Paper Work for New $9.4 Million City Water Treatment Plant Continues

By Megan Paolini

NEWS Correspondent

Gloucester City Council approved an ordinance on first reading last week authorizing funds for the replacement of the Water Treatment plant

The estimated cost for the new plant is $9,445,000.

The ordinance also authorized the issuance of general obligation bonds for the amount $9,445,000, and authorized certain related actions in connection with the water treatment plant.

Council approved a resolution to adopt a temporary capital budget.

Another resolution was adopted as presented to adopt emergency temporary budget appropriations.

The Council also okayed a resolution for the disposal of city owned equipment, as well as a resolution authorizing an application for a grant from the NJ Department of Environ-mental protection.

Council passed a resolution removing a handicapped parking space at 116 Ellis St.

Another resolution was adopted authorizing the endorsement of treatment works approval application. A resolution was also adopted authorizing the submission of an application to the NJ Local Finance Board.

An ordinance was passed on second reading establishing zoning certificate fees and amending the Housing Code chapter in the Code of Gloucester City.

During open forum Steve Martorano reminded the Council of his suggestion to have court proceeding held in the evening so people do not have to miss a day of work to take care of their legal business.

Councilwoman Jean Kaye told Martorano that the Council had discussed it last year but could not follow through with the idea because they would have to go through the union.

During the meeting, Fire Chief Brain Hagan and Fire Lieutenants Michael Hagan and Charles Sanderson took their oaths of office.

Council also presented the Sportsman Athletic Club with a resolution of appreciation for 50 years of service to Gloucester City.

The next meeting will be Thursday, May 24, at 8 p.m. in City Hall, 313 Monmouth St.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Did the School Board Look at Every Option Before Making the Staff Cuts?

Bill\’s Point of View:

 

Did the Gloucester City School Board have to lay off nearly 50 employees? Pink slips were handed out last week. We all understand that some moves had to be made because of the reduced Budget. And the Board was able to reduce the original number of cutbacks from 70 to around 50. But how many more jobs could be saved if a little more thought and effort was put into the process?

 

For example:

 

  • If the Board closed down the Highland Park School (the Alternative School) and moved the staff and the 43 students to the High School the District could save $200,000 in maintenance cost. Classes would be from 3 PM to 8 PM, instead of 2:30 PM to 7:30 PM therefore there would be no interference with the normal operation of the school. The jobs of six aides or four teachers could be saved.
  • By closing the Highland Park School for good the District could possibly save $600,000 or more in salaries and expenses. The benefit, the jobs of 12 teachers would be saved; or none of the Teacher Aide positions would have to be eliminated.
  • By holding the starting salary of the executive secretary at $40,000 instead of $55,000; and not increasing the salary of the new high school secretary, the job of one teacher\’s aide would be saved.
  • Cutting the position of Public Information Officer the District would free up $60,000. In doing so the position of one teacher would be saved.
  • Asking the teachers union for a 1 percent decrease in salaries an approximate savings of $300,000 would be realized. Thus saving the position of six teachers and the District\’s Attendance Officer\’s job.

 

What is your opinion?

Incidentally the Board of Education meets Tuesday night, at 8 PM in the Mary Ethel Costello School Library, Cumberland and Joys Streets. The public is invited to attend and speak out.

more on this subject

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Mount Ephraim Police Dept. Has New DARE Vehicle

By Bill Bates

NEWS Correspondent

The Mount Ephraim Police Department recently placed into service a new D.A.R.E. vehicle that was formerly a patrol vehicle for the borough

The vehicle is a 2001 Ford that has over 91,000 miles. The vehicle was transformed out of the patrol fleet in 2007 and was placed as an unmarked vehicle for the department. Recently, the vehicle has been transformed into the new D.A.R.E. vehicle for the town.

Recently the MEPD took over Drug Abuse Resistance Education in the borough after the Camden County Sheriff\’s Department had been performing this function for about 10 years. Currently Mount Ephraim Police Officer Scott Pezzano is the D.A.R.E. Officer for the Mount Ephraim School District, but Officer Danielle Dunay is expected to take over within the next year.

Since the Mount Ephraim Police took over the D.A.R.E. program about a year ago, Police Chief Edward Dobleman said that he has wanted to do something for the kids to give back.

Chief Dobleman came across this company from New York that does vehicle graphics, but had only wrapped a D.A.R.E. vehicle with graphics just once before speaking with him. Chief Dobleman was able to get the company to agree to wrap the vehicle as a D.A.R.E. car. The Police Chief spoke with Mayor Reader and Commissioners Gaglianone and Chambers and they agreed with him that since this was Mount Ephraim\’s first year of providing their own D.A.R.E. program with the kids that they do something for them in return.

A date was then set up with the owners of VSP Graphics in West Seneca, New York, and the company made their way from New York to New Jersey for this special project. The vehicle was then wrapped by the company at the boro garage and was completed in about a day.

The vehicle looks black in color to most, but when the sun hits it at the right angle you are able to tell that it is actually a dark green. The D.A.R.E. vehicle is complete with the Mount Ephraim Police Department Patch logo, which is being uniformed on all of the new vehicles that are added to the MEPD fleet. The D.A.R.E. vehicle is also complete with the D.A.R.E. logo and a few other D.A.R.E. trademarks. This vehicle is still able to be used for patrol functions as it has all of the equipment needed to stay in service.

Police Chief Dobleman said, \”The kids love it when they see the new D.A.R.E. vehicle on patrol. It turns their heads and gives them a sense of pride, which was the Department\’s intention.\”

The Mount Ephraim Police Department invites residents to view the website: mountephraimpd.com.

It was created to allow greater access to information about the Mount Ephraim Police Department, as well as the many services they offer as a law enforcement agency.

The page has links to NJ\’s 12 Most Wanted Criminals, NJ Missing Persons, and also has useful information that can be obtained via the Internet versus visiting the police station.

Residents may contact any of the officers via email as an email list is provided. The Mount Ephraim Police Department welcomes and encourages interaction and will be ready to assist with any resident\’s needs.

 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

WHEN EAST MEETS WEST!

 

Commentary By Hank F. Miller JR. (Hank is a former resident of Gloucester City who now resides in Japan)

 

 

As a student at St Mary\’s school in Gloucester City, at the beginning of my education so very long ago. I fell between the bumper stickers.

You know:

My kid is An Honor Student.

And:

My Kid Can Beat Up Your Honor Student. I had little aptitude for stuff like math, science or spelling, a real disadvantage that was compounded by a comatose-esque level of motivation.

But I will say this for myself. When it came to being in the right seat, in the right classroom, at the right time, I had National Honor Society numbers. If she\’s still there and not retired to Newburg by now or somewhere else, just ask Sister Roseanne.

You look at one of my old multicolored report cards, and you won\’t see anything but glowing comment concerning my attendance, punctuality and sense of geography.

(I also got along well with others.)

Unfortunately, I don\’t think I would be capable of achieving such a level of excellence today. This is because the typical classroom schedule is now sophisticated well beyond the average adult\’s ability to comprehend it

You think getting the clock on the VCR to stop blinking is a challenge, then take a peek at something called \”block scheduling.

\”What is block scheduling? Here is a way a newspaper story here described the system that has gone into effect here in this country of Japan a while back.\” Eight periods will be held one day in five and each of the other four days will have a different combination of classes in six periods. There will be two 50-minute periods, one 75 -minute period and one 41-minute period during the five day period.\”I don\’t know about anybody else, but as for me to follow this schedule, I\’d have to be tracked by satellites to comprehend this.

The purpose of blocked scheduling is to give students longer periods of uninterrupted time with teachers. This, of course, is not always a good thing.

I mean, if the teacher happens to be that \”Dead Poets Society\” guy, fine. You need extra time to get back and forth from caves and stuff. Or if the class involves slicing and dicing frogs, or sex education, or something–or any combination thereof–then, sure, I can also see how some extra time might be a good idea depending.

But say you get one of those teachers whose delivery makes Steve Wright sound like Martin Luther King? What happens then? If you go to a lot of meetings, you know all too well what happens then.

Yes spend the whole time fixated on the stapler and fighting the urge to grab it and drive enough U-shaped shards or wire into your skull to induce unconsciousness.

Still, there is still hope.

The good thing about something like block scheduling is that it is an education trend, which means it has shrimped sun-bathing.

In the near future, someone with more degrees than a Death Valley day will decide that because today\’s kids have the attention span of men with remotes, they need constant stimulation.

Thus,\”Nanosecond scheduling,\” Which calls for five-minute periods and the constant changing of classrooms, will become the rage. And I will have been born far too early.

 

Warm Regards From Kitakyushu City , Japan

 

Enjoy A Most Wonderful Spring.

 

Hank F. Miller Jr.

 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Fishing on The Gracie

Fishing Aboard \”The Gracie\”

 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Obit Mildred Moore, of Bellmawr

MOORE, MILDRED C.
(nee Couter) Age 90, on May 3, of the Saunders Ave. area of Bellmawr for over 80 years.
Dearest wife of the late Elwood and dearly beloved mother of Mildred Shakes-peare (Richard) of Pa., Robert (Emma) of Florida and Patricia Schukay (Paul) of Stratford. She is also survived by nine grandchildren Cynthia Cramer, Susan Hall, Richard Shakespeare Jr., Janice Sharp, Robert Moore Jr., Thomas Moore, Elizabeth Coniglio, Michelle Cowan and Lisa Marshall and 21 great grandchildren.
Mildred and her late husband, Elwood, formed the 1st Girl Scout Troop (Troop 139) in Bellmawr. She was a long time member of the Gloucester County Historical Society, 55 plus Christian Fellowship, and Elder Med. at JFK Health Systems.
Relatives and friends are invited to celebrate a Christian Burial Service Tuesday, May 8 at 11:00 am at THE FUNERAL MANOR, 1585 Hider Lane, Gloucester Twp. The viewing will be after 10:00 Tuesday morning at THE FUNERAL MANOR. Interment Hillcrest Memorial Park, Hurffville, NJ.
The family requests donations be given in Mildred\’s name to the Bellmawr Baptist Church Memorial Fund, 108 Kingston Ave., Bellmawr, NJ 08031.
The arrangements are under the direction of Addison G. Bradley.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Obit Chas Berwick of Bellmawr

BERWICK, CHARLES R.
On May 2, 2007; of Bellmawr, NJ; age 60 years.
Beloved husband of Kathleen T. (nee Kennedy); Devoted father of Denea and her husband Kenneth Jordan, and Charles and his wife Mindy; Dear son of Esther and the late Edwin Berwick; Loving Pop-Pop of Alex, Cory, Casey and Elizabeth; Dear brother of Edwin and his wife Marion, Eileen and her husband Raymond Dybus, James and his wife Linda, and the late Thomas and his wife Donna; also survived by many aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins.
Prior to his retirement, Mr. Berwick was employed at the Philadelphia Naval Yard for 26 years. For the past 12 years, he was employed by Superior Supply in Brooklawn. A United States Army Veteran, Mr. Berwick also served as a Reserve Police Officer in Bellmawr for several years.
Relatives and friends are invited to the Visitation and Funeral on Sunday from 1 PM at the Falco/Caruso & Leonard Pennsauken Funeral Home, 6600 North Browning Road, where a Funeral Service will be held at 3 PM. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Samaritan Hospice, 5 Eves Drive, Suite 300, Marlton, NJ 08053 or to the American Cancer Society, 1651 Old Cuthbert Road, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034. Info, condolences and guestbook at:

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Fishing Aboard \”The Gracie\”

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Puppies love to bite.

By Allan, DogCareTips

The do it naturally but it is something that they
must be taught not to do.

This needs to be addressed while they are young
because dog bites can lead to all sorts of
problems including legal action.

It may seem fun and funny to have a puppy biting
but a full-grown dog can do a lot of damage,
particularly to children if they are in the habit
of biting.

Dogs have immense strength in their jaws and even
a playful nip can do permanent damage to a child.

Generally, puppies are taught to control their
biting from their mothers but in most cases we get
puppies as pets that have been taken from their
mothers at a very young age and it is up to us to
teach them as puppies not to bite.

By letting your dog socialize with other dogs from
a young age they will quickly learn from their
elders, provided they have been taught well, that
the desire to bite needs to be curbed to avoid
retaliation and an ensuing fight.

The sooner the puppy is taught not to bite by the
owner or by interaction with other dogs, the less
aggressive they will become as they grow older and
the more pleasant they will be to live with.

Taking a puppy to a dog training school will allow
it to interact with other dogs where it will
quickly be corrected for any misbehavior.

Puppies should generally learn to interact with
other dogs within the first three months of their
life.

The longer this is left the more difficult it
becomes for your dog to socialize correctly and
they can become dangerous later in life.

As with children, the sooner your puppy can learn
correct behavior patterns the better they will be
in the long term.

It is also wise to get the puppy to behave
correctly in the presence of other animals
including cats and any other pets that they might
come in contact with over their life.

There are many items that are available from the
pet stores and vets that can give your puppy
suitable satisfaction to chew and bite upon.

This will allow your puppy to learn what is right
and what is not right to bite.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Obit Mary L. Blyth, of Audubon

Mary L. Blyth nee Costello), on May 3, 2007, of Audubon Park, NJ age 89 yrs. Beloved wife of the late James J. Blyth; devoted mother of James M. (Jean) Blyth of Blackwood, Joan Blyth of Audubon Park, Theresa (Tom) Mosteig of Cherry Hill; loving grandmother of James Blyth, Sean Blyth, Marie Edwards, Susan Mosteig, cherished great grandmother of Brendan Blyth and Vivian Edwards; dear sister of Thomas Costello of Barrington, NormaAnderson of Deptford and Alice Quinn of Willingboro.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend the visitation Monday morning from 9AM-10:15AM at Holy Maternity Church, 431 W. Nicholson Rd., Audubon. Mass of Christian Burial will follow at 10:30AM. Interment New St. Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr.
The family requests contribution\’s in Mary\’s memory may be made to: Samaritan Hospice, 5 Eves Drive, Suite 300, Marlton, NJ 08053.
Arrangements by HENRY FUNERAL HOME, Audubon.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.