Daily admission to Mt. Lebanon Swim Center is increasing slightly for most customers this year.
During their discussion session Tuesday, Mt. Lebanon commissioners reached several decisions with regard to the centerâs operation in 2021, including raising the daily cost of attendance by $1 for everyone except children ages 2 and younger, who will continue to be admitted for free.
What are intended as the temporary prices, $9 for regular admission and $8 for students and senior citizens, reflect adjustments to the swim centerâs operations as precautions against the spread of COVID-19.
Attendance at the start of the season will be limited to 300 customers during open-swim sessions, which in turn are relegated to a pair of daily three-hour time slots, from 12 to 3 p.m. and 4 to 7 p.m.
Mar. 3—With about 30 seconds until half, Mt. Lebanon decided to hold for the final shot, but Seneca Valley wasn't in a wait-and-see mood. Connor Lyczek converted a steal near midcourt into a breakaway layup and teammate Caiden Oros followed with a steal and layup seconds later as Seneca Valley played like a team hungry for its first playoff win in eight years. "One hundred percent, we were .
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A Cecil Township woman has been indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly falsifying records at a Mt. Lebanon nursing home so it would look like residents were receiving sufficient care.
Susan Gilbert, 60, of Lawrence, was indicted this week on charges of health care fraud, obstruction of a federal audit and conspiracy to defraud the United States by a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh. Gilbert is the former administrator of Mt. Lebanon Rehabilitation and Wellness Center, a skilled nursing facility that is owned by the same company that operates the Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center in Beaver County, which is being investigated by the state for criminal neglect due to the large number of residents that became infected with COVID-19 in the early days of the pandemic.
Mt. Lebanon Commission has arrived at a timetable for enactment and implementation of an ordinance revision addressing on-street overnight parking.
During their discussion session conducted Tuesday via Zoom, commissioners agreed to introduce the revision at their March 9 regular meeting and conduct a public hearing March 23. A vote on the ordinance then could be taken as early as April 13.
Commissioners also decided on Oct. 1 for the start of a grace period prior to enforcement of a key provision of the ordinance beginning Jan. 1.
At that point, residents would have a maximum of 20 nights annually per vehicle license plate for requesting exceptions to the long-standing prohibition of parking on public streets between 2 and 6 a.m.