Attention Gloucester City Residents/Businesses! Enter St. Patrick’s Decorating Contest

Decorate the outside of your home or business:

Win Cash Prizes!

Let’s light Gloucester Green!

OPEN TO GLOUCESTER CITY RESIDENTS AND BUSINESSES

JUDGING BEGINS FEBRUARY 18 AND GOES THROUGH MARCH 11

JUDGING CATEGORIES FOR CASH PRIZES:

Monmouth Street and Johnson Blvd.

City Wide

Businesses

HOW TO WIN THE ST. PATRICK’S DECORATING CONTEST

Step 1

– Decorate your home or business with lots of lights for nighttime judging; Monmouth/Johnson decorate in every way possible for day and night consideration!

Step 2

– Start a friendly competition with neighbors and friends to join the contest

Step 3

– Register before February 11 online below or at St. Mary\’s Rectory

Winners will be announced Wednesday, March 11, 2020

at Gloucester City Ministerium Ecumenical Lenten Service at St. Mary’s, as well as

Facebook

and

Instagram

.

REGISTER NOW!

NJ IRISH SOCIETY, 420 MONMOUTH STREET, GLOUCESTER CITY, NJ, 08030,

Coast Guard establishes temporary security zone for State of the Union address

WASHINGTON, D.C. (February 3, 2020)– — The Coast Guard is scheduled to establish a temporary security zone in designated waters in the National Capital Region for the State of the Union address on Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020.

The security zone will be in effect from noon until 11:59 p.m., which will limit or prohibit navigation by commercial and recreational boaters. The security zone will include the Potomac River from south of the Francis Scott Key Bridge to north of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge. The security zone will also include the Georgetown Channel Tidal Basin as well as the Anacostia River from the 11th Street Bridge to its confluence with the Potomac River.

Entering or operating in the security zone is prohibited unless authorized by the Captain of the Port of Coast Guard Sector Maryland-National Capital Region or a designated representative. Vessels already at berth, mooring or anchor at the time the security zone is implemented are not required to depart the security zone. All vessels underway within the security zone at the time it is implemented are to depart the zone at the time the security zone is implemented.

Persons desiring to transit the security zone must first obtain authorization from the COTP or his designated representative. To seek permission to transit the area, call 410-576-2693 or use marine-band radio via VHF-FM channel 16. The Coast Guard may be assisted by other Federal, state or local law enforcement agencies in enforcing this regulation.

Rutgers-Camden’s Pitts earns NJAC Rookie of the Week Honor

CAMDEN, N.J. (Feb. 3, 2020) –

Jalissa Pitts

has been one of the top freshmen in the New Jersey Athletic Conference throughout her maiden season.

The Rutgers University-Camden guard/forward was rewarded for her talents Monday when she was named the NJAC Women’s Basketball Rookie of the Week. She becomes the Scarlet Raptors’ first NJAC Rookie of the Week since Wykira Johnson-Kelly captured a trio of the conference honors last season (Nov. 12, Dec. 10 and Jan. 21).

Pitts earned her honor after averaging 19 points and 10 rebounds in a pair of conference games as the Scarlet Raptors went 1-1 last week. Rutgers-Camden lost at game at Stockton University Wednesday and posted a big road win Saturday against one of the NJAC’s top teams, Kean University.

Against Stockton, Pitts collected her second career double-double, producing a game-high 19 points, while tying for game-high honors with 11 rebounds. She nearly added another double-double against Kean, once again scoring 19 points and adding nine rebounds. She also collected two assists and two steals in that game.

For the season, Pitts is second on the Scarlet Raptors with a scoring average of 11.6, while leading the team in rebounding with a 7.3 average. She has played in all 20 Rutgers-Camden games, starting 19, including the last 16 contests. She also has added 31 steals (fourth on the team), 21 assists (fourth) and six blocked shots (tied for third).

Pitts notched her first career double-double against Ramapo College on Jan. 8, notching 20 points and a career-high 13 rebounds. Her career scoring high of 25 points came in her first collegiate game, Nov. 12 at Penn State-Schuylkill. She added 24 points in her first meeting against Kean on Dec. 14.

Overall, Pitts has scored in double figures on 10 occasions, including three times with 20 or more points. She also has three double-figure games in rebounds.

Pitts, who also earned honors Monday as Rutgers-Camden’s Raptor of the Week, becomes the second Scarlet Raptor to earn NJAC honors this season. On November 18, senior guard

Fatimah Williams

was named the NJAC Player of the Week.

A graduate of Winslow Township High School, Pitts was a two-time All-Olympic Conference First Team player during her scholastic career. She earned 10 varsity letters at Winslow Township, including four apiece in basketball and soccer and two for outdoor track.

A Nursing major at Rutgers-Camden, Pitts captured Dean’s List recognition and a berth on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll during her first semester on campus in the fall.

Ayanna Pressley to Deliver Working Families Party Response to the State of the Union

Washington, D.C. (February 3, 2020)– Today, the Working Families Party announced Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D – Mass.) will deliver WFP’s response to President Donald Trump’s State of the Union

Gloucestercitynews.net graphic

Address on Tuesday evening. In 2018, Pressley became the first woman of color elected to

C

ongress from Massachusetts. During her first year in Congress, Pressley led on a number of progressive priorities, including introducing a House resolution called the “People’s Justice Guarantee,” which called for the abolishment of cash bail and the death penalty, among other transformational reforms to the criminal legal system.

The speech can be viewed on the WFP’s Facebook page.

“Ayanna Pressley has fearlessly held this administration accountable from the moment she touched down in Washington, all while fighting to reimagine our country so it works for the many instead of the privileged and well-connected few,” said Working Families Party National Director Maurice Mitchell. “On Tuesday night, she’ll put forth a vision for a post-Trump America that allows our nation to live up to its promise of freedom and equality under the law for every person.”

In 2018, the Working Families Party endorsed Pressley’s historic run for the Massachusetts’ 7th Congressional District. Both Pressley and the Working Families Party have both endorsed Senator Elizabeth Warren for the Democratic presidential nomination, citing her agenda of bold, structural change.

“I’m honored to accept the invitation from the Working Families Party to deliver their State of the Union response,” said Pressley. “We find ourselves in unprecedented times. Every day, the occupant of the White House is advancing cruel, bigoted policies that are creating pain and trauma in our communities. Our response on Tuesday will lift up the strength of our diverse grassroots movement that will help evict the occupant of the White House, elect dynamic leaders up and down the ballot this fall, and will advance a bold, progressive policy agenda that returns power to the people and ensures equity and justice for all of our communities.”

Pressley’s remarks will follow the Democratic Party responses from Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Texas Rep. Veronica Escobar. This will be the Working Families Party’s third response to the State of the Union Address. Former Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Md.) delivered the response in 2018, and Wisconsin Lt. Gov. and WFP national committee member Mandela Barnes in 2019.

Pressley was born in Cincinnati but grew up in Chicago. She got her start in politics working for former United States Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II. She also served as a senior aide to former Massachusetts Senator John Kerry. In 2009, Pressley was elected to Boston City Council, making her the first woman of color to serve on that body in its 100-year history. While on the council, Pressley worked in close partnership with community on issues of consequence, including the groundbreaking creation of the Committee on Health, Women, Families, and Communities, and the development of a comprehensive, culturally competent, medically accurate, and age-appropriate sexual education and health curriculum, which was successfully adopted as a permanent part of the Boston Public Schools’ wellness policy.

The WFP is a grassroots political party fighting for an America for the many, not the few. Last year the WFP drove a progressive wave in local elections across America. The WFP helped elect longtime tenants organizer and progressive champion Jumaane Williams as Public Advocate in

New York City

, swelled the ranks of

Chicago

city council progressive caucus, put public education champions on the school board in

Milwaukee

, helped insurgent activist Candi CdeBaca oust a longtime incumbent on the

Denver City Council

, and elected other council members from

Morgantown

, W.Va., to Phoenix. In 2018 it helped to drive the progressive wave up and down the ballot, flipping state senate chambers in

New York

and Colorado, and defeating Gov. Scott Walker (R-Wis.).

Andy A. Domanick, Heavy Equipment Operator for Holt Logistics

Confidence is the measure of the honesty of your selfishness. Andy A. Domanick was stone hearted, funny and very organized. Unfortunately, he was a Dallas Cowboys fan. He took life for granted until Wednesday January 29th, 2020 when it came to an end after 58 years.

Andrew was born in Woodbury and had spent many of his early years in center city Mantua. He graduated from Clearview High School, class of 1980 and had contributed to the manpower of our great nation upholding the ideals of our American freedoms, in the United States Navy. He worked as a heavy equipment operator for Holt Logistics at the Gloucester City Marine Terminal and had been a member of the Gloucester City VFW Post 3620. At home, Andy enjoyed professional wrestling and collecting baseball cards. He spent his time on the Delaware river bank fishing and walking with his metal detector.

Andy is the widower of the late Ann M. (nee Watson) Domanick, and was predeceased by his doggy companion \”Diddy\”. He is the son of Gloria (nee Pote) & the late Thomas \”Buddy\” Domanick, Sr. Andy is the brother of Tom and his wife Marie, Joseph Domanick, Matthew & his wife Lorraine and Valerie & her husband Wes Russell. He is also survived and will be sadly missed by his nieces and nephews, Ashton, Tommy, Jamie, Sean, Kayla, Brandy, Samantha, Matthew and great nephews, Kelle, Holden and Finley.

The time honored tradition of reuniting those we love with nature was held privately under the guidance of Creran Celebration Etherington & Creran Funeral Homes 700 Powell St. Gloucester City. To share a heartfelt memory, please visit

www.crerancelebration.com

#crerancelebration #heartfelt Etherington-Creran Funeral Home 700 Powell St. Gloucester City, NJ 08030 856-456-0599

Letters to the Editor: The State of Our Union Can Start with School Lunch

Tomorrow President Trump will deliver his State of the Union address in front of Congress, outlining his policy priorities and executive vision for the country.

Over the past three years, President Trump has spoken to a domestic agenda focusing on health care, education, farmers and the working class. It’s worth recognizing, however, that his Administration’s proposals have failed to meet, and many times even undermined the health, education, and well-being of our nation’s families and children.

At

FoodCorps

, we believe that a healthy, prosperous future relies on a strong education system — and that the students that education system serves must be fueled with healthy food. In the last year alone, the President

has sought to dismantle SNAP

(formerly known as food stamps) impacting millions of families’ food budgets, while also jeopardizing school meal access for an estimated one million children, limit healthier options on our kids’ trays, and dissuade immigrant communities from seeking support to feed their families.

As the President prepares to address the nation, amid perhaps the most polarizing moment of his executive tenure, we strongly urge a dialogue — from him and others — that considers our top domestic policy issues as reflections of how we invest in schoolchildren.

For instance:

Role of Food in Children’s Health

: in a political climate that is fueled by debates about health care costs and preventable diet-related diseases, we should channel the old wisdom that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure and increase investment in school meals, which ~30 million kids eat every day.

Fighting for Family Farmers

: with continued conversations on how to lift up farmers and rural communities, a clear answer is to connect them with local schools for market development. The

Farm to School Act of 2019

would not only create new revenue streams for local producers, but would help bring more farm-fresh foods into our schools—prioritizing high-need student populations.

Education = Equity

: Children who lack a quality diet are more likely to face a lifetime of challenges: they score lower on tests, miss more days of school, advance less in their careers, and raise children who are likely to repeat the same cycle. Will President Trump lay out a plan to level the playing field so that all kids—regardless of race, place, or class—are well-nourished and ready to thrive at school and beyond?

A Hidden Infrastructure Need

:

Infrastructure is back in the news.

It’s not just bridges and highways that are falling apart: many school cafeterias haven’t been updated in decades, limiting their capacity to serve meals made from scratch with fresh produce. The

School Food Modernization Act

would provide critical investment in school kitchen equipment to ensure they can effectively and efficiently serve healthy school lunches [link to op-ed].

We believe that a strong State of the Union would include healthy school meals for all children and call on both the White House and Congress to protect and strengthen investments in school meals.

Interested in hearing more on school food policies? We can connect you with FoodCorps Policy Director Kumar Chandran who can speak to current introduced legislation, including the Bills mentioned above, and other policies that would equip school nutrition staff with the best possible tools to serve students on a daily basis.

All the best,

Casey

###

About FoodCorps

Together with communities, FoodCorps connects kids to healthy food in school so that every child—regardless of race, place, or class—gets the nourishment they need to thrive. Our AmeriCorps leaders transform schools into places where all students learn what healthy food is, fall in love with it, and eat it every day. Building on this foundation of direct impact, FoodCorps develops leaders, forges networks, and pursues policy reforms that in time have the potential to improve all of our nation’s 100,000 schools. To learn more about FoodCorps’ work across the country, visit

Homepage

.

Judy Lee Connelly, of Brooklawn, age 74

Judy Lee Connelly

Judy Lee Connelly (Hopkins), 74 of Brooklawn, NJ passed away peacefully on February 2, 2020, with her loving family surrounding her.  Judy was the beloved wife of Daniel Connelly and beloved mother of their children, Randy (Patti), Christopher (Linda), Lisa (Jack), Eric (Andrea), Jennifer (John), and Daniel (Lynn). She also leaves behind her grandchildren, Adam, Ryan, Alex, Josh, Brittany, Christopher, Sydney, Paige, Elizabeth, Michael, Mackenzie, Jenna, Carly, Emma, and Adriana, and 8 great grandchildren, her brother Curtis, her sister Terry, and many nieces and nephews. Her nieces Paulette, Dawn and Tracy held a special place in her heart. Judy was predeceased by her parents James and Marjorie Hopkins, sister Karen Fisher, brother Lynn Hopkins and her grandson, Eric, Jr.

Judy worked at Package Materials in Haddonfield, NJ for 35 years. Judy dedicated most of her life to her family as they were her pride and joy. Everything was about family! She had a beautiful heart and always loved above and beyond. Her grandchildren and great grandchildren were always the apple of her eye. Judy took such good care of everyone and if anyone needed or wanted anything she was always ready to help.

Relatives and friends are invited to her viewing on Thursday evening, February 6

th

, from 6 to 8 PM and again on Friday Morning, February 7

th

, from 10 to 11 AM at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, 851 Monmouth St., Gloucester City. Funeral Service 11 AM in the funeral home. Interment will be private.

Memorial donations may be made to American Cancer Society, 1851 Old Cuthbert Rd, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034. Please memo, Judy Lee Connelly.

Condolences and Memories may be shared at

www.mccannhealey.com

under the obituary of Judy Lee Connelly. Funeral Arrangements and Inquiries through: McCANN–HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, Gloucester City Ph:856-456-1142

Brooklawn 7/8 Boys Continue Winning

Related:

Gloucester High School

Gloucester Catholic

https://darrowphotos.com

BROOKLAWN, NJ–The Brooklawn School Boys Basketball improved to 10-1 after beating visiting Merchantville. The pre-game was exciting as the 8th grade players were honored by parents, Coach\’s Austin Darrow and Chris Rodriguez in their last home game.

The Brooklawn Bears look to finish the regular season strong before heading into the Camden County Basketball Elementary School League.

More Photo\’s available for viewing at www.Darrowphotos.com

Photo\’s Courtesy of Bruce Darrow

Pictured below Coach\’s Chris Rodriguez and Austin Darrow

Pictured below Aidan Mc Clintock

Pictured below Jason Flynn

Pictured below Coach Chris Rodriguez presents Kaden Elmore

Related:

Gloucester High School

Gloucester Catholic

https://darrowphotos.com

JEROME BY DAVE WOLFE

Related:

ARTIST Dave Wolfe

Vol. 6 No. 31 (February 2, 2020)

Editor\’s Note: Each Sunday morning we post a weekly comic strip provided by cartoonist Dave Wolfe.  (click image to enlarge)

Muhlenberg College Students from NJ Named to Dean\’s List

ALLENTOWN, PA (01/28/2020)– Congratulations to the following local students named to the Dean\’s List at Muhlenberg College for the Fall 2019 semester:

Alexandria Bak of Pennsville, NJ (08070)

Shannon Beachem of Wall Township, NJ (07719)

Matthew Borrelli of Cherry Hill, NJ (08034)

Zaire Carter of Delran, NJ (08075)

Frank Caterina of Shamong, NJ (08088)

Madison Cornelius of Browns Mills, NJ (08015)

Hannah DeFrates of Haddonfield, NJ (08033)

Olivia Deutsch of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Quinn Dougherty of Cape May, NJ (08204)

Carina Filemyr of Cape May, NJ (08204)

Laura Frye of Woodstown, NJ (08098)

Christopher Grahn of Riverton, NJ (08077)

Brooke Greenberg of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Jenna Greenwald of Voorhees, NJ (08043)

Lauren Greenwald of Voorhees, NJ (08043)

Isabel Kaufman of Collingswood, NJ (08108)

Emily Kirchner of Maple Shade, NJ (08052)

Sarah Krsnak of Medford, NJ (08055)

Emma Mueller of Moorestown, NJ (08057)

Aitan Netz of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Grace Nyberg of Haddonfield, NJ (08033)

Grace Oddo of Lumberton, NJ (08048)

Kristen Paige of Tabernacle, NJ (08088)

Frances Parker of Haddon Township, NJ (08108)

Jason Richwall of Medford, NJ (08055)

Kaley Ryan of Mount Laurel, NJ (08054)

Isabel Schwartz of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Kayleigh Scott of Haddonfield, NJ (08033)

Chloe Selover of Woodbine, NJ (08270)

Raivat Shah of Mount Laurel, NJ (08054)

Samantha Shera of Voorhees, NJ (08043)

Kelly Steltz of Haddonfield, NJ (08033)

Desire Suarez of Elmer, NJ (08318)

Jake Swerdloff of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Jessica Szasz of Mount Laurel, NJ (08054)

Sarah Vetesi of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Ashling Wahner of Bordentown, NJ (08505)

Cameron Wasson of Mount Laurel, NJ (08054)

Julia Weikart of Haddon Heights, NJ (08035)

Gwendolyn Wilkie of Moorestown, NJ (08057)

Matthew Borrelli of Cherry Hill, NJ (08003)

Olivia Deutsch of Cherry Hill, NJ (08057)

Julia Weikart of Haddon Heights, NJ (08002)

Students with a term GPA of 3.50 or higher were recognized for this academic achievement.

About Muhlenberg College

Founded in 1848,

Muhlenberg

is a highly selective, private, four-year residential, liberal arts college located in Allentown, Pennsylvania, approximately 90 miles west of New York City. With an undergraduate enrollment of approximately 2,200 students, Muhlenberg College is dedicated to shaping creative, compassionate, collaborative leaders through rigorous academic programs in the arts, humanities, natural sciences and social sciences as well as selected pre-professional programs, including accounting, business, education and public health. The College is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

A member of the Centennial Conference, Muhlenberg competes in 22 varsity sports.

About Muhlenberg College\’s School of Continuing Studies

For more than 100 years,

Muhlenberg College\’s School of Continuing Studies

has provided lifelong learners the opportunity to continue and enhance their education in ways that recognize their experience, maturity, motivation, life circumstances and capacity for independent scholarship. Through a rich variety of certificates and baccalaureate degrees, the School of Continuing Studies aligns a rigorous, high-quality and student-centric curriculum with the needs and trends of our regional economy.