BROOKLAWN COUNCILMAN TOM MacADAMS MADE A DIFFERENCE

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Gloucester City Group Offers Service Program to Senior Citizens

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DRPA CLARIFIES SICK LEAVE BUY-BACK POLICY

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Philly Happenings and Events

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Now – September 12
The Vogel Collection

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Samuel M.V. Hamilton Building
128 North Broad Street
215.972.7600
www.PAFA.org

Now – October 28
Tippler\’s Tour

Historic Philadelphia
6th and Chestnut streets
215.629.4026
www.historicphiladelphia.org

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Now – January 2
Cleopatra: The Search for the Last Queen of Egypt

The Franklin Institute
222 North 20th Street
215.448.1200
www.FI.edu

Now – September 6
Late Renoir

Philadelphia Museum of Art
26th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway
215.763.8100
www.PhilaMuseum.org

September 4 – 6
Labor Day Weekend Programming

National Constitution Center
525 Arch Street
215.409.6600
www.constitutioncenter.org

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New Special Menu @ Shank\’s
Shank\’s Original is featuring a special lunch menu on Mondays and Tuesdays. Grab your favorite sandwich (choose from roast pork, roast beef, Italian sausage, meatball, chicken parm, eggplant parm, all on a Kaiser roll) and a soda for only $5.99, or enjoy either a free fountain drink or $1 off with any sandwich purchase. Shank\’s catering trays of $50 or more are now also $10 off. 
Shank\’s Original, 15th and Sansom streets, 215.629.1093, www.shanksoriginal.com

Cocktails and Shopping
Join SA VA for cocktails and shopping on the last two Thursdays in August from 5-8pm. A new product and drink will be featured each week and you can enjoy 15% off all regularly-priced clothing. On September 6, take an extra 15% off sale items in honor of Labor Day.
SA VA, 1700 Sansom Street, 4th Floor, 
www.savafashion.com

Design A New Ben & Jerry\’s Flavor 
Raven Lounge is partnering with flavor innovators Ben & Jerry for the ultimate Ice Cream Social. Help create the newest Raven-inspired flavor using ice cream, froyo, toppings and even Cherry Garcia on top. For your chance to win a pass to this exclusive event, visit the website and submit your Raven Recipe. Be sure to also check the website for other upcoming events, including the Art in the Dark series, charity happy hours and comedy nights.
Raven Lounge, 1718 Sansom Street, 215.840.3577, 
www.ravenlounge.com

Become A GUESS List Member 
GUESS is offering their GUESS List members exclusive discounts. Enjoy 20% off full-price merchandise and 50% off sale merchandise, August 21-22. Offer is valid at all GUESS by Marciano participating stores. Not a GUESS List member yet? Sign up online or in any store.
GUESS by Marciano, 1520 Walnut Street, 215.875.8525, 
www.guess.com

Oktoberfest In August
Local breweries start producing Oktoberfest beers in late August. Instead of storing it for a month, McGillin\’s Olde Ale House will start pouring the coveted seasonal brews on August 24. Oktoberfest beers and German cuisine will then be served from August 25 through October 3. The historic tavern\’s Oktoberfest celebration will commence at the 4th annual Midtown Village Fall Festival on October 2, when Drury Street will be transformed into a giant beer garden, complete with live entertainment, German beers and foods.
McGillin\’s Olde Ale House, 1310 Drury Street, 215.735.5562, 
www.mcgillins.com

Taste the Flavors of Summer Before They\’re Gone! 
Join Bistro St Tropez\’ Chef Patrice Rames for dinner as he highlights the juicy and fresh summer flavors of ripe tomatoes and fresh peaches. Chef Rames has created two menus to choose from, 3 courses for $28 or 5 courses for $48 (plus tax and gratuity). Wine pairings with each course are also available. Dinner is served Wednesday through Saturday beginning at 5:30pm. Call now for reservations since this offer only runs through August 28.
Bistro St Tropez, 2400 Market Street, 4th Floor, Marketplace Design Center, 215.569.9269,
www.bistrosttropez.com

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LENA CZYZEWICZ of Mt. Ephraim

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Letters: American Legion Post 135 Says Thank You!

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ESTEY/NASH ASK BOARD TO CONTINUE DISCOUNT PROGRAMS

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Letters: School Equipment Needs Maintenance

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 Bill

I too have a photo I like to share with your readers taken several days ago. It is a picture of a broken picnic table behind the Cold Spring School in Gloucester City. Not only is the wood in this table dry rotten, which caused it to break, but also is the wood in the two other picnic tables that are located on school grounds. I don’t know if anyone got hurt when the table in the photo broke. I do think it should have been removed by today, which it wasn’t at 1 PM, as it is hazardous and unsightly.

\"P1060098\" Photo: One of the other tables nearby, the wood is dry rotten

I question why the maintenance department had allowed this table and continues to allow the other tables to be used by staff and school children. It is obvious to anyone looking at the other two tables that they too are in danger of breaking. The condition of these tables didn’t happen overnight. How much time would it take to throw a coat of stain or paint on the tables each year. Appearance is everything, and I agree with you that Community Pride starts with the outward appearance of your home and or your school.

Lastly I would suggest if those who run the school district are not capable of maintaining something as simple as picnic tables should we be building a $65 million Middle School. One further point take a walk behind the high school football field and look at the brand new bleachers, not so new now, that have been dumped in the brush near the baseball field for over a year. Do we have that much money to waste that we can throw aluminum bleachers away?

I commend Mr. Lipsett for addressing the problem on Sylvan Avenue caused by the men of the Public Works Dept. Hopefully School Supt. Spaventa is also a reader of ClearysNoteBook and will take action to clean up this mess behind the Cold Springs Pre-School. And recover the bleachers near the HS baseball field now that it has been brought to his attention.

Thank you for providing this forum as a means to reach out to those who run our City and School District. It is much appreciated.

signed A Faithful Reader of CNB

PS: Please don’t disclose my Email address

Read more: http://www.gloucestercitynews.net/#ixzz0wrzIjG83

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Higher Troop Casualties Likely in Afghanistan

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Bill’s Point of View: Your Toll Money…The DRPA\’s Private Slush Fund

By Bill Cleary

The Delaware River Port Authority Board of Commissioners will meet this Wednesday \"Outraged\" to discuss among other things some ideas on how to improve its image in light of the recent scandals involving employees at the agency.

It is obvious to all that the Board wouldn’t be talking about reform if the employees hadn’t got caught.

And if past practice is any example, the Commissioners will go back to governing the Authority as though it was a private slush fund. Spending your money on whatever project that will benefit their political party, their friends or family members.

For those on vacation we found out recently that Michael Joyce, DRPA safety director gave his daughter a DRPA E-Z pass transponder that allowed her to cross the Delaware River for free. Besides this abuse it is alleged that Joyce improperly received pension credits for a part-time, $67,356 solicitor\’s job in Pennsauken. Records show he also received pension credits to which he was not entitled in 2008 for a second, $18,200 solicitor position with the Pennsauken Sewerage Authority. After the story was published Joyce resigned from his $189,000 DRPA job.

A few days after the Joyce story was published Fox 29 News broadcast a report about John Havers a Delaware River Port Authority employee. He was suspended for a month after borrowing toll money to cover party costs and was later moved to a job running a cruise terminal that\’s not currently receiving ships.

Havers left an IOU note with the safe, so he avoided being arrested for embezzlement. Even so DRPA officials suspended him for a month. Fox 29 News revealed that, while suspended, Havers had someone take his SUV from the DRPA to the authority\’s depot to get gasoline. After the suspension, he was transferred to a role running the DRPA\’s cruise terminal despite the shortage of business there these days.

Havers is from Gloucester County, as is DRPA CEO John Matheussen and New Jersey State Senate President Steven Sweeney. Fox 29 sources said Sweeney protected Havers when others at the DRPA wanted him fired, but Sweeney denied that in an interview last week.

And if you happen to be one of the 900 DRPA employees who doesn’t use your two weeks sick leave each year well come Christmas the Commissioners award you with a nice bonus. Fox 29 says that practice cost the public millions each year.

Today the Courier Post released an article about even more wasteful spending practices of the DRPA. The commissioners approved a $700,000 cash grant to Pennsauken Township to be used to convert a neglected five-acre site on Garfield Avenue into a football field. The grant was originally intended to be a loan to spawn private investment in the township.

Pennsauken Mayor Ricardo Taylor Jr., who is a commissioner on the bi-state board, said he opposes DRPA spending toll money on non-transit projects, but he said he wasn\’t going to turn down $700,000 in cash.

The money comes from the balance of a revolving loan fund created in 1993 with a $700,000 gift from DRPA. Pennsauken, Gloucester City, Camden and Philadelphia each had revolving loan funds to compensate the municipalities in some way for local, tax-exempt land surrounding the authority-owned bridges.

Gloucester City spent its $700,000 loan fund renovating a derelict waterfront building now occupied by the Holt Group. DRPA closed out the fund with a zero balance six years ago.

Records indicate Camden City has received $6.9 million from the DRPA for unspecified economic development usage since 1993. Neither the city nor DRPA could produce an accounting of that money the Courier Post reported.

And if all the above isn’t enough to get you mad as \”Hell\” consider this, the DRPA says it is in desperate need of money to maintain the bridges. In July 2011 the tolls on the four bridges will be increased by $1 up to $5 a crossing.

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