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  • 8/13/2019 Medford 0115

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    www.medfordsun.com JANUARY 1521, 2014 FREE

    Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-11Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

    INSIDE THIS ISSUETop teacher

    Board recognizes Vicky Gormansclassroom achievements. PAGE 5

    MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun

    Shawnees Ryan Surman lines up against Noah Snively of Lenape for the first match of theevening between the Indians and the Renegades last week. Surman lost his match, but Shawneewon the dual meet, 46-19.

    Shawnee lines up against LenapeTownshipnamesBuonimayor

    By MIKE MONOSTRAThe Sun

    Last weeks Medford councilreorganization meeting brought anew face and a new voice to theseat of mayor.

    Chris Buoni was chosen as themayor of Medford Township for2014. He takes the place of FrankCzekay. Chuck Watson filled thedeputy mayors seat.

    Buoni discussed how he hasdifferent views and a differentvoice than the two previous may-ors, Czekay and Randy Pace.However, he said a different voiceis a good thing.

    One of the great things, as wego through the next few years, isthat youre going to see a lot ofdifferent faces and hear a lot ofdifferent voices up here, Buonisaid.

    Buoni set a list of goals resi-dents should expect from him asmayor. Information, access andempathy were the three main as-

    please see COUNCIL, page 4

    New BOEpresident

    voted inat meetingBy MIKE MONOSTRA

    The Sun

    A Lenape Regional HighSchool Board of Education mem-ber who has had his roots in thedistrict his entire life was chosenas its president last week.

    David Stow was unanimouslyvoted to serve as the Board of Ed-ucation president at the boardsreorganization meeting. Stowtakes over for Ted Shinske. Hehad served as the boards vicepresident in 2013.

    Stow has been a part of theLenape district going back to hisdays as a student at Lenape HighSchool in the 1970s. Stow nowlives and represents Medford onthe board, and nothing makes

    him more proud than serving onthe districts Board of Education.

    Im proud to be a member ofthis board, he said. We have oneof the best school districts in thisstate.

    During his acceptance speechto the large crowd gathered at thedistricts administration buildingin Shamong, Stow rattled off the

    please see NEXT, page 6

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    2 THE MEDFORD SUN JANUARY 1521, 2014

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    Real estate tax: $8,162 / 2013Approximate Lot Square Footage: 13,917

    This two-story colonial has four bedroomsand two full and one half bathrooms.Features include hardwood floors, tin ceil-ings, kitchen with Italian tile, two staircas-es, ample closet space, refinished atticand newer electrical system.

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    Leah Arter was sworn as direc-tor of the Burlington CountyBoard of Chosen FreeholdersJan. 2, pledging to enact a new

    jobs initiative in 2014 to assist un-employed and underemployedresidents, and issuing a budgetchallenge to her fellow freehold-ers to find cost-savings that wouldreduce property taxes for thesixth consecutive year.

    Arter was elected during thetraditional organizational meet-ing, held in the Olde HistoricCourt House in Mt. Holly. Theevent also included the swearingin of Joe Donnelly of Cinnamin-

    son to his third three-year termon the board; the swearing in ofTimothy Tyler of Fieldsboro to asecond five-year term as countyclerk; and, Jean Stanfield of West-ampton to her fifth three-yearterm as Sheriff.

    Now in her third year as a free-holder, Arter, of Moorestown, de-livered a State of the County ad-dress that highlighted financial

    accomplishments, noting thatBurlington County governmenthas had a record of spending lessmoney per citizen than any othercounty in the state.

    The unfortunate reality, saidArter, is that even though the realestate market is recovering, thecounty is facing yet another de-crease in ratables in 2014 and acorresponding loss in revenue.She said all freeholders shouldparticipate in the hands-on taskof making up that shortfall.

    Second on the directors list ofpriorities for the new year is thecreation of a new Workforce De-

    velopment Initiative which, shesaid, is built upon the premisethat every Burlington County res-ident who wants a job will findone.

    This program will target train-ing and other resources availablethrough county schools, theBurlington County Chamber, ex-isting agencies, and other organi-zations, Arter said, adding, Most

    critical to this initiative will bethe ongoing participation of busi-ness owners and their hiringmanagers, who will directly con-vey to us the skills they are look-ing for in new workers.

    She cited three other key goalsfor the coming year, which includ-ed:

    Creation of a shared serviceswebsite. County staff wascharged with the responsibility ofcreating an interactive webpagewhere the county, towns andother local entities could posttheir successful shared servicesprograms and look for others.

    Creation of a comprehensivehealth program. The Health De-partment is charged with under-taking an aggressive campaign toencourage residents to eat health-ier, exercise regularly, managestress and take advantage of freehealth screenings.

    Stronger communicationwith local business. Arter, whoowns a small business, charged

    herself with the responsibility ofbuilding upon the countys BuyLocal program by visiting down-towns and local stores and shops,and giving other business ownersan opportunity to share with hertheir needs and issues.

    JANUARY 1521, 2014 THE MEDFORD SUN 3

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    Leah Arter sworn in as director of freeholders

    SPORTS SCORES

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    4 THE MEDFORD SUN JANUARY 1521, 2014 INCORPORATED COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL

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    pects he wanted to express to thetownship. All revolve aroundopen communication, somethingBuoni said he supports.

    What the mayor really is, isthe voice and the face of council,he said.

    As the gavel was turned overfrom Czekay to Buoni, both spokeof the changes Medford has madein the past year and where the

    township is going in 2014.The biggest topic Czekay

    touched on was the townshipsability to close the budget deficitand keep municipal taxes flat in2013.

    We started off in 2013 with abudget deficit, Czekay said. Butwe went to adopt our budget ontime, in accordance with govern-ment guidelines, and we had nolocal tax increase last year.

    It was sort of a turning pointhere in Medford, Buoni said.

    Were definitely not out of thewoods yet, but it was the differ-ence between facing a sort ofcalamity, and then having to find

    out what normal is. Were work-ing on that.

    In other news: During councils regular

    meeting following the reorganiza-tion, township manager ChrisSchultz responded to a few com-plaints he received about snow re-moval after a storm that hit onJan. 2 and 3.

    Schultz said he received anemail that compared Medford toEvesham Township, which hasfewer road miles to plow and al-most four times as many employ-ees.

    Medford has only 10 publicworks employees in its labor poolto remove snow. While all employ-ees were working as the stormstarted, Schultz said that over theweekend, they had to send peoplehome for rest.

    The township plows the mainroads first before working its wayto secondary and collector roadsand finally residential roads.

    The township roads werentthe only issue during the storm.Schultz said the county roads

    werent any better.The biggest problem wasnt

    just with Medford, Schultz said.The county roads were terrible.

    One solution to Medfords snowproblem was looking at pre-treat-ment options. Schultz said thetownship has not pre-treated inthe past, but is getting informa-tion together on possibly pur-chasing brine and equipment topre-treat. If the township can dothat, it may be able to pre-treatthe roads that will be plowed last,according to Schultz.

    Schultz also said he receivedcomplaints that the public worksyard was not taking trash prior tothe storm. He explained that theyard cannot do that when it is

    preparing for snow.Our priority is snow removal

    and getting ready for these winterstorms, Schultz said.

    Schultz also gave an update onthe townships leaf program. Hesaid the public works staff is cur-rently 75 percent through zonefour. The township still has toreach zones five and one beforecycling through other zones ifthere is time. Schultz said the re-cent snow has slowed the leafpickup process.

    The next Medford Townshipcouncil meeting is on Jan. 21 at7:30 p.m. in the Public SafetyBuilding.

    COUNCILContinued from page 1

    Council to meet again Jan. 21

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    JANUARY 1521, 2014 THE MEDFORD SUN 5

    Dont leave a tangled messfor your loved ones to deal

    with after youre gone.

    Well take care of your Will, Power of

    Attorney, Health Care Directive, pet

    care concerns, and probate matters.

    Gary Woodend, Esq.5-C N. Main Street, Medford, NJ

    (609) 654-5489We make it simple, thorough, and easy to understand!

    The MOMS Club of MedfordArea is hosting a preschool fairon Wednesday, Jan. 22, from 10a.m. to noon at St. Peter's Episco-

    pal Church on Hartford Road.This is a free event and is opento the public.

    There will be more than 15 areapreschools and camps presentand able to answer questionsabout their programs.

    For more information, pleasecontact us [email protected] or

    visit the groups website atwww.medfordareamoms.com.

    In the Jan. 1 edition of The

    Medford Sun, the year in reviewstated that the Medford LibraryAssociation dissolved in 2012. Theassociation is not defunct and iscurrently operating as a nonprof-it entity.

    correction

    Preschool fair set for Jan. 22

    By MIKE MONOSTRA

    The SunA Medford Memorial Middle

    School teacher shared the lime-light at last weeks Board of Edu-cation reorganization meeting.

    Superintendent Joseph DelRossi introduced Vicky Gormanto the audience and recognizedher for three achievements shehas received regarding her sci-ence classes.

    While her three achievementsare separate, the general theme

    isnt just about teaching childrenin a classroom; its about bringinga real scientific approach to peo-ple throughout the Medford com-munity, officials said.

    The middle school studentsare helping to improve the scien-tific literacy in the community,Gorman said.

    This community-based ap-proach is what the schools Citi-zen Science Education Programis all about. Gorman stated thestudents are working on projects

    outside the classroom to improveeveryones understanding of howthe earth works, particularly as itrelates to weather.

    This program has helped Gor-

    man receive a Distinguished K-12Teacher award from the Ameri-can Meteorological Society. Shewill attend the societys nationalconvention in Atlanta as part ofthe award.

    The National Oceanic and At-mospheric Administration alsohas named Gorman a climatesteward. She said being a climatesteward will allow her to work onprofessional development to cre-ate even better projects for thecommunity.

    Gorman will also receive hon-

    ors at the National Science Teach-ers Associations conference inBoston in the spring.

    For her, the next step is im-proving the schools communica-tion with the community and pro-moting the work the students aredoing outside the school walls.

    We have to continue to createcommunity outreach, she said.

    In other news: The reorganization meeting

    saw a new member join the Boardof Education. David Berming-

    ham was sworn in as the newestboard member. Reelected boardmembers Michael Etter andKatherine Busca were also swornin. Bermingham defeated former

    board vice president Trudy Colein last Novembers election.

    Etter was chosen to retain hisrole as president. Katherine San-tamore was the unanimouschoice as the boards new vicepresident, taking over for Cole.

    The board passed two revisedpolicies on second reading. Therevisions were made to the atten-dance policy to be in compliancewith Department of Educationguidelines. The policy on re-search projects by staff memberswas a routine police update.

    The next Medford Board ofEducation meeting will be on Jan.27 at 7:30 p.m. at the Medford Me-morial Middle School.

    Science success: Middle school teacherrecognized for classroom achievements

    OBITUARIES

    The Sun will print obituaries,free of charge.

  • 8/13/2019 Medford 0115

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    6 THE MEDFORD SUN JANUARY 1521, 2014

    108 Kings Highway East

    Haddonfield, NJ 08033

    856-427-0933

    The Sun is published weekly by ElauwitMedia LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rdFloor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed

    weekly to select addresses in the 08055 ZIPcode.

    If you are not on the mailing list, six-monthsubscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFsof the publication are online, free of charge.For information, please call 856-427-0933.

    To submit a news release, please [email protected]. For advertisinginformation, call 856-427-0933 or [email protected]. The Sunwelcomes suggestions and comments from

    readers including any information abouterrors that may call for a correction to beprinted.

    SPEAK UPThe Sun welcomes letters from readers.Brief and to the point is best, so we look forletters that are 300 words or fewer. Includeyour name, address and phone number. Wedo not print anonymous letters. Send lett ersto [email protected], via fax at 856-427-0934, or via the mail. You can dropthem off at our office, too.

    The Sun reserves the right to reprint yourletter in any medium including electroni-cally.

    Dan McDonough Jr.CHAIRMAN OF ELAUWIT MEDIA

    MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow

    CONTENT EDITOR Kristen Dowd

    MEDFORD EDITOR Mike Monostra

    ART DIRECTOR Stephanie Lippincott

    CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann

    CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens

    VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.

    ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP

    PUBLISHER EMERITUS Steve Miller

    EDITOR EMERITUS Alan Bauer

    Tim RonaldsonEXECUTIVE EDITOR

    Joe EiseleINTERIM PUBLISHER

    names of many teachers. These were theteachers Stow had dating all the way backto kindergarten and through his entire ca-reer at Lenape.

    All of these people have dedicated theirlives, he said. Not for fame and certainlynot for fortune. These people have dedicat-ed their lives to young people.

    With Stow moving up to president, the

    board unanimously elected Linda Ecken-hoff to take over as vice president. Theboard also made board and professional ap-pointments during the reorganization por-tion of the meeting.

    In other news:

    The Shawnee High School football teamwas honored during the action portion ofthe boards meeting last week. Members ofthe team received certificates and posed forpictures with members of the board.

    Head coach Tim Gushue talked abouthis teams perseverance in defeating thetop three teams in their bracket and win-ning the South Jersey Group IV champi-onship.

    When we got to the playoffs, I said themistake they made was they let us in, hesaid.

    Superintendent Carol Birnbohm in-

    formed the board that unannounced lock-down drills were held at the high schoolsfor the first time. The school districtworked with the respective local authori-ties in conducting the drills. She said hav-ing unannounced drills allowed school ad-

    ministration and local authorities to betterassess school security and safety, some-thing she emphasized as a priority in thedistrict.

    Birnbohm had praise for the choirs ateach of the districts four high schools fortheir work during the holiday season. Allof the school choirs performed throughouttheir communities during December.

    We received numerous letters of grati-tude for their service, she said.

    Birnbohm also praised the schoolboard for its service during her report.January is New Jersey School Board

    Recognition month. The next Lenape Regional High School

    District Board of Education meeting isscheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 19 at 7:30p.m. in the district administration at 93Willow Grove Road in Shamong.

    Overall, New Jerseys schools

    are excellent. Thats not in

    question. A recent study

    ranked New Jersey second in the na-

    tion in student achievement and

    chance for success.

    Thats impressive.

    The Garden State ranked second on

    The Quality Counts report, which the

    publisher of Education Week con-

    ducts. Only Massachusetts ranked

    higher than New Jersey in the Chance

    for Success Index, which measures the

    role of education in an individuals

    life.

    The states B+ grade was much high-

    er than the national average of C+, and

    also bested the grade for nearby statesMaryland (B), Pennsylvania (B),

    Delaware (B-) and New York (B-).

    Yay for us.

    With every positive seems to come a

    negative, though, or, in this case, an

    area in need of improvement.

    The same Quality Counts reportranked New Jersey below average in

    the categories of standards, assess-

    ments and accountability (C 44th

    overall) and teaching profession (D+ -

    38th).

    It has been widely reported, both

    here and elsewhere, that our school

    districts are actively working to im-

    prove their accountability and assess-ments, so lets leave that one alone for

    now. The concerning aspect of this

    study is, without a doubt, the teaching

    profession.

    According to the report, New Jersey

    has no incentives for teachers or prin-

    cipals working in hard-to-staff disci-

    plines or schools, no salary parity with

    other occupations, and no financial in-

    centives for teachers to earn national

    certifications.

    This needs to change.

    As we wrote some time ago, our stu-

    dents and, therefore, our schools are

    only as good as the teachers and ad-

    ministrators we hire; ergo, we need to

    ensure that our teachers and adminis-

    trators are not only well qualified at

    the time of hiring but are also incen-

    tivized to grow professionally within

    our system as well.

    Our schools are great now, but lets

    make sure they continue to be great.

    Lets find a way to incentivize ourteachers and administrators to work in

    difficult subjects, in difficult schools

    and earn bigger and better certifica-

    tions.

    Our students are the ones who will

    benefit the most.

    in our opinion

    Lets do more for our teachersOur schools are good, theres no doubt, but lets make them even better

    Your thoughts

    What are your thoughts on the state ofour schools? Do you believe incentivizingteachers and administrators to grow asprofessionals is worth the return oninvestment? Let your thoughts be heardthrough a letter to the editor.

    NEXTContinued from page 1

    Next LRHSD Board of Education meeting is Feb. 19

  • 8/13/2019 Medford 0115

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    WE NES YJAN. 15Paws to read: 3:30-4:15 p.m.

    Pinelands Branch Library, 39Allen Ave., Medford. Children are

    welcome to practice their readingskills and make a new friend by

    reading aloud to Ocho, a regis-tered therapy dog. Reading todogs has been shown to increaseliteracy skills and confidence inchildren. Sign up for a 15-minuteslot and see what it's all about.

    Registration required, visit

    www.bcls.lib.nj.us.

    Nutrition, diet and weight loss: 7p.m. Pinelands Branch Library, 39Allen Ave., Medford. Join AnnaSherman, registered dietitian and

    founder of 4Girls Nutrition, LLCto learn how to avoid beingsucked into the fad-diet world,why these diets may not workand how to lose weight withoutfocusing just on calories. She willtalk about using a lifestyle pat-terns approach to help you iden-tify the eating, exercise, and cop-ing patterns that may be gettingin the way of your weight lossgoals. Registration required, visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us.

    Medford Lakes Garden Club meet-

    ing: Vaughan Hall in MedfordLakes. 11:30 a.m. New membersand guests welcome. Call 268-2333 for information.

    Medford Sunrise Rotary Club:MedPort Diner. 7:15 a.m. Call 354-8104 for information.

    THURS YJAN. 16Lego club: Ages 7-12. 4 p.m.

    Pinelands Branch Library, 39Allen Ave., Medford. Join Legoclub for creativity and imagina-tion in action. Kids can work indi-

    vidually or in teams to create thismonths challenge. The themewill be revealed at the Lego clubsession. Please do not bring yourown Legos. Registration required,visit www.bcls.lib.nj.us.

    TUES YJAN. 21Kids knitting club: Ages 7-16. 4 p.m.

    Pinelands Branch Library, 39Allen Ave., Medford. Knitters of alllevels are invited to join this four-week series. Bring a project thatyou are working on or pick oneout at class. Beginners pleasebring size 10 knitting needles. Theyarn will be provided. Please notethat when you sign up, it is for allfour weeks. Registrationrequired, visit www.bcls.lib.nj.us.

    Medford-Vincentown Rotary Clubmeeting: 6:30 p.m. at MedfordLakes Country Club, MedfordLakes. For more information visitwww.mvrotaryclub.org.

    Kids Yoga: 4:30 to 5:15 p.m. at TheSanctuary for Yoga, 43 S. MainSt., Medford. Call (609) 953-7800for more information.

    CALENDARPAGE 8 JANUARY 1521, 2014

    WANT TO BE LISTED?Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Medford Sun, 108 KingsHighway East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email: news@med-

    fordsun.com.

    11 S. Main Street Medford, NJ 08055Phone: 609-654-4164

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    classifiedT H E M E D F O R D S U N

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