


- #West mountain sanitarium scranton pa registration#
- #West mountain sanitarium scranton pa portable#
- #West mountain sanitarium scranton pa windows#
My only suggestions would be to label above the windows so that the staff wouldn't have to keep telling every person who tries to queue that they have to go to the window on the right to check in first, and then queue in the line approaching the window on the left. The setup was outside with two different windows. Otherwise, I commend the county and providers there for responding in such a responsible manner to the Covid testing needs of county residents. A number of patients were heard complaining about location/poor signage & directions.
#West mountain sanitarium scranton pa portable#
You should have a portable sign on Lancaster Ave or tell people the location is at back of IHOP parking lot and in between post office location. The address you have on the website doesn’t exist on Google Maps or Waze ( GPS). We looked around for 20 min and had to ask the nearby fire Dept for directions. The other suggestion is better signage and direction at your Ardmore site. Thankfully, your attentive staff were able to accommodate us. That would have been a major problem for us. If I hadn’t called ( as a senior citizen, I had to arrange travel to your site with my daughter) we May have been turned away.
#West mountain sanitarium scranton pa registration#
Your system needs to confirm immediately once registration is complete. Why only 1/2? The person on the telephone line was EXTREMELY helpful! She called the site staff, kept me on the telephone line and gave me real-time updates until we could straighten it all out. When I called the telephone number to confirm my appointment, there was no record of me making the appointment on line, however 1/2 the info I provided via online registration was in the record. When I booked the reservation, I never received a confirmation email. “By early summer, this thing is gonna look amazing.The reservation process and site location needs to be improved. Everybody knows about this place,” he said. They’re filling in the old foundations and plan to restore the concrete and stone structures, including a red brick fireplace and chimney on a spot that offers spectacular views of the Lackawanna Valley. They’ve cleared out the trash and heavy growth. On Tuesday, he made his way up a cobbled driveway with his leaf blower uncovering curbs, clearing away years’ worth of leaves, exposing the road surface maybe for the first time in decades. For now, they enjoy restoring the land themselves. He hopes someone with visions for a park or other public space will pick it up, he said. They bought it as an investment property and hope to sell it some day, Joe Harris said. Others said he’s building hundreds of homes. One was that he was building an outdoor shooting range to augment Roll Call’s indoor range at the bottom of the mountain. Joe Harris heard rumors of all kinds about what his family wants to do. The family runs the Roll Call firearms and tactical gear shop off North Keyser Avenue, but says its plans have nothing to do with its other business. When Joe Harris, his father Tom and brother Tom III bought it, they found the only intruders to be hundreds of old tires and heavy overgrowth, the kind that made the old roads winding through it barely passable by ATV. “At one point you could drive right back in there,” he said, explaining how shenanigans dwindled after gates and natural barriers were raised. Supervisor David Bird, though not so much anymore. The place had once been a trap for troublemakers, said Ransom Twp. Layers of graffiti cake the stone and concrete structures still standing, immune to fire and weather. The old hospital and outbuildings off North Sekol Avenue are gone. Joe Harris and his family spend their off days working across the former West Mountain Sanitarium campus after they bought it at auction from its former owner, Peter Sabia, last year for $141,750, according to county records. He finds solace in the same fresh air that tuberculosis patients sought for healing decades ago when the 37 acres offered sick people escape from the valley’s choking smoke and soot. He had earbuds in his ears and a commercial leaf blower strapped to his back. Cold wind snapped across West Mountain where Joe Harris worked alone.
