UpdatedThu, May 6, 2021 at 9:21 am ET
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(Lorraine Swanson/Patch)
BUCKS COUNTY, PA Does Amazon have plans for a second grocery store location in Bucks County?
While the company has declined to comment on the plans, official sources say Amazon is planning a grocery store at the former K-Mart store on Street Road in Bensalem. It would be the second Amazon grocery store location in Bucks County. A store has been confirmed in Warrington but is not yet open. Amazon doesn t comment on rumors or speculation, said Laura Hayes, a spokesperson for the company, when contacted via email by Patch on Wednesday.
Not 1 but 2 Amazon Grocery Stores Coming to Bucks County ?
Are the rumors true? Is Amazon planning to open a second Amazon-branded grocery store in Bucks County? One store has been confirmed to open in Warrington but there is speculation that another store is in the works.
Apparently, store #2 is slated to open at the site of the former K-Mart store on Street Road in Bensalem. A spokesperson for Amazon stated that, Amazon doesn t comment on rumors or speculation”. While the company is saying it’s a rumor, official sources say that a second store will be opening. So, what’s the truth?
DoorDash DA made 300+ deliveries while on the county clock, controller says
Updated May 04, 2021;
A then-Bucks County prosecutor made more than 300 food deliveries for DoorDash while he was supposed to be working for the county, according to the controller.
Gregg Shore was the county’s first assistant district attorney and a top aide to Bucks County District Attorney Matt Weintraub.
Last month, after learning about the double-dipping, Weintruab demoted Shore to deputy district attorney. Shore later resigned.
Controller Neale Dougherty said the district attorney’s office submitted paperwork to change Shore’s payroll records for the time used for the deliveries, 97 hours, from “worked” to vacation time.
Bucks County gym owner files defamation lawsuit over petition alleging his involvement in the Capitol insurrection Ellie Rushing, The Philadelphia Inquirer
The owner of a Bucks County gym and wellness center filed a defamation lawsuit against a Doylestown resident and the website he used to make a petition, in which he called on people and businesses to boycott the facility over the owner’s involvement in organizing buses to go to the U.S. Capitol the day of the Jan. 6 insurrection.
The lawsuit, filed Friday in Bucks County’s Court of Common Pleas, alleges that MoveOn.org and Gregory Bullough, who created the petition, are responsible for publishing “false, malicious and defamatory” accusations against Jim Worthington, the owner of Newtown Athletic Club.
The University has launched a podcast to tell stories from within its community.
For years, the La Salle University community has read about faculty, alumni, and student achievements. Now, Explorers everywhere can listen to them, too.
In April, the University debuted a podcast, 20th & Olney, aimed at bringing to life the transformational student successes, professional outcomes, and faculty achievements for which La Salle is known. The biweekly podcast is produced by La Salle University Marketing and Communicationâwith hosts Shea Wright and Patrick Berkery, and editorial support from Christopher A. Vito.
20th & Olney will deliver biweekly episodes that focus on short-form, intimate interviews with those closest to La Salleâincluding faculty, staff, current students, alumni, and more.