Upper darby police station. Rides up on the curb and brushes the entry gate. The driver parks around back, officers watch this unfold, but they couldnt believe what they found. He told police he had 12 to 14 beers. And he was whacked out. He was in ineeb reeuated. The driver 45 told police he was looking for a safe place after admitting he had been drinking. He stopped for drinks in new jersey and then philadelphia before ending up at their backdoor. You can smell the alcohol, efs unsteady getting out of the car. He tried to do the field sobriety test but hen couldnt stand up. Its crazy that they pulled into the police station. While most try to run from the cops, he went right to them. His car is now impounded but he did make bail. People say they are glad he ended up where he did. They felt the guilt and they were like im in trouble. Just go right to the station. Maybe he would have gotten into a car accident instead of going to the police station. E he could have hurt somebody. Repo
20 years ago, a public-private partnership involving Bethlehem Steel executives, public officials and a nonprofit laid the groundwork for the transformation of the massive, 4.5-mile Steel campus into Lehigh Valley Industrial Park VII. Today, the park has 32 business tenants employing some 4,200 workers.
Nation’s largest vertical farm company is building its biggest facility in Bethlehem
Updated Dec 14, 2020;
Posted Dec 14, 2020
Bowery Farming Inc. has broken ground on its fourth and largest indoor vertical farm in LVIP VII in Bethlehem.Courtesy photo | For lehighvalleylive.com
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A company that develops indoor farms with crops stacked vertically, floor to ceiling, is building its fourth and biggest facility in Bethlehem.
Bowery Farming Inc. has broken ground on the new location in LVIP VII, a 1,000-acre component of the Bethlehem Commerce Center along Route 412 that Lehigh Valley Industrial Park Inc. began developing in 2004 on former Bethlehem Steel Corp. land.