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Snyder County Commissioner Joe Kantz speaks about a planned drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility in Spring Township, Snyder County, on Tuesday. More than 75 residents packed into a tiny municipal hall to express fears the facility will bring crime to the area.Damian Gessel/The Daily Item
Damian Gessel /

Published March 26, 2008 12:31 am - A Williamsport-based company's plan to bring a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center to Beaver Springs has dozens of local residents furious.


Residents in uproar over plan
75 pack Snyder County hall in opposition to Firetree facility

By Damian Gessel
The Daily Item

BEAVER SPRINGS -- A Williamsport-based company's plan to bring a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center to Beaver Springs has dozens of local residents furious.

More than 75 people squeezed into the tiny Spring Township Municipal Building Tuesday in a show of opposition to Alcat Reentry Centers Inc.'s March 18 purchase of a building along Route 522. Many here are worried the facility -- a subsidiary of Firetree Ltd. -- will bump up crime and burden taxpayers.

"I've read about residents in halfway houses getting out, breaking free, raping and killing. I'm worried about the area's overall public safety," said Beaver Springs resident Stephanie Friel, who said she left Pittsburgh, in part, because of crime.

Snyder County commissioners weren't thrilled with news of Alcat's purchase of the former T & T Bargain Boys building, either. Chairman Joe Kantz attended Tuesday's Spring Township meeting, lending words of reason to a session that several times threatened to dip into anger and disorder.

"We're doing everything we can. This is top priority for us until we get some answers," Kantz said, adding that the commissioners are looking into a few "small glimmers of hope" for preventing the rehabilitation facility from coming to Snyder County.

Among other concerns, Kantz is worried the nonprofit facility will eat up thousands of dollars in tax revenue.

But Allen Ertel, chairman of the executive committee for Firetree Ltd., dismissed residents' fears in a phone interview on Tuesday.

"People are misinformed. They're making inaccurate assumptions. I've seen the e-mail," Ertel said, referring to the online e-mail chain that drew many Beaver Springs residents to Tuesday's meeting. "They're out to destroy everything. I don't believe they're doing what's good for the community."

Firetree is considering Alcat only for a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility, not for a halfway house, Ertel said. He also dismissed the notion Alcat would bring "undesirable elements" to Snyder County.

"When someone is only here for 30-60 days, there are no camp followers. Those are for a prison, and we're not a prison," he said.

Most of Firetree's six rehab facilities have faced local opposition, Ertel said. Two -- one planned for Upper Augusta Township, Northumberland County, and another planned for Laurelton -- were shot down by local leaders.

"It's the old NIMBY complex," Ertel said. "Not in my backyard."

But those that stuck, he said, have gained acceptance from the community.

"You can call over to Wernersville (where several Firetree facilities are located). Call the police chief, call the supervisors, call the county commissioners. They all support us," Ertel said.

Alcat would bring high-paying jobs to Snyder County, Ertel said.



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