Thursday, May 14, 2009

Express Times Endorses John Stoffa!

Great news here in the Stoffa camp! The Express Times has just endorsed John Stoffa for reelection as Northampton County Executive. Noting that the choice is "as clear and compelling as it ever has been," the editors recommend Stoffa.

"We hope Democrats will take the time to measure the performances of the candidates and see in this case that the status quo -- Stoffa -- is the argument against complacency and against a return to the laissez-faire, party-run management style that dominated the county administration before him.

"Stoffa says he wants a second term to map out what the county needs, looking at where it will be in 2030 and 2050. Taxpayers are fortunate to have someone looking ahead, but also to deal with the day-to-day headaches of running a large bureaucracy with equanimity, bipartisanship and some backbone.

"That's Stoffa."

This is a shot in the arm that will drive us in the final days. My thanks to The Express Times for their very kind words.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Why Stoffa Dislikes the KOZ Tax Break


John Stoffa: "The only way you can cut costs is personnel. That's most of your costs. You can delay hiring. You can not hire. You can freeze positions and you'll save money.

"I'm going to disagree with most of the people here. I don't like KOZs. I think we should get rid of them. It means Keystone Opportunity Zone, where you don't pay any taxes for ten years. I like LERTA, where you pay 1/10th, 2/10th, 3/10th as the years go by. That makes sense to me. To give somebody no taxes, no sales taxes, no nothing. People can live there in condominiums and pay no taxes. It's wrong. I don't believe in KOZs. I would get rid of them."

Monday, May 11, 2009

Morning Call Endorses John Stoffa

Great News — The Morning Call has endorsed John Stoffa for Northampton County Exec! This has energized my father's campaign in its final week. Here are the three reasons why Editors believe Stoffa deserves your vote.

"First, Mr. Stoffa has much more experience in county government than Mrs. McHale. He has served for 30 years in both Northampton and Lehigh County; Mrs. McHale has been on county council for about 11 years. As for executive experience, Mr. Stoffa ran Lehigh County's Department of Human Services for eight years and is in the middle of his fourth year as executive. Mrs. McHale's experience in a family insurance business doesn't match up with the varied demands on a county executive.

"Second, Mr. Stoffa better articulates a vision for the county. He puts modernization of the prison at the top of the list, and has been willing, in spite of political risks, to explore public-private and regional options. That includes the proposed Bethlehem Township treatment center, something Mrs. McHale has voted against. The prison is the right priority. Mr. Stoffa can list a series of cost-cutting steps in his administration, but Mrs. McHale is not clear on how she would cope with a rising demand for county services and declining state funding.

"Finally, there is the politics. Mr. Stoffa has run afoul of the Democratic establishment, partly because he appointed Republicans to top positions. So, the county committee endorsed Mrs. McHale in February. Good, clean fun, we suppose. But, if going lockstep with party leaders is to be the qualification for county executive, we'll support the bipartisan man. Nominate John Stoffa on the Democratic ballot.
"

John Stoffa & Open Space


My father and I both grew up on farms. He loved it. I hated it. Farms are dirty, messy, and a lot of work. If your father has a lot of work responsibilities, taking care of a farm and fixing up an old farmhouse leaves little time for a childhood of family fun. My parents had the same fight year after year from 1978 until 1998 where at the end of the argument they would announce to my brother and I that we were selling and moving to Easton. This was usually accompanied by the “whooshing” sound of me flying up to my room to pack my suitcase. I couldn’t get off that damn place fast enough. But we never moved to Easton and I always had to unpack my bags.

As soon as I graduated from Moravian and was on my own, I moved to 10th and Linden in Center City Allentown. I didn’t care if there were shootings on either side of my block within the same year, I was in the city where you could walk everywhere and there were people and noise and traffic and I was far away from steer and albino peacocks and sweet corn sold out of the driveway.

But now that I’m the same age my father was when he bought our farm, I look at things differently. I went away to Miami for eight years, one of the most urban places in the country, and I returned to the place of my childhood, Northampton County. I was shocked, honestly, because so much of what made the area special disappeared so quickly.

There was an old farm on the corner of 512 and Stoke Park Rd. All the kids used to sleigh ride down that hill in the winter and then come back to my house and dry their fannies on our radiators. The farmhouse was torn down but the barn survived for many years serving as the push off point for the sledders. Now there is a Wegman’s there: not even a Wegman’s, but a Wegman’s sign letting you know that a Wegman’s is nearby.

The Pharo Estate on the other side of the road had a ton of land. The house reminded me of Tara in Gone With the Wind with its columns dating back to 1804. Old Mrs. Pharo lived there for many years and there used to be a small splice of a road that was “Old Stoke Park Road”, surviving from the 1800s before they re-directed Stoke Park Rd. to meet more cleanly with 512. The house still exists, the barn morphed into some modern office space and the old farm that went on for acres is all condos.

Koehler’s Corners on the corner of Jacksonville Rd. and Stoke Park was a definite landmark and almost like a visual petting zoo. Since the late 1700s, the same family lived here and this farm offered Hanover Township residents a visual petting zoo as we drove by gazing at the various farm animals and horses being ridden by their riders. That’s gone too. I don’t even remember what’s there now it’s so forgettable.

Dr. Gene Witiak had his beautiful historic early 19th Century Goetz Homestead on 512 and the barn housed his veterinarian practice. I remember sitting outside on the back porch drinking lemonade with his twin daughters, who went to Asa Packer with me, as we looked out on the fields and he examined my cat. That land is all developed now and the Witiaks actually had to physically move their home to another location to save it. I applaud them for that. The barn was torn down.

The Diefenderfer farm on the southwest corner Jacksonville and Hanoverville is gone now too. So are the Uliana’s and Fehnel’s farms that bordered ours. I was doing research on Historic Hanover Township and found the brochure from the Sept. 20, 1998 Historic Hanover Trolley Tour and was shocked to see that of the 12 historic farms and homes on this tour, 25% of them don’t exist anymore, and that’s just in the last ten years since I moved to Miami.

Now don’t get me wrong. Before we moved to Melody Ranch - our Stoke Park Rd. farm - we lived in a development in Hanover Farms. I’m not saying our neighborhood’s lime green aluminum sided 1969 split levels with brown shutters and plastic Bicentennial eagles above the front doors didn’t have their charm; that was part of my childhood, too. But it doesn’t seem to hold the fascination, the memories, or the uniqueness that the old farms and farmhouses gave to the township where I was raised. I worry that townships like Hanover are in danger of turning into Central Jersey where you know not where one town begins and another ends except for the clues that the freeway exits and entrances give you.

The friends I made when I was living in Miami love to visit Pennsylvania. They think it’s beautiful. They love New Hope, Bethlehem, Easton, Jim Thorpe. Nazareth and Bangor have their charms, too. But Hanover Township? Yes, my hometown - where I grew up - does have its charm to my Miami friends. That charm? Wegmans (because there is no Wegmans in Miami.) I wish I could take them back in time and show them Hanover Township in the old days. Hanover Township is much more than a Wegmans. If I could take them back in time, they’d remember more than just Wegmans.

So even though I might have been my father’s hardest convert to open space programs because of my childhood spreading manure and selling sweet corn, I think I’ve come around after visiting where I grew up ten years later. Traveling around Pennsylvania, I see that we are far behind Lehigh, Bucks, and Lancaster Counties in open space preservation, but it’s not too late. I’d give anything to bring that hill back for the kids to sleigh ride on like we did in the 70s and 80s with that big red 19th century imposing barn. Where do kids in Hanover Township sleigh ride now?

Friday, May 8, 2009

Interview With Northampton County's First Cat

Name: Tuxedo
Age in Cat Years: 56
Political Party: Democrat
Residence: Allen Township


Tux, may I call you Tux?

TUX: Surely.

Tux, you were recently featured in the Voter's Guide of www.lehighvalleylive.com. You've kept a low profile these past three and a half years, much lower than, let's say, Bo Obama.

TUX: Oh please. Don't get me started about that circus. In my day, political leader's pets were more dignified. Anyway, continue.

But the public IS curious about you. Tell us a little about your relationship with your owner, John Stoffa.

TUX: I was a housecat that was abandoned and came upon this farmette where this guy was always planting sweet corn and moving manure piles on weekends. I began meowing around the house and they started feeding me. At that point in my life I wasn't ready for a new relationship with a new family so I just took the food and watched them from afar. Times goes on and the farmette is sold and the whole neighorhood is slated to be demolished and this guy puts me in a carrier even though I was a stray and moves me out to the country on a new farm with him.

Where you were still...uh...feral?

TUX: Yes. I was still not ready to start a new relationship but the food kept getting better and better. It went from dry to wet food and then I started following the old guy around on the farm while he tooled around on his tractors and whatnot. He must have taken it that I was being loving or companionable but I was worried he was going to cut off more of his fingers and was keeping an eye on him. He was the first one I let hold me and then it went on from there. In due time I managed to weasel my way into the house.

What is unique about you?

TUX: I'm almost completey deaf. By the way, I appreciate you using that megaphone. I believe I'm the only deaf cat in Northampton County. It can be a bit of a burden since I can't hear people calling me or cars driving up the driveway. I'm often startled by people who come up behind me and I've had more than one embarrassing incident sitting in the driveway minding my own business with my head turned the wrong way only to find John's car running but parked in front of me as he waves and claps his hands wildly trying to get me to move out of the way. I am looking into kitty hearing aids on the Internet. Though I can't hear it, I'm told that my meow, since I've lost my hearing, has become to resemble something similar to an Austrailian dingo being strangled.

What is your take on past presidential pets?

TUX: Socks handled the whole Monica Lewinsky thing like a champ. The Bushes push their dogs too hard, making them write and publish books. It's just too much pressure. That's why Barney bit that reporter. He flipped. Bo? The press is focusing too much on Bo. He's so young and with all those expectations, I just don't know. I most admire Quentin Roosevelt's parrot, even though he wasn't a Democrat.

What do you like best about Northampton County?

TUX: The cat unions. We have eleven in Northampton County. I belong to UFP, the United Feline Patrollers Union. We are farm cats that patrol their owners' farms, catching field mice and making sure that all cats stick to their own property lines and don't wander into someone else's territory.

Do cats file grievances?

TUX: I did just yesterday. I peed on the Oriental rug and they put me in the yard for the day. Who do they think they are? Humans still don't understand that when a cat chooses a family, the house belongs to the cat.

What's your key political issue?

TUX: Open space, definitely. Open Space. The development in Northampton County is making the mice and bird population decline rapidly. This affects the cats of Northampton County.

One more question?

TUX: No. My people said you wanted five minutes.. I gave you five. I need to look into the kitty hearing aids. Remember, get off the sofa and vote for Stoffa. I'll keep the sofa warm while you're gone.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Bill White Gives My Dad an A- in Recent Debate

Thanks to The Morning Call's Bill White, who recently gave John Stoffa an A- for his performance on Tuesday night's league of Women Voters' debate. Here's what Bill says.

"What Stoffa always has done is answer questions directly, and he did that again Tuesday. The difference, for me, was that he did it with more fire than I've seen in the past. He even asked the moderator if the candidates could ask one another questions or respond to one another. "

If I were handing out grades, I'd give the League of Women Voters an A+ for an outstanding event.

The picture, right from Bill White's blog, features him at Egypt's Musikfest.

Why We Need to Do Something About Our Jail

About 65 cents of every real estate tax dollar is spent on our courts and jails. Does it have to be that way? Eighty per cent are there on drug and alcohol charges. Nearly 70% of all inmates will return to Chez Northampton. Doesn't it make fiscal sense to reduce that figure? That, and a common sense of decency, is what is behind John Stoffa's proposed treatment center and work release facility in Bethlehem Township.

"We have four people in a cell, four bunk beds, a commode and a hopper, and it is disgraceful the way we treat our people in our jail."

Monday, May 4, 2009

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Life With Father

I learned at an early age that being John Stoffa’s son would mean I would be different from everyone else. When I was a kid at Asa Packer Elementary School in the 70s, my teacher once asked, “Who here has a daddy who works for Bethlehem Steel?” Practically the entire class raised their hand. Damn! Why does my Dad have to be a social worker? What is a social worker anyway?

I gazed at all my friends and thought of their fancy aluminum sided homes situated on streets named after developers’ children like Ashley Lane and Bradley Court. Me? I lived in a dilapidated 19th century farmhouse called Melody Ranch - painted pink in the 50s - with poison ivy growing up to my second floor bedroom window. This is all because my Dad wanted to save an old farm and restore it himself.

My friends spent weekends at the pool of the Steel Club. Me? I helped Dad move manure piles, planted sweet corn, bought peacocks in Amish country, got thrown off my disagreeable pony Dixie into an electric fence and fed my pet beef steer, Sir Loin. It was like Little House on the Prairie minus the residuals.

“Jeffrey Stoffa, what does YOUR Daddy do?” I look at the Martin Towers mob surrounding me with their arched right eyebrows waiting to hear if I can top them. “My dad works in drugs and alcohol!” I announce defiantly. Heck, maybe if they think my Dad was a drug dealer at least I’ll add some excitement. But it was no use, they knew he was the Northampton County Drug and Alcohol Director. Everyone knew my Dad. Ever since I was born it seemed everyone knew my Dad. My gravestone will say, “Yes, I’m John Stoffa’s son.”

“Jeffrey, come on. We’re going to get some peacocks. Get in the station wagon.” Could I roll my eyes in the back of my head any farther? Upon arriving in Lancaster, Dad says, “Stay here. I’ll be back,” plopping my six-year-old body on the side bench of an enormous oak dining table with about 22 people dressed in 18th century neutral-colored clothing and speaking German. Just as quickly, these 22 people jump up and find some excuse to flee the strange 6-year-old Auslander from Northampton County.

“Don’t be afraid. These are Amish people. They’re neat. You’ll see,” Dad says as I watch him walk away in his tattered baseball cap, ripped shirt, stained jeans, and boots. Neat? Where’s the television? How do they watch Sonny and Cher? I wasn’t afraid of the Amish. They were afraid of me! I had my 1970s Garanimals multi-colored striped and crisscrossed shirt with the green pants and red sneakers. If that weren’t enough, my Donny & Marie lunch pail also made a major contrast to the huge Holy Bible in German sitting on the table next to me. I was all colors and metals and Donnie and Marie, an unsettling visitor from the 20th Century with singing Mormons on my lunch pail no less.

Where is Dad? Why are we here? No one is speaking English and they’re all staring at me. Out the window I could see my father choosing peacocks. They all look the same, Dad, just pick some. Let’s go. If I were smarter I would have run right then and there and given myself up for adoption to a nice Republican couple. But instead I waited patiently for my father to return and we drove home in a station wagon full of peacocks screeching their mating calls while he whistled, “Goodbye, My Coney Island Baby.”

Even my parents’ vacations weren’t like other parents.’ In 1976, the year of the Bicentennial, my parents went to the Soviet Union with another couple who were also fascinated by Russian architecture and history. My father took Hershey bars to Moscow and snuck them to little kids in Red Square when the soldiers weren’t looking. Mom slipped a Vogue magazine to her female tour guide when the trip was over, causing her to hug my mother, “You don’t know what this means to me and my sisters,” she gushed. When they got back to the States and presented me with nesting dolls, Russian lapel pins, and really nasty wrapped candy that resembled some kind of caramel, my mother remarked to my grandmother, “I’ll never complain about paying taxes in this country again.”

My school bordered our farm. So out of one whole side of the school you gazed out at our shabby grey Upper Barn with the fading words of “Melody Ranch” painted on the side in 1950s pink. One day in Creative Writing, the teacher had all the kids stare out the window at my barn and write what we felt. She then read our compositions. I got to spend a whole class hearing my friends pontificate on the beautiful and exotic wreck of a property that my Dad bought. Sigh. A little girl next to me leans over and whispers, “What happened? Did your parents get poor?”, turning her head toward the barn.

Just as the readings were wrapping up, my pet steer Sir Loin walked by the window. He had apparently gotten loose while grazing in the pasture by pulling his own stake out. He was wandering around dragging his huge chain and stake behind him. Since steer are as dumb as peacocks, he never realized he was free; he just kept grazing on the school lawn. (Run Sir Loin! Run!)

“Look at that big dog!” my friend Samantha Case said. I looked and groaned. “Isn’t that from your farm?” Nope. Not mine; must be someone else’s steer. Maybe if I look away no one else will see him. It was too late. Within minutes, Asa Packer Elementary School was experiencing something that would still be talked about at my 20th high school reunion. The male teachers surrounded him, the female teachers shielded the children in the playground, the children inside pressed up against the window screaming and chattering. Everyone’s faces, expressions, body English, and level of hysteria resembled Medieval depictions of the Sack of Rome. I just shrugged my shoulders like, “I don’t know. Never saw that dog before in my life.”

I finally admitted it was my Sir Loin and my father was called by the Principal. Dad rushed from the Government Center in Easton, apologized, and led my steer home through the neighboring field in his three piece suit and wing tips.

My father spends nothing on himself. It’s a battle to get him to buy new clothes. I once threw away sweaters in high school and he fished them out of the garbage and still wears those sweaters. He’s probably the only grown man in the Lehigh Valley ever to wear teenage fashions from The Merry Go Round circa 1985 ... twenty years later.

Dad actually tithed when I was a kid, which amazed me. He was the one who taught me that you put money in the collection plate, not take it out…and I was 15 at the time.

Because my father loved being a weekend farmer and loves the “everyman,” we always had interesting visitors. It wasn’t unusual to have the doorbell ring many times a day. Sometimes it would be one of my mother’s friends popping over to have tea and discuss the latest episode of Masterpiece Theatre’s Upstairs Downstairs, or a big shot politician wanting Dad’s support or advice. But in line between the Upstairs Downstairs woman and the politician would be another character waiting to ring the bell, someone like Jake the Grinder who came to grind the corn that Dad grew. Or as he introduced himself, “Chake da Grinter who come ta grindt da corn.”

My favorite conversation with Jake was when I asked him directions to Emmaus and he referred to Emmaus Ave. as the “Road to Emmaus.” I said, “Oh, like in the Bible…”

“BIBLE? Whatcha mean Bible? E-moss iz namedt fer de Indians, da E-moss Indians.”

“Really? I thought it was named for the New Testament, the road to Emmaus, Jesus’ resurrection.” Jake the Grinder looked at me, his eyes squinting,

“Vot’s dat? Some kinda Catholic thing?” he barked. But whether it was Jake the Grinder or the Queen of England, my mother always treated everyone with the same respect, “Oh, Jake, what a pleasure to see you. John’s somewhere on the property. Would you like something to drink?” I think if my tombstone says, “Yes, he’s my father.” Then Mom’s tombstone should say, “John’s somewhere on the property” because that’s what she is always saying when he’s home. Being buried in the same graveyard gives it an ironic double meaning.

Sometimes my father’s eccentricities could make for a lot of fun. During the 80s and 90s, Dad had successfully redone most of the farmhouse and it was no longer pink and had no poison ivy growing up to my window, we had many parties, with tents outside, lots of family and friends and neighbors, kind of like a Hanover Township version of the Twelve Oaks barbecue. Mom even would walk around with a real antique white parasol.

There was always that point during the day when the quiet afternoon filled with laughing and the barking of dogs, and suddenly the chatter would be pierced with the sound of my father reving up one of his many tractors pulling a huge hay wagon that probably was older than the house. “Hay ride!” someone would yell. My mother would dart into the house grabbing whoever was closest to help her get the hats. She had started the tradition that on all Stoffa hayrides, you had to wear a hat. Because my parents don’t throw away anything and had inherited all kinds of goodies from Al Crawford, who had sold us the farm with contents included, we had a real Chinese coolie hat, a real PA State Troopers hat, a Russian colonel’s bear fur hat, all kinds of hats. Everyone’d pile in and drive away from the party. But where to go?

We couldn’t enjoy a tree-lined empty field. Hanover Township was all built up with a residential street plan based on 19th Century English garden mazes. We did the next best thing. Our hay ride would wind in and out of Hanover Farms, Stafore Estates, Macada Rd., down Bradley Lane, Ashley Court, Katharine Circle, and Billy Bob Terrace. But my father would deliberately drive to their friends’ houses, especially the ones that had perfectly manicured lawns, and instruct all the partygoers to throw hay all over their front lawns as we hooted and hollered with our best fake redneck accents. That was fun.

Even in their retirement, their unusual lifestyle patterned by Dad, hasn’t changed. A few years ago, I came home from South Beach, where I was living, to visit my parents. I had met Michelle Pfeiffer at the supermarket in the deli aisle and Russell Crowe and Meg Ryan had stopped their car in front of my apartment so Meg could brush crumbs off her lap. I was so excited to tell my mom this news, but when I arrived home she was busy helping him birth some goats. They were standing in the barn, knee deep in fluids and goats emitting moans and groans. I heard my father yelling, “Come on…push!” He thinks the goat mother speaks English? Meg Ryan and Michelle Pfeiffer went right out of my head.

But as exciting as it was to stand next to an emaciated Michelle Pfeiffer in a South Beach deli and be able to say, “Excuse me, are you going to take that corned beef?” I don’t think those are the memories I’ll remember when I’m on the third floor of Gracedale looking forward to jello night. Instead, I’m sure I’ll remember my steer, Sir Loin, my pink 19th century farmhouse where I grew up, the Amish family I frightened with my loud Garanimals rainbow colored outfit bought at a Hess’s Cleanup Sale on Hamilton St., the hayrides, and the many other great memories that were created thanks to life with Father.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Why Diane Fosco Will Vote For John Stoffa


"He gets the job done. ... We're in the biggest economic war this country has ever experienced. Not the time to change leaders."

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Great Things About Northampton County

Let's have some fun. We all like to complain, but there really are lots of great things about Northampton County. I've decided to list some of them, but am sure I missed some. Feel free to add anything that makes Northampton County a destination. I've relaxed the comment settings to make it easy for you. Here's my list.

Fresh trout still swimming through the Monocacy Creek in Downtown Bethlehem.

The mahogany Victorian bar in Bangor's Colonial Hotel.

That Moravian widows still live in the Sisters House on Church St. in Bethlehem.

That Jayne Mansfield expressly desired to be buried in Pen Argyl and not Hollywood, that she described Pen Argyl as the setting of her happiest memories, that she was buried in a slate casket, and that people still put pennies on her grave after 41 years.

That the Whitfield House in Nazareth was originally built as a school for black children in the 1740s.

18th Century German crooked German graves with stars, hearts and flowers carved on them in Pennsville.

That people still put flowers on Jane Horner’s grave, a woman who was massacred by Indians on Oct. 8, 1763 when on the way to buy some fire for her hearth.

That the Roxy in Northampton hasn’t changed sine 1928 and still shows silent movies accompanied by an organ on special occasions.

That the valets at the Hotel Bethlehem wear uniforms again.

That we have the oldest book store in the world, Moravian Book Store.

That the Sands knew the only way they’d get a casino in Bethlehem was if they made it involve the historical abandoned Bethlehem Steel plant.

Preserved farmland in the country and protected historic districts in the cities of Bethlehem and Easton.

Abandoned limestone quarries and abandoned slate quarry piles.

The Bangor Public Library.

That Bethlehem named their two public schools Freedom and Liberty and dress their bands as patriots and grenadiers.

Restored old German stone farmhouses in Saucon Valley.

The Herman Simon Mansion (Third Street Alliance) on 3d St. in Easton.

Baklava and coffee at the diners.

The 1905 church on 611 in Raubsville.

How the County Courthouse looks on the hill as you complete Cemetery Curve.

The golden image of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania emblem on top of the bridge as you enter Easton from New Jersey.

Crystal Cave in Hellertown.
That Larry Holmes came back.

Slave and Indian graves in God’s Acre Cemetery in Historic Bethlehem.

The fact that more people are moving in than moving out.

The turret on the Mount Vernon Inn on Northampton St. in Easton.

Spring Garden St. in Easton and Market St. in Bethlehem.

Blue and gold onion domes on Slavic churches in Northampton.

The mansions on College Hill and Fountain Hill.

Musikfest and Heritage Day.

Lehigh Lafayette Games.

That Eugene Grace’s ballroom - where Bing Crosby used to sing - is now a chapel to St. Anne.

That so many of my friends who graduated with me moved away to big cities but came back.

The celebration queens at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Festival in Roseto.

The Steckel House B&B in Bath.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

John Stoffa's Reaction to Party Snub

Jeff Stoffa: Reflections From a Son

What kind of a father was John Stoffa?

I’m not going to say he was a great father just to help him get elected. My Dad had three kids. I was born in 1970; my brother in 1976; and before us, in the mid 60s, was born his community. One of my earliest memories was when we lived in Hanover Township, next to Pharo Park, and a municipal jazz band was playing a free concert one afternoon on the basketball field. All my friends were there with their families. The band started playing the theme to the Harlem Globetrotters. That's a song my Dad loved, played on his trumpet and whistled all the time. I ran back to the house to get him to join me, but he was at the head of the dining room table with these stoic looking people sitting all around the table. He told me he had an important meeting and couldn’t see the band. That was in his Shade Tree Commission days in the mid 70s.

Fast forward to 2009 and a lot of people in Hanover Township enjoy more trees, parks, open spaces and the resulting higher property values at the expense of this kid who sat alone at the band concert on a Saturday afternoon. The true irony of it all is that our neighborhood, the farmettes around Asa Packer School, all got gobbled up by the pressures of the expanding development along Schoenersville Rd. So my little grave I made for our cat, Foxy Lady, when I was 10 is buried beneath a Holiday Inn Express now. But those freakin’ shade trees are still there.

My father always put his community and the County first. There were many many nights having dinner with his seat empty because of Board meetings, panels, Church council, various events, but never political. They always revolved around improving the community or drug and alcohol rehab or vocational rehab or something of that ilk. Just take a look at his resume and you know there’s no way he could have been home every night with his kids.

So you’re saying he was absent?

Yes, except on weekends. Then of course he made my childhood a challenge too on Saturday and Sunday. It was tough keeping up with the Joneses’ of Hanover Township when your dad made you move manure piles on Saturday and presented you with a pet steer named Sir Loin and you lived in a run down farmhouse complete with a sign that said, “Melody Ranch.” We were far from conventional. But overall, he was a good father by virtue of his example. The way he treated people, the way he cared about his community, the way he tithed and always stuck up for the underdog. No matter how far he rises, he’ll always be that 8 year old with missing fingers - living on a farm with no indoor plumbing - wondering how he’ll keep from pumping gas for the rest of his life. He never forgets where he came from.

What did you think of your first County Council meeting?

I think they should be televised or at least shown on webcam. I lived in Florida for eight years and there the city and county council meetings are televised. I once spent two hours watching the Coral Gables City Council discuss whether or not to force someone to cut down a huge tree on the side of the road; they had pointers and slide shows and everything. People don’t know enough about what the County does and I think more people might get involved if they could watch local government sessions on television. With our County Council’s reputation for being one Southern accent away from the Harper Valley PTA, it could be quite entertaining for the public. But as incompetent as the public accuses them of being during opening comments, Council seems to really love their communities and care about the County. I mean, they’re not there for the money certainly. If Lehigh County attacked us, I’m sure Ron Angle and Ann McHale would grab their pitchforks and rifles and defend Norco side by side against the invaders, no doubt about it.

What do you think when you read criticisms of your father on LV Ramblings?

Some make me laugh out loud. Some I agree with --- like my Dad is slow and moves slowly and “old Stoffa” looks old. He always looked and acted old even when he was young and he never moves fast. My father never runs. I saw him run once in my life when he was chasing a groundhog out of his field corn crib. The house could be on fire and he wouldn’t run. But just because he moves slowly doesn’t mean his mind moves slowly. I’d rather a slow moving person with a quick mind than a fast moving person with a slow mind. FDR didn’t move very fast and he was pretty good at his job.

What criticisms make you laugh?

Well, there are 260,000 people in Northampton County and you can’t please them all. When I was 15, a couple moved in next to my best friend’s house in Hanover Township. She wanted to welcome them so we got some sweet corn my Dad had grown and rang their doorbell. When I introduced myself, the guy told me that my Dad had fired him six months ago. I was like, “Well, I guess you won’t be needing the corn then.” How many frustrated vendors are out there that lost a bid because my father wanted to save the taxpayers money? If you’re a person that does pay for play, takes donations from special interests, cherishes having your own special monogrammed parking space, and then this Susan Boyle crawls out of Kreidersville and does the opposite, you will feel judged. When you feel judged, you attack and you feel relief by heckling someone anonymously on a blog. So there you go. I also love how everyone’s “in the tank” for my father. What does that mean? I guess you win an election and thousands of people are “in the tank” for you.

Does it bother your Dad?

Who knows? He’d never say an unkind word about anyone. Someone could spit on him one night or give him a medal the next and he’ll still come home, check his emails, whistle to himself, and mow the lawn after he reads every newspaper printed in the Lehigh Valley. It can be kind of aggravating when he doesn’t fight back right away. When the McHale signs showed up suddenly, long after ours, and they had copied our colors, our fonts, and our word placements, and then hundreds of our signs disappeared or were destroyed and ripped up or replaced by hers in the middle of the night, or blocked by hers so no one could see ours anymore, I and the rest of the sign volunteers were livid. I’m half Irish so some shanty Irish screaming banshee from the Potato Famine in my blood rose up and wanted to at least move the signs that were blocking ours. But Dad wouldn’t. He didn’t want to stoop down to a Hatfield and McCoy mudfight. My father hates it when people call us Pensyltucky even when others’ actions warrant the moniker.

Now that you have a blog, are you prepared for criticism?

I love it. I haven’t gotten many. Someone called me the Paris Hilton of Northampton County and someone else called me Prince Harry. I guess that insinuates I’m vapid and riding on my last name, but physically attractive. Someone else called me Little Stoffa too which is funny because I’m 6’4.”

What’s the most significant thing you’ve inherited from your father?

The first thing that comes to mind is my leg. My father and I both have a left leg exactly 3/8” shorter than the right leg. We buy rubber heel lifts off the Internet and I never have any so he gives me some from his stash. A great Christmas present for me are rubber heel lifts. My brother is a Republican and has legs of equal length. I sometimes question his legitimacy. I WISH I inherited his frugality. If I had my father’s frugality and ability to handle money, I’d be a lot better off financially right now. He rather pull some sweater of mine that I didn’t want out of the garbage than buy himself something new. He’s very careful with a dollar and I wasn’t surprised at all to find out that he was able to spare Northampton County any tax increases during the four years while increasing services at the same time. I think in these difficult economic times that’s the main reason people will vote for him.

What did you think when he first ran for County Executive?

I thought he was crazy. I knew when he retired he wouldn’t be happy. He likes to be involved and there were so many people still calling him for advice and keeping him in the loop about the County. Goats and peacocks and sunflower fields can occupy a mind like his for only so long. When he lost the County Council run, I didn’t understand why he would go for County Executive. I was in Miami and I’d hear reports about him running around all by himself with his signs and getting chased out of Redner’s parking lot when he was asking for petition signatures. I really didn’t think he’d be able to do it with such a small team. But some really good people came out of the woodwork volunteering to help him, people he didn’t know until that point and I think people underestimated him. No one took him seriously, especially the Establishment Democrats. I was proud when he won and I recall vividly the Morning Call article someone mailed to me in Florida that showed Boscola and Reibman watching the returns. Their expressions were classic. He really pulled it off but I said to himself, “Oh boy, he just made some enemies.“ I wish I still had that picture. Boscola and Riebman look like Simon Cowell and that pretty blonde British lady watching Susan Boyle belt out her first notes on Britain’s Got Talent.

What did you think when he wanted to run for re-election?

Well, that was a different story. He had had a back and hip operation in the same month and I wasn’t sure if he was up for it physically. But then one day he popped out of bed, put a suit on and went back to work. My grandfather Stoffa was diagnosed with black lung when he was 45 and was given months to live, and he lived to 85. His father, my great-grandfather Stoffa, lived to 100. Slovaks are hearty. I think it’s ironic that both Ann McHale and my Dad are Slovak and are running against each other. I wonder who’s a better chadash or polka dancer.

What do you wish people knew about John Stoffa that they don’t?

I wish people could see all the things he does for people that never get recognized. He has clients from Drug and Alcohol and Vocational Rehab that he met in the 60s who still call him for advice. The other day I was looking for pictures for this site and I found a letter from a woman in Northampton. Her husband and little boy were in line at the Carmike in front of my parents when the father realized he had forgotten his wallet so they couldn’t see the movie, which made the boy cry. My father gave the boy $20 and his address, telling him to mail back the money to him someday. Of course the mother did, thanking my father for teaching her son “that there still are good people in this world.” Now my father, didn’t save that letter. He never would have. My mother did. That’s just how he is.

What’s the most important thing your parents taught you?

They taught me to respect everyone, that no one is better than anyone else. There but for the Grace of God go I, you know? They could have been getting ready to go to the Governor’s Ball in Harrisburg, with a Congressman calling on the phone, but if Jake the Grinder who “come ta grind da corn” rang the doorbell, Jake would get just the same attention and the Congressman might have to wait a minute until Jake is greeted. That’s how they are. My mother’s family came from a lot of money and lost it all in the Depression. They had a chauffeur and maids and a ballroom and billiard room one minute, and then ’29 comes and they’re bartering with silver and selling blood to buy hot dogs to eat. You never know what the future holds. You might be in a great 3 bedroom colonial out in the townships with a perfect family, but you never know what can happen to your grandkids when they’re older, or the people they marry, and it’s always good to have good County services. I’ve known many people who complained about paying taxes for health and human services until their daughter suddenly gives birth to a child with Down’s Syndrome.

Why will you vote for your father?

Because he’s a nice guy, in the true sense of the word. I say that as an English major. When I heard he was referred to as a nice guy in a derogatory manner in public, I picked up my Merriam Webster dictionary, being the English major that I am and reacquainted myself with the word to see if I agreed.

Nice: “pleasing, agreeable, respectable, well-mannered, showing or requiring great accuracy, precision or skill, having or showing accurate perception, virtuous, suitable, proper, requiring tact or care."

Antonyms: "unpleasant, unkind, careless, improper, bad, disagreeable, horrible, nasty, repulsive, unlikable, unpleasant, disordered, imprecise, unmannerly, and unrefined."

A respectful person with great accuracy, precision, skill, and perception is much better than a careless disagreeable , imprecise, disordered and unrefined one. I’ll vote for a nice guy any day...

Monday, April 20, 2009

John Stoffa's Childhood: The Short and Simple Annals of the Poor


George Stoffa, John's brother, describes their childhood. As Abraham Lincoln summed up his own childhood, it could be described as "the short and simple annals of the poor."

Friday, April 17, 2009

Meet My Mom, the First Lady of Northampton County!


Name: Barbara Gallagher Stoffa

Place of Birth: Pottsville, PA

Education:
Hazleton High School, Wilkes University, B.A.., Chestnut Hill College MSW

Retired as Director of Lehigh County Childrens’ Mental Health

Currently President of the Board of the Child Advocacy Center of Lehigh County

Hobbies: Reading, traveling, history, playing Free Cell on her laptop while watching Netflix movies

Children: 2

JS: What’s it like being married to John Stoffa?

BGS: (long pause) …an adventure. It’s, um, always something new. Life with him has been full of offbeat unlikely interests and activities. I grew up in the suburbs and downtown residential areas of small towns. I had no farm background at all and so my husband having a beef steer, us buying a property with a barn and other outbuildings on it, having ducks and other kinds of farm animals was absolutely mind bending to me. I became very comfortable with it. I love animals. I loved it when we stabled horses on our property; I got a kick out of all of John’s interests in animal husbandry, but you can’t say I shared these interests. John and I were very much a “Green Acres” couple if you remember that old TV show.

JS: You were Zsa Zsa Gabor?

BGS: Yes, I was Zsa Zsa, or Eva. I think it was Eva Gabor. People ask me ‘Do you help John planting the corn?’ I usually answer “No, I don’t want to wreck my manicure.”

JS: Has he ever made you a birdhouse?

BGS: No, he hasn’t.

JS: If he did, what do you think it would look like?

BGS: I’m sure it would be extravagant, expensive, and colorful.

JS: It’s obvious the Stoffas are more private and less social than other political couples in the Lehigh Valley. Why is that?

BGS: That really isn’t by design. That just sort of evolved because John and I are definitely homebodies and John has always, well… yes, I’d say from very early on in his career he has served on Boards and had evening meetings, always had a full time job, and so when weekends came, we both wanted to be at home. We never talked about it or decided, we just preferred being in our own home. We would entertain, of course, but usually it was family, very close friends, visiting in each others’ homes, going to the movies. We really did not feel drawn to large social gatherings.

JS: What’s the biggest misconception about your husband?

BGS: That he is a serious, dour person. You have to spend some time with him in a small group to be able to see that he can be very silly and I’m sure most people can’t picture John Stoffa being silly, but believe me he has great capability in that direction.

JS: How has he changed politically in the last 40 years? …if he’s changed at all.

BGS: I think the most noticeable thing to me is the growth of his political interest. When we met and in the early days of our marriage, he didn’t have any more interest in politics than the average person in the street. It was when he began to work at the County level where he interacted with County Council and the County Executive that I saw his political interests really crystallize. I think that before that, politics was academic. But when he worked for the County and could actually see decisions being made and how they were being made and who had what part in making decisions, it became very real for him and he developed a very substantial interest in local politics at that time. Of course , he has a substantial interest in state and national politics, but he definitely believes all politics is local, as some famous politician once said.

JS: You like to say, “The things you don’t know at the altar.” What things did you not know?

BGS: Certainly, I never thought that one day I would be in a barn in February helping John help a ewe deliver her twins. Additionally, I didn’t know that he would develop such a huge interest in politics. I didn’t realize that he would develop such an interest in his community. I grew up in a home where neither parent was active in any community-building or community service organizations. They both played golf and that’s how they spent the bulk of their free time, and so this was a very new world to me: something I don’t think I ever could have anticipated unless perhaps I had been very analytic about his family . Looking back now I see that his father was very active in his community. So now it all seems very logical but as it developed it was all very surprising to me.

JS: What’s your favorite John Stoffa story?

BGS: I don’t know my favorite favorite but certainly one of the top five is a good example of how John can use humor to deal with things and be a little outrageous. He was serving as Director of Human Services and every year he had to present his budget to county council. He knew his budget was going to be controversial and raise some possibly angry discussion, so he went to a friend of his who was a Bethlehem policeman and borrowed a bullet proof jacket, the real thing. He showed up at the County Council meeting wearing it on top of his suit and made some silly remarks about “I’m ready to present my budget” and of course he looked goofy. He had a suit and a tie and shirt on. The bullet proof vest crushed the suit, and the shoulders looked goofy. The whole thing looked goofy yet he sat there in the meeting like that the whole time.

JS: Going back to the silly side of Dad, can you tell the salamander story?

BGS: Oh…. Puff the magic dragon? Well, when John and I were dating, there was a bar in Hazleton where I lived that we went to a lot called “The Anywhere.” It was one of those dark bars and I learned the hard way I think that one of the reasons they kept it so dark was so you couldn’t see how dirty the place was. At any rate, there were a bunch of us there and one of my friends is a fellow who was very easily affected by alcohol. We used to tell him that if he just read a beer label, he’d drop over. Well, John, out at State College had bought a pet at a pet store. It was a small salamander and he named it Puff the Magic Dragon. He was in Hazleton for the weekend to see me…

JS: What year is this?

BGS: This is somewhere between ’62 and’65. And so he had Puff the Magic Dragon in his sportcoat pocket, and of course didn’t tell anyone. So we’re at the “Anywhere” talking and drinking, and John very stealthily took Puff the Magic Dragon out of his coatpocket and just put him on the table that we were sitting at, and he, you know, all of us, except the friend who was so easily affected by alcohol, noticed it. John put his finger to his lips like, “Don’t say anything” and then of course we all caught on and so we just let Puff walk around the table until finally our friend Bruce noticed him and “Oh my God! What’s that?” and we all said, “What are you talking about?” and he said, “What? Oh my God? Is that a lizard or what is that thing?” And of course Puff is walking all over the table and we’re saying, “Bruce, I don’t see anything. You really have to slow down with your beer.” And so this went on and on until very unexpectedly, Bruce, getting more and more alarmed, swatted it off the table like it was a bug or something. So poor Puff goes flying off the table and lands on the floor. Then we were all up on our feet,“Oh my God, where’s Puff?” He had landed under the next table, which was occupied. John was on his feet like a fireman to the rescue, and he and I each got on the floor among these people’s feet and legs , telling them to be careful that there was a lizard here. They were screaming and finally John found him. Poor Puff was covered with dust balls that were stuck to his skin from being on this filthy floor of the bar. When John picked him up and put him back on our table, he really did look like Puff the Magic Dragon, he looked like a puff ball of dust. ..and of course Bruce said, “ I’ll never touch another drop. “

JS: Which of course didn’t happen.

BGS: No, it didn’t.

JS: To end this interview, is there anything you’d like to add or say yourself?

BGS: Um.…(pause) ….yes. I’d like to say… describe something about my husband that I’m proud of, and there are a lot of things, but this in particular in his political life: John is not the kind of a politician who’s real hot to have cornerstones laid and have his name engraved on things. In fact, I’d really say he isn’t a politician, but the best way to describe him in public office is that he’s an administrator, a manager. He sits down at his desk, looks at what work needs to be done and starts to do the work. He goes to very few political events, we don’t entertain, uh ... any differently than when we were first married, few close friends, family. So he sees the office he holds as his job. He goes there every day. He focuses on what needs to be done. The first year I’d say he focused very much on things that had already begun, needed to be finished, things that had deadlines. I think probably a year went by before he could get down to some of the things he wanted to. He is focused on the County and its needs. He has no ambitions for further office, which is of course a large part why he doesn’t go to the political things that anyone would who wanted to have further office. Certainly, he sees nothing wrong with those events, but they just doesn’t apply to him. He goes to work and does the things that aren’t glamorous . They’re not exciting, there’s no fanfare necessarily, but they are the things that need to be done, no more than cutting the grass, doing the food shopping, cleaning the house, or changing the oil in your car. He is engaged in the maintenance of this County in the most cost-efficient and fair minded way. He is not going to build buildings and lay cornerstones. That is not him. I am very proud of him that he doesn’t have a need to do things like that and he can focus on the non-glamorous, but necessary things.

JS: Are you going to vote for him?

BGS: Yes.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

What Do The Neighbors Think?


Before deciding an issue, I always consider what impact it will have on good people like the Strassers.

Monday, April 13, 2009

My Father's Fingers

As a young boy, I experienced a dreaded family ritual that I expected every time I brought a new friend home for dinner. I knew it was coming as soon as I saw my father at the head of the table begin to raise his fingers in the form of a Churchill/Nixon V for Victory sign.

"You kids had better eat your vegetables or else Mrs. Stoffa will do this to you!" he'd say smiling and laughing and nodding towards his hand. My friends would shriek in horror, fascination and delight as their eyes darted from his fingers to my mother scooping out applesauce. If anyone had been looking at me, which they never were at this point, they would have seen my eyes rolling to the back of my head.

"John, stop that. Kids, don't pay any attention to him," my mother would say to my friends as they viewed and touched the famed fingers up close, asking questions about how they got that way.

My father often pokes fun at his fingers in social and even professional situations, but few people know the backstory of how they got that way, (with the exception of a number of 40 year old friends of mine that had the pleasure of eating at our home back in the mid 70s.)

In 1947 when John Stoffa was eight years old, he and his older brother George were working a tripod cornstalk cutter that wielded a sharp blade that came down on the stalks that the operator pushed towards the blade. My grandfather let his 8 and 10 year old sons work this machine unsupervised while he was doing other farmwork.

Somehow my father pushed a cornstalk too far and down came the blade. Just little boys, they panicked and the fingers were lost somewhere in a nearby pig pen and never found again. My dad was rushed to Coaldale Hospital, but the real trauma was that in his childish ignorance, he did not realize that he had any hopes of surviving. While his older sisters wrapped the bleeding fingers in cloth and my grandfather drove through red lights, my father calmly waited to die, not saying anything to anybody. It wasn't until he was in the hospital being prepared for a operation on his hand that he realized that you don't automatically die from severed fingers.

As a child I thought he was torturing my friends with his dinner joke. Now as an adult I realize he was actually a lot smarter than I thought. The kids were bound to notice the fingers sooner or later and might have been uncomfortable, distracted, or scared had he said nothing or talked about the fingers in a serious tone. What better way to put them at ease than to use humor and let them ask questions to learn more?

John Stoffa embraced his physical imperfection using humor. The "Mrs. Stoffa will cut your fingers off if you don't eat your vegetables" joke that made my friends shriek and laugh in horror and glee back in the 70s is only one of many finger jokes in his repetoire. He's got a million of 'em.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Will You Help Me?

My father is running for re-election as County Executive of Northampton County and faces the Democratic Primary on May 19. Under his administration there have been no tax increases, Republicans and Democrats have served together in his Cabinet in a bi-partisan spirit, and he refuses to accept campaign contributions to keep his loyalty to the people and not special interests.

Because he doesn't accept campaign contributions, he manages his campaign all by himself. Will you help us with lawn signs? We're looking for people who are willing to place a lawn sign in their yard. Or if you have friends or family in Northampton County that would be open to it, please submit their information. I will come and deliver the lawnsign personally! (Hide your valuables.)

Who wants a lawn sign? Who has a loved one in Northampton County that will let us place one in their yard? Please write me at JeffStoffa@gmail.com.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Wanna' Send a "Dear John" Letter?

If you have any questions about the county and would like an answer, just post a comment or send an email to JohnStoffa@gmail.com. My Dad tells me he's received many "Dear John" letters in his time.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Greetings

Hi, everyone. My Dad, John Stoffa, is seeking your vote for Northampton County Executive. He refuses to raise money like other politicians and won't blow his own horn, so we're going to toot it for him.

This is a blog by the family, friends and supporters of John Stoffa. He has restored integrity to county government. He's kept your taxes low. He has started our first ever organized open space plan to preserve our beautiful farmlands and precious streams. He has helped make the county's citizens safer with innovations like reverse 911, which allows the government to call you in the event of an emergency.

He's not finished. He'd like four more years, and that's up to you. From time to time, my dad will weigh in on important issues. But this blog will tell you a little bit more about John Stoffa the man.

I hope you all enjoy the time you spend visiting with us. The picture you see is my brother and me at our dad's swearing-in ceremony.

Addition: I'm the one pictured on the right. On the left is my brother, Greg.