Renaming Streets in Memory of City’s War Heroes’ A Hardship; Not For Me

Bill\’s Point of View:

(Hardship: noun, adversity, misfortune, suffering, burden, affliction) 

The proposal to rename some streets in Gloucester City in memory of citizens who have died fighting for our country has started quite a controversy I have been told. An article about the renaming streets in honor of City heroes appeared in last Thursday\’s Gloucester City News. Soon after the phones started to ring in the Municipal Building from people who opposed the idea.

The article mentioned that the Mayor\’s Advisory Committee was conducting a feasibility study. \”Nothing will be done until the study is completed. The public will be informed of the outcome before any streets are renamed,\” said Ted Howarth a member of the committee. He added the committe welcomes the public input both pro and con.

Those who complained said if their street is renamed it would create a hardship to have to change their driver\’s license and other documents. I can understand their concerns. After all the news release that came from the Advisory Committee said the public would only have several months to make any necessary address changes. Howarth said that part of the release should have said four years instead several months.

I recommend we all take a moment to think about the suggestion before getting upset. Some thought should be given to the \”Hardship\” that the honorees and their families had to endure. All we are being asked to do is change the address on a couple of documents. The soldiers gave their lives for us to live in the greatest Nation in the world. And we are complaining about it being a \”Hardship\” to fill out a form to change our address on our license or other documents.

I really don\’t believe any of us would mind that little inconvenience if we took a moment to put ourselves in the shoes of the mother or father who lost a son fighting for our country.

Let\’s give the committee sometime to study the proposal before jumping to conclusions. Myself I would love to see the name of my street changed to Hamacher Road. I knew Billy Hamacher personality, who died during the Vietnam War. He was a great guy. I also knew the other Vietnam soldiers from our City who died on a first name basis. If Hamacher Road is taken I would have no problem if my street was changed to one of the other names.

And finally I urged our Mayor and Council members not to buckle under just because they are receiving a little flack on what I believe is a great idea.

What is your opinion?

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Continued: A Look at the Port of Gloucester City and other South Jersey Ports on the Delaware River

see Sunday\’s story

…From the pages of South Jersey Magazine…

Author: Tara Nurin

\”The South Jersey ports are a main contributor to air pollution in the South Jersey/Philadelphia region,\” warns Doug O\’Malley, the field director for the advocacy group Environment New Jersey. He says Camden, Burlington and Gloucester counties are \”out of attainment with the [Environmental Protection Agency] for soot pollution, and soot pollution is honestly the most deadly form of air pollution out there. It\’s directly linked to cancer. It\’s directly linked to aggravating asthma, heart disease and heart attacks.\”

\”If you talk anecdotally to teachers or nurses in schools, they\’ll tell you that 25 percent of the kids in Waterfront South have asthma,\” cautions Olga Pomar, an attorney with South Jersey Legal Services who represents clients from Camden\’s Waterfront South neighborhood. Waterfront South is a tiny enclave of impoverished homes that\’s buried deep within the port area and imprisoned by heavy industry on all four sides. Some of its 1,700 residents are suing their industrial neighbors over the pollution they emit.

\”People in Waterfront South and most of Camden have elevated lung cancer rates, and overall, Camden has high lung, esophageal, stomach, pancreas, liver and kidney cancer vis a vis the rest of New Jersey,\” Pomar says.

While Pomar doesn\’t blame the port and its surrounding businesses for the entirety of Camden\’s poor health, she does feel strongly that the port \”really has a major detrimental impact on quality of life.\” Pomar suggests the SJPC could mitigate some of the damage by following the path of some North Jersey ports that are looking to implement new environmental regulations pioneered in Southern California. There, the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles have just announced a plan to eventually ban all but the newest, most clean-driving diesel trucks. And California Senator Barbara Boxer has introduced federal legislation that would keep any large commercial or recreational vessel that doesn\’t significantly reduce its soot-causing sulfur emissions out of American ports.

But the SJPC counters that Camden ports are appropriately eco-friendly by pointing to several new initiatives, including modern electric cranes; retrofitted machinery to reduce emissions; tree-lined environmental berms that act as buffer zones between the port and residential areas; not to mention a stated objective to carry more cargo to nearby destinations via lower-emission boats rather than dirty trucks.

But greening every aspect of the terminals can\’t save the region\’s environment from an incredibly controversial potential eco-disaster that\’s coming up the river. The true enemy of life along the Delaware, warn environmentalists, is a recently approved project to dredge the river to allow for larger, more profitable ships to enter Philadelphia and South Jersey ports.

\”It threatens drinking water supplies; it threatens the aquifer that runs below the river; it threatens horseshoe crab populations, oyster populations. Many of the creatures that depend upon the river—their habitat will be destroyed in this process,\” cries Sharon Finlayson, chair of the New Jersey Environmental Federation.

Finlayson and other New Jersey environmentalists furiously accuse Gov. Jon Corzine of caving to pressure by his gubernatorial counterpart in Pennsylvania, who, after many years, finally persuaded New Jersey\’s executive officer to allow the river channel to be deepened by five feet. This past May, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell announced victory for his dredging agenda, which he and the Philadelphia trade unions insist will create high-paying jobs (with some in New Jersey) and allow Delaware River ports to compete with others for the heftier ships that are increasingly favored on the high seas.

Although the deepening project has long been opposed by politicians on this side of the river primarily for environmental reasons, New Jersey port operators say dredging the Delaware River will actually benefit them just as much as those in Pennsylvania.

\”South Jersey ports will also be able to bring in not just bigger ships but ships that carry more cargo,\” says SJPC executive director and CEO Joseph Balzano. \”You\’re always competing with other port facilities for ships. If they\’re going to increase the depth of the other port facilities, in order to compete we\’ve got to have it here,\” agrees Holt\’s head of security, Robert Fair.

Gloucester\’s leadership too believes that meeting the demands of tomorrow\’s shipping industry is a necessary component of their dreams to ensure a viable and thriving future for their city. Like the river, the tides of economies are cyclical, and Gloucester\’s political captains are investing in the notion that drawing inspiration from its ship-dominated past can provide a business model for its resuscitated destiny. Although the days of the old-fashioned wooden sailboats and the steamboats that carried goods to and from New Jersey are long gone, they hope to be ready to greet the mammoth steel-hulled freightliners carrying many tons of cargo that can help ensure the city\’s economic vitality. It\’s only with the foresight and ability to address the current and future realities of the shipping industry that they can safely envision dollar signs and renewed glory for Gloucester, heralded by a day when visitors will flock to watch their residents at work at the ports and reflect on a South Jersey waterfront yet again enhanced by commercial ships navigating up and down the Delaware River.

Like Mayor William James muses, \”The port has been good to us. And hopefully the water will continue to be good to us.\”

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Richard D. Hubbs, Army Veteran, Gloucester City Volunteer Fireman

Richard D. Hubbs, of Gloucester City, passed away suddenly on July 29, 2007 at the age of 71. Loving husband of 28 years and together again with Connie J. Hubbs. Devoted and caring father of Richard D. Hubbs, Jr. (Patricia) of Gloucester City and Alice J. Sharp (Michael) of Sewell. Cherished grandfather of Richard III, Kyle Hubbs, Tina (Christopher) Holmes, Matthew Wilson, Michael Sharp, Jr. and Mason Sharp. Dear Great-grandfather of Natalie Holmes. Loving Brother of Joseph Hubbs of Audubon, Allen L. Hubbs of Gloucester City, George F. Hubbs of Elk Township, Nancy Quieti of Bellmawr,Edward Hubbs of Gloucester City and the late Hubert Hubbs.

Also, survived by many nieces and nephews.

Richard was a lifelong resident of Gloucester City. He graduated from Gloucester City High School in 1954. Richard proudly served our country in the U.S. Army. He was a 14 year dedicated volunteer for the Gloucester City Fire Department: Station # 51. Richard worked over 20 years at Brandywine Construction and Management in Philadelphia, PA in the maintenance department.

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend his viewing on Wednesday Evening from 7 to 9 pm and Thursday morning from 10 to 11 am at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City. Episcopal Religious Service 11 am in the funeral home officiated by Mother Bradley of Saint Luke\’s Episcopal Church in Westville. Interment Cedar Grove Cemetery, Gloucester City.

In lieu of flowers, family requests memorial donations in Richard\’s memory to the Heroes to Hero Scholarship Foundation: P.O. Box 126, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Please write in the memo of the check, Richard D. Hubbs. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com 

see Connie Hubbs Obit
 

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Letters: Teens Are \”Skinny Dipping\” in Brooklawn

In the past few weeks, I have that been aware that people, during the early morning hours, were using my backyard pool.

This morning, at 5 a.m., I found four young teenagers in the pool. Although I could have and maybe should have called the police, I did not.

Their response when I asked them what gave them the right to use the pool, they stated others told them they could. I then inquired as to why they thought \”other people\” who did not live in the house had the right to allow them the use of the pool. In addition, I asked them where their parents thought they were. In bed, of course.

I then told them to get out of the pool and to let \”the others\” know that if I ever again find anyone using the pool, I would call the police and have them arrested for trespassing.

I realize this is a \”prank,\” however the liability to me or any other household where this may be happening is very high.

Oh, and by the way moms and dads, the girls were naked…

Elena Young, Brooklawn

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