Gannett Settings - The Haddonfield Sun

Transcription

Gannett Settings - The Haddonfield Sun
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www.haddonfieldsun.com
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JAN. 13–19, 2016
Haddonfield schools
bond referendum
tax impact increases
Coloring at the library
Adjusted numbers estimate bond total
to cost $35.3 million, with yearly tax impact
of $300.49 for average homeowner
By BRIGIT BAUMA
The Sun
The Haddonfield Board of Education released new numbers for
the upcoming bond referendum
at its meeting last Thursday.
The latest numbers estimate
the bond total to cost $35.3 million
with an estimated yearly tax impact of $300.49 for the average assessed home at $484,226. The cost
per average assessed home is up
from the $287 estimated for the
previously approved referendum
number of $40.9 million. This is
due to incorrect financial numbers, which were brought to the
attention of the board at a previous meeting. Approval of the
bond referendum was passed
with an 8 to 1 vote, with Mary
Fagan giving the only opposing
vote.
Resident John Sullivan went to
the board, saying he believed approved referendum figures in November were incorrect. Due to
this, the board went back over the
figures and discovered that they
were in face erroneous.
“We want to thank John Sullivan a great deal. Although we are
embarrassed the numbers were
wrong, we would’ve been even
more embarrassed if this had
come up later in the process when
people were asked to vote. So
thank you for checking that and
bringing it to our attention,”
board president Glenn Moramarco said.
Because of this, the BOE took
quick action and made changes to
rectify the mistakes. It hired a
new financial advisor, moved
around some of the projects for
the referendum and eliminated
some items. All of the corrections
and new bond referendum proposal have been sent to the state.
The new numbers are a bond
referendum estimated at $35.3
million in total with an estimated
yearly tax impact of $300.49 for
the average assessed home at
please see PREVIOUS, page 12
BRIGIT BAUMA/The Sun
Jane Cavanaugh colors a polar bear as her mom looks on at the Haddonfield Public Library’s Toddler Time on Thursday, Jan. 7. Children enjoyed bear-themed songs and stories, talking about winter hibernation.
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
605 Warwick
Planning Board still does not
reach decision. PAGE 7
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 19–21
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
2 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
Bancroft property declared area
in need of redevelopment
By BRIGIT BAUMA
The Sun
The Planning Board unani-
mously declared the Bancroft
property an area in need of redevelopment at its meeting on Jan.
5. No opposition to the ruling was
there that night.
In September, commissioners
asked for a reinvestigation of the
property to determine if it is a redevelopment area, as a reassertion of the 2005 ruling and to create redevelopment plans for the
area.
At the October Planning Board
meeting, planner Philip Caton of
the Trenton firm Clarke Caton
Hintz, representing the borough,
gave his testimony as to why the
Bancroft site should be listed as a
redevelopment area. Caton listed
five conditions at the site that are
persistent problems, qualifying
Bancroft for redevelopment –
parking, traffic circulation, storm
water management, impervious
surface coverage, and the conditions of its buildings and
grounds.
The ruling was tabled twice
after requests from Recovery Centers of America CEO and developer J. Brian O’Neill’s holding
company, II Hopkins Lane, LLC’s
attorney Jack Plackter. With the
second tabling, Plackter revealed
a tentative agreement signing
over the Bancroft property to
Haddonfield was very close to
being reached.
According to Borough Solicitor
Mario Iavicoli, the two parties
have come to a settlement with a
purchase price agreement, development agreement and other
agreements, however there hasn’t
been a final agreement.
The redevelopment proposal
please see FORMALIZED, page 16
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JAN. 13–19, 2016 – THE HADDONFIELD SUN 3
Haddonfield 65 Club hosting
trip to Tomasello Winery
3:30 p.m. The bus will depart at
7:30 p.m., arriving back in Haddonfield at 8:45 p.m.
Payments must be received by
Jan. 23. Total cost, including
transportation, wine tasting,
three-course lunch, $10 in slot
play and tickets for the show, is
$50 per person. There will be
BINGO on the bus.
Contact Bill Brown at [email protected] or Jack
Aharon at, [email protected] to reserve your seat, or
sign up at the clubhouse. Make
checks out to “The Haddonfield 65
Club.”
on campus
Erika Harter of Haddonfield
graduated from Clarion University
Dec. 12 with a medical imaging sciences bachelors of science degree.
Siera Carusone, from Haddon-
field, has been named to the
dean's list for the fall semester at
the University of Vermont. Carusone is a class of 2018 anthropology major in the College of Arts &
Sciences.
NJ Lic. #13vh0111555900
The Haddonfield 65 Club will
host a trip of Tomasello Winery
and casino on Feb. 17.
This trip will depart from
Wedgewood Swim Club at 10:30
a.m., arriving at Tomasello Winery for a lunch, consisting of
soup or salad, chicken or fish, a
complementary glass of wine,
and dessert. Prior to lunch, those
going may sample wines and/or
purchase wines. At 1:15 p.m., the
65 Club will head to Resorts in Atlantic City, where each guest will
receive $10 in slot play. In addition, everyone will receive show
tickets for the Neverly Brothers at
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4 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
BOE swears in new members
will be closing
its doors by the
end of February.
Please stop
by to take
redeem any
credits, gift
certificates
and to take
advantage
of our
farewell sale.
Moramarco re-elected as president; Kutner is vice president
By BRIGIT BAUMA
The Sun
Thank you for
your patronage!
Send us your Haddonfield news
Drop us an email at [email protected].
The
Haddonfield
Public
Schools Board of Education held
its reorganization meeting last
Thursday.
The newly elected BOE members, Adam M. Sangillo, Susan
Kutner and Joshua Drew, were all
sworn in for three-year terms
after being chosen by the people
of Haddonfield in last November’s elections. Glenn Moramarco
was re-elected as president of the
board and Kutner was voted in as
vice president; both positions
passed unanimously.
Moramarco has been on the
board since 2008 and has been
president of the board since 2013.
Kutner was chosen and brought in
by the board when previous board
member Andrew Berlin had to resign from his position last year.
Both were honored to be chosen
for their positions. They hope to
work with the community and
have a successful bond referendum, as well as continue with the
district’s high academic quality.
“I am honored to be selected for
this, especially after only a few
months on the board… (I hope to)
continue to build confidence
within the community, especially
for the referendum, that we’re
doing things right and listening
to them,” Kutner said.
“I’m grateful for the confidence
in the committee, and I’m looking
forward to hopefully leading a
successful referendum for the
schools… For me the major goal
is to fix the schools and continue
with the academic excellence that
Haddonfield is already known
for,” Moramarco said.
Various other professional appointments were made that night
as well.
In other news:
• Sue Halbert’s third-grade
class at Tatem Elementary School
was commended for two projects
it participated in and won this
past school year. The first was for
winning the Global Monster Project with their monster Bobbi
Wasabi. For this project, students
from places such as England,
Myan- mar, Brazil and the United
States chose a particular area of
an imaginary monster and described it in great detail. A coordinator put them all together to
provide a description for all 47
participating classes to build a
monster. Halbert’s class was the
one chosen as the closest to the
description and won.
The second was its class blog,
which received Best Class Blog.
The Edublog Awards, started in
2004, is a community-based incentive created in response to complease see NEXT, page 18
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856-834-2843
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JAN. 13–19, 2016 – THE HADDONFIELD SUN 5
HSH announces grants
The Historical Society of Haddonfield has been awarded two
grants totaling $31,400 to plan and
undertake a capital campaign for
its new Archives Center, which
was recently approved by Haddonfield’s Zoning Board of Adjustment to be built on the site of
an existing garage on the Society’s property.
The New Jersey Cultural Trust
awarded the society $26,400
through its Institutional and Financial Stabilization grant program, which rotates annually between funding arts, history and
cultural institutions. The Historical Society is the only recipient in
Camden County this year.
The Haddonfield Foundation
awarded an additional $5,000 to
the society’s effort to undertake
the capital campaign.
“Together, these generous
grants will allow us to take the
next steps to making the Archives
Center a reality and securing the
community support we need to
construct the building,” said
Carol W. Smith, president of the
Historical Society of Haddonfield. “These awards will allow us
to work with experts experienced
in planning and managing a capital campaign of this scale.”
The proposed Archives Center
is expected to cost approximately
$850,000. The new two-story building was designed by Haddonfield
resident Eduardo Guzman of
DCM Architecture and Engineering, and reinterprets an earlier
barn that had stood on the site.
The new Archives Center will
provide much-needed space for
the society’s archival holdings,
which include correspondence,
photographs, diaries, scrapbooks,
maps, pamphlets, ephemera,
books and more.
The Historical Society of Haddonfield was founded in 1914 and
is committed to collecting and
preserving unique artifacts, documents, photographs and other
collection materials that help tell
the history of Haddonfield and its
environs in South Jersey.
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-Release emotional toxicity
-Create optimal daily nutrition
-Lower your blood pressure
-Lose weight (if needed)
6
THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
in our opinion
ACLU: The big bully
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
Under pressure from organization, school eliminates “God bless America”
ifteen years ago, following the
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, there
was one song that became a rallying cry for our country. “God Bless
America” was sung by Americans
everywhere, regardless of their ethnic
background or religious beliefs.
The most public places where this
took place were at professional sporting events – before the start of NFL
games and in the seventh inning
stretch of MLB games. Fifteen years
later, the practice still continues at
many sporting venues in the United
States.
Piggybacking on this practice, an elementary school in a local school district began saying “God bless America” following the Pledge of Allegiance,
which, let’s not forget, also includes
F
Your thoughts
What are your thoughts on “God bless
America” in our public schools? Share
your thoughts on this, and other topics,
through a letter to the editor.
the word “god.”
But now, 15 years into this practice,
the American Civil Liberties Union
has said enough is enough, and Glenview Elementary School in Haddon
Heights will no longer be saying “God
bless America.”
The principal at the school, Sam Sassano, defended the practice, writing to
parents that, “it has been our view that
the practice is fundamentally patriotic
in nature and does not invoke or advance any religious message, despite
the specific reference to God’s bless-
ing.” Alas, the school won’t be having
its students say the phrase “God bless
America” after they say “one nation,
under God.”
Congratulations, ACLU, you have
succeeded. While children will be
taught about the founding of our country and the rights we as Americans
have, they will be faced with the fact
that if a group as big or as strong as
the ACLU pressures you, you have no
choice but to succumb to its wishes.
While our children will be learning
about the dangers of bullying, they
will be confronted with the fact that if
you are big enough and if you bully
hard enough, you can get what you
want.
Thank you, ACLU. Keep fighting the
good fight.
letter to the editor
Resident shares concerns with
BOE’s proposed referendum
Editor’s note: This letter was received
prior to the meeting on Jan. 7. The author
wished to have it published.
As a former member of the Haddonfield
Board of Education, I have long been an ardent supporter of our school system, its
students and public education.
Therefore, I regret to say that I have serious concerns about the BOE’s proposed
$40.9 million school bond referendum, on
which residents will vote in approximately
sixty days.
My concerns center around the purported cost of the bond. In mid-November 2015,
the BOE announced that the bond would
cost the average Haddonfield household
just $287 per year. Shortly thereafter, several local papers and the school district’s own
newsletter reported that claim to residents.
What the BOE apparently missed is that
the bond’s true cost may be as much as 50
percent higher, or a total of more than $400
per year, for the average Haddonfield
household. A resident first brought that
discrepancy to the BOE's attention early
last month, but the school board has failed
to date to publicly acknowledge or address
the discrepancy.
In practical terms, this discrepancy
means that the bond during its term could
end up costing the average Haddonfield
household several thousand dollars more
than the many thousands of dollars already projected by the BOE. And that is
just for this one bond.
Why then has the BOE failed to correct
its projection in a prompt manner? I truly
do not know. Perhaps the BOE will announce a correction at its upcoming Jan. 7
public meeting, and if that happens, I hope
that the board makes its correction in a
completely transparent manner.
For example, the school board would not
be acting transparently were it to merely
Dan McDonough Jr.
chair man of el auw it media
Tim Ronaldson
Joe Eisele
execut ive edit or
publ isher
Kristen Dowd
senior associat e edit or Mike Monostra
haddonf iel d edit or Brigit Bauma
ar t dir ect or Stephanie Lippincott
adver t isinG dir ect or Arlene Reyes
manaGinG edit or
el auw it media Gr oup
publ isher emer it us
edit or emer it us
Steve Miller
Alan Bauer
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rd
Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed
weekly to select addresses in the 08033 ZIP
code. If you are not on the mailing list, sixmonth subscriptions are available for
$39.99.
PDFs of the publication are online, free of
charge. For information, call 856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
[email protected].
For advertising information, call 856427-0933 or email [email protected].
extend the bond’s term beyond the current
proposal of 20 years. Such an extension
would increase the number of payments
and the total interest owed over the extended term of the bond, thereby costing residents substantially more in the end.
Finally, as a former school board member, I find it difficult to understand why
four members of the school board (two of
whom are on the Buildings & Grounds
Committee) were absent on the night that
the board cast its critical vote to send its
$40.9 million bond to the state for agency
approval. One can only hope that residents
will see more accurate, timely and complete participation from the BOE going forward.
Brett Harrison
Please recycle
this newspaper.
The Sun welcomes suggestions and comments from readers – including any information about errors that may call for a correction to be printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers.
Brief and to the point is best, so we look for
letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include
your name, address and phone number. We
do not print anonymous letters. Send letters
to [email protected], via fax at
856-427-0934, or via the mail. You can drop
them off at our office, too.
The Haddonfield Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium – including electronically.
JAN. 13–19, 2016 – THE HADDONFIELD SUN 7
Still no decision on 605 Warwick Road
The Planning Board again pushes off a determination
for the 605 Warwick Road application due to time constraints
By BRIGIT BAUMA
The Sun
The application for the subdivision of 605 Warwick Road will
once again be a topic of the next
Haddonfield Planning Board
meeting.
The board again had to push
off a determination for the application from applicant/developer
Mark DeFeo due to time constraints. This meeting saw input
from borough engineer Todd Day,
but once again public comment
wasn’t able to be reached that
night.
The new proposal for 605 Warwick subdivisions has a 13,000
square foot lot fronted by Warwick Road, a 15,600 square foot lot
fronted by Warwick and Gill
roads, and a 21,400 square foot lot
fronted by Treaty Elm Lane and
Gill Road. The new applications
also addressed the concerns the
Planning Board had from the previous application, including
storm water management, lot
depth, lot lines, parking areas and
traffic.
The board opened the hearing
on Jan. 5 with some discussion
and comments from Day, who was
not available at the last meeting,
but listened to the recording so he
could give opinions and recommendations to the board.
Storm water management was
a big discussion at the meeting
again. At the December meeting,
DeFeo’s architect, Clifton Quay of
Stantec, presented two types of
drainage systems that would be
applied to the properties. The one
would control roof and patio run
off, creating a subsystem of pipes
and chambers that would allow
for slower release, easier cleaning
and easier repair if a problem
were to occur. The second was a
subsystem underneath the driveways that would allow for water
run off storage and release of
water at a slow rate. Each house
would have its own separate system.
The reduction standards recommended are that for two years
there is a 50 percent reduction, 10
years is 75 percent reduction and
100 years is 80 percent reduction.
For the overall site area, the reductions are 62 percent. When the
board expressed concern with not
meeting the two-year reduction,
Quay said this could be addressed
please see BOARD, page 10
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PAGE 8
CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY JAN. 13
Afternoon Adventures: Ages 3 to 5.
3:30 p.m. at Borough Hall. Hosted
by the Haddonfield Public
Library.
THURSDAY JAN. 14
Toddler Time: Ages 2 to 3. 10:30
a.m. at Borough Hall. Hosted by
the Haddonfield Public Library.
Read to a Dog: 3:30 p.m. to 4:30
p.m. at Borough Hall. Hosted by
the Haddonfield Public Library.
Nelson Johnson Book Discussion:
7 p.m. at Borough Hall. Hosted by
the Haddonfield Public Library.
Nelson Johnson will give a book
discussion and sign copies of
“Battleground New Jersey: Vanderbilt, Hague and their Fight for
Justice” on Jan. 14 at 7 p.m. at
Borough Hall. Register by calling
(856) 429-1304, ext. 114
FRIDAY JAN. 15
Friday Program: Mabel Kay House.
Noon to 2 p.m. Call 354-8789 for
more information.
SATURDAY JAN. 16
Haddonfield Lions Club’s Annual
Mayor’s Breakfast: 9 a.m. at the
First Presbyterian Church, 20
Kings Highway East. Tickets are
$7 each and will be available at
the door. Mayor Jeff Kasko will
deliver the annual State of the
Borough Address and also present the Citizen of the Year award,
which recognizes an outstanding
member of the Haddonfield community. At the Mayor's Breakfast,
the Lions will be collecting eyeglasses, hearing aids and cell
phones for recycling. This year,
the club will also collect non-perishable food items for the Food
JAN. 13–19, 2016
WANT TO BE LISTED?
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Haddonfield Sun, 108
Kings Highway East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email:
[email protected]. Or you can submit a calendar listing
through our website (www.haddonfieldsun.com).
Pantry at the John D. Young
Memorial Blind Center in Absecon.
SUNDAY JAN. 17
Dance Haddonfield: 6 p.m. at Grace
Church, 19 Kings Highway. Dance
and socialize. Intermediate lesson
6 p.m. and beginner lesson 7 p.m.
with dancing from 8 to 10:30 p.m.
$20 for intermediate lessons and
$15 for beginner. For more information, visit www.haddonfielddance.org.
Quaker Worship: 10 a.m. at Haddonfield Friends Meeting, 45 Friends
Ave. (at Lake Street), Haddonfield. Food and fellowship from
11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Visitors
welcome. Call (856) 428-6242 or
visit
www.haddonfieldfriendsmeeting.org.
Lutheran Church of Our Savior:
Traditional/classic worship services with Holy Communion at 8
and 10:30 a.m. Sunday school
10:30 a.m. for children age 3
through sixth grade. Reflections
worship at 9:15 a.m. 204 Wayne
Ave., Haddonfield.
Grace Church: Holy Eucharist (Rite
I) from 8 to 9 a.m. Choral and
Family Eucharist (Rite II) from
9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Fellowship at 9
and 10:30 a.m. Christian education (adults) from 10:30 to 11:30
a.m. Christian education (children) from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Nursery available. 19 Kings Highway East, Haddonfield.
Haddonfield United Methodist
Church: Contemporary worship 9
a.m. in Fellowship Hall. Traditional
worship 10:30 a.m. in the sanctuary. 29 Warwick Road, Haddonfield.
Mount Olivet Baptist Church: Sunday school at 8:30 a.m. Morning
worship at 9:30 a.m. 202 Douglass Ave., Haddonfield.
First Baptist Church: Adult Bible
study at 9:30 a.m. Prayer &
Praise Music at 10 a.m. Children’s
Sunday school at 11:15 a.m. Worship service at 11 a.m.; childcare
provided. 124 Kings Highway East,
Haddonfield.
Haddonfield Bible Church: Morning
prayer at 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school at 10 a.m. Sunday worship
at 11 a.m. Evening worship at 6:30
p.m. 324 Belmont Ave., Haddonfield.
First Presbyterian Church: Traditional worship at 8:15 a.m. in the
chapel. Family service at 9:30
a.m. in the sanctuary. Traditional
worship at 11 a.m. in the sanctuary. 20 Kings Highway East, Haddonfield.
First Church of Christ, Scientist:
Service at 10 a.m. Sunday school
for children at 10 a.m. 355 Kings
Highway East, Haddonfield.
TUESDAY JAN. 19
Little Listeners: Ages 3 to 5. 10:30
a.m. at Borough Hall. Hosted by
the Haddonfield Public Library.
Lessons & Classes
Canasta, Pinochle, Mah Jongg, Bridge
Sewing, Knitting & Crocheting
7 Kings Court, Haddonfield NJ 08033
856-429-1841
www.gamefriendzy.com
10 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
Board to meet on Feb. 2
BOARD
Continued from page 7
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R
ead their
their ads,
cut their
their coupons,
coupons, but
but before
beeffore you
you sign
sign call
c a ll
by putting a lawn drain into the
underground systems, which
they can do.
Day reviewed this and agreed
that the storm water management proposed moves the water
away from where there is a problem and releases it at a slower
rate.
Another big subject of the
meeting was impervious surfaces
and land disturbance. Impervious
surfaces, part of land disturbance, are not penetrable by
water, and adding impervious
Open the doors to
your future where
the best is yet to be.
surfaces could add more storm
water.
For something to not be considered a major development by the
borough and the state, it has to be
less than one acre of land disturbance. The proposal has 0.98 acres
of land disturbance, making it
not a major development by .02
acres, which also concerned the
board.
From the back and forth of the
board, the developer and the opposition, there wasn’t a clear determination of whether the impervious surfaces and land disturbance would cause more flooding.
A determination was not made,
as the meeting passed 11 p.m., the
cut off time of the Planning
Board’s meetings.
The Feb. 2 Planning Board
meeting will host the hearing beginning with comments and questions from the public. It will be
held at 7:30 p.m. in Borough Hall.
In other news:
The board approved a preliminary proposal by Haddonfield
Public Schools for sidewalk improvements for student pick-up
and drop-off.
At Haddonfield Memorial High
School, the sidewalk along Sylvan
Lake Avenue would be renovated
up to the bus parking area, and
stairs and handrails would be updated as well to bring them into
compliance with the Americans
With Disabilities Act.
At the elementary and middle
schools, the district plan would
eliminate the grass median between the sidewalk and the curb
line, normalize uneven concrete
and create barrier-free, ADA-compliant loading zones.
The board approval of the
measure will allow it to proceed
to the referendum phase in
March.
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12 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
Previous bond numbers were incorrect
PREVIOUS
www.miajon.com
Continued from page 1
MiaJon Salon
116 N. Haddon Ave, Haddonfield, NJ 08033
8 56- 42 9-5 070
ARE YOU PREPARED FOR SNOW?
Have you checked to see if your snow
blower will start and run before you
really need it?
Please do so now!!!
We perform the tune up it needs to have
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* Snow Shovels * Calcium * Snow Blower Parts For Sale *
* Chains Sharpened *
WE ALSO SERVICE:
Kerosene
Heaters
Generators
Chain Saws
Blowers
Snow Blowers
Keep warm this winter
without burning your cash
Seasoned Fire Wood for
Sale & Delivered.
Sales, Services and Warranty work
$484,226. This number is based on
a 25-year bond with an interest
rate of 3.53 percent.
“We cut down the price in the
short run (by) making our new estimates based on a 25-year bond
rather than the 20-year bond. The
interest rate anticipated is 3.53
percent, which was market rate
as of Jan. 4, 2016,” Moramarco
said.
The $35.3 million referendum
is down from the $40.9 million approved in November, but the costs
for residents are estimated higher. The old figures are from the
previous financial advisor for the
bond. Due to this, the board approved a new financial advisor
that night, Daniel Mariniello of
NW Financial Group.
For Question 1, almost everything remains the same, except
HVAC upgrades were taken out of
Q1 and put into Question 2A,
which is specifically on air-conditioning upgrades. Q1 includes the
building envelope, or exterior,
HMHS B-wing reconstruction,
site work, electrical upgrades,
special systems upgrades, HVAC
repairs and air-conditioning for
the middle school cafeteria, program renovations at HMHS, and
HazMat and soft costs. The total
cost of Q1 is estimated to be $30.2
million, with a cost of $253.37 for
the average home per year.
“We moved some items from
Q1 into Q2A, which was air-conditioning. Originally in Q1 items,
we would get certain rooms air
conditioner ready, even if Question 2 didn’t pass. Those were
some very substantial costs, so all
of those have been moved into
Q2A. Those costs haven’t gone
away, but are no longer in Q1. Fixing units and the middle school
cafeteria are still in Q1, but anything considered an upgrade has
been moved to 2A,” Moramarco
said.
Question 2A will still include
air-conditioning to be put in all
classrooms and building automation system control upgrades to
all schools. Q2A is estimated to be
$3.7 million, with a cost of $30.70
per year for the average home.
Question 2B remains the same,
including the stadium and track
upgrades, except the new stadium
lights and poles were taken out.
According to Moramarco, the
lighting and poles still need to be
done, however the district is hoping to find funding in the regular
budget or through the clubs and
activities that use the lighting.
Q2B is estimated to cost $1.4 million, with an average impact of
$16.43 per year.
Question 2C was completely
eliminated from the referendum.
The question was for building envelope work deferred from Q1,
which needs to be addressed due
to ongoing deterioration, but the
conditions are not as critical.
Sullivan, who attended the
meeting, once again spoke to the
board, thanking it for looking
please see REFERENDUM, page 18
14 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
obituaries
Katharine C. Laskey
Jan. 3, 2016
Katharine C. Laskey (nee
Dunenburg), longtime Philadelphia resident, passed away on
Jan. 3 at the age 99.
She was the wife of the late
Joseph, beloved mother of Carol
Neall (Gordon) of Haddonfield
and the late Joseph Laskey. She is
also survived by two grandchildren, Harry and Kathy Hossler,
both of Philadelphia, a stepgranddaughter Desiree Neall of
Marlton and a great-grandson
Justin Hossler.
Services were held privately.
Arrangements
were
made
by Kain-Murphy Funeral Services.
Boris R. Broz
Dec. 26, 2015
Boris R. Broz of Haddonfield
passed away on Dec. 26 at the age
of 81. He was the beloved husband of Nancy (nee Divelbiss);
brother of Vladimir Broz of Chagrin Falls, Ohio, and the late Igor
Broz; and uncle to five nephews
and one niece. He is also survived
by his devoted caretaker Jon
Adams, his wife, Adriana and
their two children, as well as
Boris’ “adopted” daughter, Anya
Ermolaeva.
A memorial service for Boris
will be held at a later date. In lieu
of flowers, memorial contributions in his honor may be made to
Interfaith Caregivers, P.O. Box
186, Haddonfield, N.J. 08033 or a
charity of your choice.
Arrangements were made by
Kain-Murphy Funeral Services of
Haddonfield.
Russell H. Sheppard, Jr.
Jan. 5, 2016
Russell H. Sheppard, Jr., of
Pennsauken and formerly longtime resident of Haddonfield and
Haddon Township, passed away
on Jan. 5 at the age of 74. He was
the devoted husband to Marcia
Sheppard; loving father of LoriAnne Sheppard of Drexel Hill,
Pa., and Russell H. Sheppard III of
Pennsauken; and beloved grandfather to Russell and Abigail
Sheppard. He is also survived by
a sister Suzanne (Michael) Dodson of Springfield, Mass., and
many nieces and nephews.
Russ was a longtime member
of the Merchantville Country
Club, as well as a member of the
Haddonfield Masonic Lodge. Additionally, he proudly served in
the U.S. Navy for four years.
Russ’ family will receive
friends from 10-11:45 a.m., on
Tuesday, Jan. 19 at Kain-Murphy
Funeral Services, 15 W. End Ave.,
with a Masonic Service at noon
and a Religious Service to follow.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions in Russ’ honor may
be made to the Samaritan Hospice, 5 Eves Drive, Suite 300, Marlton, N.J. 08053 or to American
Cancer Society, 1626 Locust St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. 19103.
10% to
25% Off
Entire
Store
WINTER COLORING CONTEST
Win
Tickets!!
• Must be original form. • Only one entry per person.
• Coloring must be done by using colored pencils, watercolors and/or crayons. • Entries must be received by 5 p.m. on February 5, 2016, and cannot be returned.
• Entries will be judged by Sun Newspaper staff and will be based on overall coloring.
• Three winners will be notified by phone/email and posted on Sun Newspapers' social media sites.
• Winners will receive 4-pack to Sahara Sams. • Prizes will be mailed to the address listed on the entry form.
Mail to: Elauwit Media, 108 Kings Hwy. East, 3rd Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033
16 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
Formalized ruling now
goes to commissioners
FORMALIZED
Continued from page 2
would still need to go through, regardless of whether an agreement is made.
When it came to the Planning
Board’s time for discussion, the
question of where the borough
and the developer were came up.
However, nothing has been revealed.
“Do we have an update on
where things stand vis-à-vis the
borough and the property
owner?” board member Douglas
Email us at [email protected]
*+-$ $%-" *+," %&" /
#)*'%
McCollister asked.
“We don’t,” board Solicitor
Donald Ryan said. “That is something that is still ongoing … The
property owner offered no objections, nor did the property owner
endorse the declaration that the
property is in need of redevelopment … This is a recommendation to the Board of Commissioners from here.”
The formalized ruling of the
property will now go to the commissioners. The commissioners’
next meeting is scheduled to take
place on Tuesday, Jan. 12 at 7:30
p.m. in Borough Hall.
Pending formal action at that
meeting, the borough could present a formal redevelopment plan
at the February planning board
meeting.
on campus
(.,- (")-%*) !
Erin Kingham of Haddonfield is
one of nearly 700 Lebanon Valley
College students named to the
dean's list for the fall semester.
Dean's list students must maintain a GPA of at least 3.4 out of
4.0. Kingham, a graduate of Haddon Township High School, is
pursuing a bachelor’s of science
in health science at The Valley.
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PROFESSIONAL WEBSITES.
PEASANT PRICES.
Please recycle
this newspaper.
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18 THE HADDONFIELD SUN — JAN. 13–19, 2016
Referendum website to launch by Jan. 15
REFERENDUM
Call now for phone consultation!
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Continued from page 12
into the figures and updating the
referendum accordingly. However, he was concerned with the
numbers still. He especially wanted to note that this figure is on a
25-year bond and not a 20-year
bond, which means that though
the average cost per year might
be lower comparatively, the bond
would last for five additional
years.
When it came time to vote,
Fagan explained why she would
be voting against the bond referendum approval that night. She
felt that, though she supports a
referendum to fix the buildings,
she would have liked to proceed
with the referendum at a later
date after finding out the incorrect tax impact analysis for more
time for input. Moramarco disagreed, saying he feels HPS is at a
point where things need to move
forward. The referendum passed
with an 8-1 vote by the board.
For information on the bond
referendum go to HPS’s website
at www.haddonfield.k12.nj.us. A
video of Thursday’s meeting can
be found at the Haddonfield Civic
Association’s
Vimeo
at
vimeo.com/user2961532.
Even more information and
communication will be available
to the public once the website for
the referendum is launched. The
website is expected to be live by
Jan. 15. The referendum is scheduled for Tuesday, March 8.
Next BOE meeting is Jan. 21
NEXT
Continued from page 4
munity concerns relating to how
schools, districts and educational
institutions were blocking access
of learner and teacher blog sites
for educational purposes.
The purpose of the Edublog
Awards is to promote and demonstrate the educational values of
these social media. In the class
blogs category Halbert’s class was
No. 1. The blog can be found at
3hcrew.edublogs.org.
• The next BOE meeting will be
on Thursday, Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. in
the high school library.
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THE HADDONFIELD SUN
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Haddonfield
Come Home to
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GARY VERMAAT
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LENNY, VERMAAT
LEONARD
856-428-5150 Ninety Tanner Street • Haddonfield, NJ
INCORPORATED
Visit www.lvlrealtors.com or text LVL to 64842 to tour our Haddonfield Properties.
R E A LT O R S

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