Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Businesses, volunteers restoring life and hope in Brownsvill­e

- By Kris B. Mamula

The question from the retired guy in the yoga class was the kind of thing a kid might ask: “I’m interested in planting some flowers in Brownsvill­e. Can you help me?”

“I kind of laughed,” yoga teacher Laura Patterson remembered about the inquiry from Joe Barantovic­h. That was a couple of years ago. Now, she has a different view about their meeting and the changes spawned by their partnershi­p.

“It’s really been a true catalyst,” said Ms. Patterson, 39, a lifelong Fayette County resident who owns a wellness center in Brownsvill­e, a postage stamp-size borough about 40 miles south of Pittsburgh.

The Fayette County Chamber of Commerce, Brownsvill­e Area Chamber of Commerce, elected officials and others did the ribbon-and-giant-scissors thing Friday at 11 businesses that have opened in recent months in the Brownsvill­e area: a 33,000-square-foot grocery store in Redstone and a

barbershop, cigar store, deli and others in the borough. It was the chamber’s biggest one-day ribbon-cutting in its 50-year history, the business booster group said.

Brownsvill­e, a gritty Monongahel­a River town with a coal and steel history, was overdue for a good day. The borough has been losing ground since the mines played out and the mills closed in the early 1980s.

About 700 of the town’s 2,000 residents earn less than $12,700 a year for an individual, $17,240 for a family of two, meeting the federal guidelines for impoverish­ed. The biggest employer in the borough, where the population peaked at more than 8,000 in 1940, is the Brownsvill­e Ambulance Service.

Mayor Ross Swords admits that Brownsvill­e doesn’t have the “best-looking downtown.” Just don’t speak ill of it, he snapped. That would be “like talking bad about a family member,” the 36-year-old mayor said.

“I think you’re going to see a rebirth in Brownsvill­e.”

Things started happening in Brownsvill­e about the time of the meeting in the yoga class: Along with new businesses, the town library — facing closure in 2019 due to money problems — is now planning an expansion after receiving a $250,000 state grant while the borough continues snapping up vacant buildings for rehabilita­tion.

Along the way, flowers got planted around town and dilapidate­d buildings got a fresh coat of paint with the help of students from the local high school.

“It just makes everybody feel better,” said Lori Barron, 40, Brownsvill­e Free Public Library director. “People seem nicer.”

Uniontown native Darnell Samuel said the sprucing up shows visitors that people care. “It brings life to the businesses,” the 44-yearold said. “It attracts so many people.”

He chose a storefront on Market Street, Brownsvill­e’s main drag, to open a barbershop in January. That was one of the stops for Friday’s marathon ribbon-cutting.

Among the people a beaming Mr. Samuel thanked Friday was the mayor, who he said personally trimmed the tree outside his shop.

Mr. Barantovic­h, 68, a native of Brownsvill­e, taught high school physical education and English in Miami for 35 years, returning home to spend holidays with his parents who lived in the borough. His parents have since died, and he now spends his summers at his parents’ home in Brownsvill­e and winters at a home in Florida.

“I just wanted to plant some flowers,” he said. “It would make me feel better driving through town. I knew I could do it myself if I had to.”

Turns out, he didn’t have to do it himself: More than 100 volunteers turned out last year to pick up trash, trim trees and dress up vacant lots with flowers, all kinds. A second planting and cleanup day is scheduled for Saturday.

Last year, Mr. Barantovic­h and Ms. Patterson cofounded the Brownsvill­e Perennial Project, a nonprofit community group, which received nearly $10,000 this year from the Laurel Highlands Visitors Bureau to continue work in the community.

Coincident­ally, new businesses began opening amid downtown’s abandoned buildings about the time the flowers began sprouting.

“We’ve got kids here, adults here, who haven’t known anything but the blight that Brownsvill­e was,” Mr. Barantovic­h said. “We’re just trying to change the conversati­on. I’m just happy to be part of it.”

Ms. Patterson, who has a degree in landscape architectu­re from West Virginia University, said she quickly embraced his idea. Brownsvill­e needs to create a future for young people, so students understand “they don’t necessaril­y have to run away at full speed after graduation,” she said. “That’s a major problem in these small towns.”

The borough has had painful false starts in the past. In the 1990s, a Pittsburgh area couple bought up more than 100 properties, many of them historic. They planned to create a tourist attraction, with entertainm­ent, shopping and nightlife.

But the properties became derelict and tax delinquent, the dreams of a resort evaporated and the borough began acquiring the properties by eminent domain.

This time around is different, Ms. Patterson said: “Every time everybody counts us out, we stand back up.”

 ?? Michael M. Santiago/Post-Gazette photos ?? Darnell Samuel, owner of Market Street Barbershop, center, is surrounded by employees and friends as he cuts a ribbon during a ceremony sponsored by the Fayette County Chamber of Commerce at Market Street Barbershop in Brownsvill­e.
Michael M. Santiago/Post-Gazette photos Darnell Samuel, owner of Market Street Barbershop, center, is surrounded by employees and friends as he cuts a ribbon during a ceremony sponsored by the Fayette County Chamber of Commerce at Market Street Barbershop in Brownsvill­e.
 ??  ?? A marathon ribbon-cutting Friday in Brownsvill­e attracted elected officials and others.
A marathon ribbon-cutting Friday in Brownsvill­e attracted elected officials and others.

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