participating in educational and vocational programs.
But the bill found no purchase among House Democrats.
When he spoke with Spotlight PA in June, Briggs said the language was “too heavy-handed.”
“These are serious matters,” he said, “but I think there needs to be some compassion on the facts, and high mandatory minimums across the board isn’t the direction I want to go in.”
Elizabeth Rementer, a spokesperson for House Democrats, said Sunday that the lawmakers remain committed to continuing negotiations.
But speaking of the bill passed Sunday, she said, “Unfortunately, this isn’t it.”
Mass resentencings possible
Stakeholders are similarly split.
Berks County District Attorney John Adams, in an interview with Spotlight PA, said he largely supported the state Senate legislation and its attempt to establish both a framework for future sentencing and a path for reconsidering past convictions. As a prosecutor and former defense attorney, “I have been on both sides of this issue, so I know it by heart, and I know it through experience,” Adams said.
“This bill covers pretty much everything that I was looking for,” he said. “It offers, in the appropriate instances, the possibility that someone could be sentenced to life in prison, and it also offers otherwise some alternatives.”
But Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner, a progressive Democrat known for diverging from his fellow prosecutors, derided the state Senate bill as unscientific and beholden to an old-school, tough-on-crime approach to justice.
In an interview with Spotlight PA, Krasner was blunt in his assessment of the courts as a better path than the proposed legislation..
“Nothing is better than stupid,” Krasner said.
The path to this type of mass resentencing is uncertain — for now.
Without a legislative fix, the issue will need to return to the state Supreme Court to become retroactive.
The Abolitionist Law Center is ready to pursue this path if the legislature fails to act, said Legal Director Bret Grote, whether through traditional appeal or a King’s Bench petition, which would ask the court to take the matter more quickly.
“The issue will be presented to the court promptly, and the court alone will decide when they hear such a case,” Grote said, “but with more than — and we’re confident it’s more than 1,100 people — serving this unconstitutional sentence, this is a constitutional crisis.”
Straight Ahead, ALC, and other advocates actively involved in conversations around the Lee decision are ready to do the most good for the most people, Damon said. “So, I’m not being glib when I say we’re ready to go a mass resentencing.”
More than 500 of the people serving life sentences for felony murder were convicted in Philadelphia, where the courts do not “tend to throw the book at people,” Damon said, and where there is a reform-minded district attorney in Krasner.
“We’re going to have lower sentences in Philly,” Damon said.
___
This story was originally published by Spotlight PA and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
Pennsylvania
12-year-old boy on e-bike killed in crash with pickup truck in Pennsylvania
A 12-year-old boy on an electric bike was killed in a crash in Manchester Township, Pennsylvania, on Monday, authorities said.
The Northern York County Regional Police Department said in a news release that the crash happened at the intersection of North George Street and Emig Road on Monday at around 9:30 p.m. Officers were called to the scene and found that the 12-year-old e-bike rider and the driver of a pickup truck had crashed.
First responders performed life-saving measures on the boy, who died as a result of his injuries. The boy’s identity was not released as of Tuesday night. It was not immediately clear if the driver of the pickup truck was injured.
Police are investigating the crash. Law enforcement did not release any additional information. Anyone with information on the deadly crash can contact the Northern York County Regional Police Department at 717-467-8355 or email tips@nycrpd.org. The case number is 2026-029713, police added.
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