Herald A Lantern 19 May '82
Get Tough Policy in Time for Summer
hv Jake Schaad ♦CAPE MAY A get tough policy for drunks, drivers of noisy and speedy . vehicles and for delinquent dog owners was announced by Mayor Arthur Blomkvest at MondaV night's City Council Meeting The mayor said the city Will strictly enforce a law that imposes a $500 fine for drinking in the streets or in cars There is "a lot of drinking taking place at 2 or 3 . o’clock in the morning” and bottles are strewn all over the city’s streets, he said To illustrate this point, the mayor produced a box of 27 broken bottles that he said
SIEGEL'S
he picked up in 20 minutes along the Beach Dr IIK ALSO announced that children with noisy mopeds will have the vehicles taken away from them this summer The mopeds wil^be taken to the police station and the parents of offenders subject to fines, he said. ,i Mr. Blomkvest gave notice to speeders, especially motorcyclists, that extra policemen will be brought in’ during the summer months and radar traps will be established in the city. “We’re going to shut down speeding this summer,’’ he promised, adding “and that goes for local residents, too."
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ON DOGS, the mayor said the city will crack down on residents who allow their canine to run lose. When a spectator asked what could be done about owners who refused to clean up after their dogs defecate on other people’s properties, the mayor said they should call the police department and enforcement will follow. The meeting was opened with Youth Week ceremonies. Participating were students from Cape May Elementary, Teitelman junior high school and L-ower Cape May Regional High School. WHEN A STUDENT asked if condominiums are detracting from the Cape May Victorian theme, the mayor revealed that the voters of the ciJjLwill be asked to -Vote Tits, a November Jreferendihn whether the required height for VgW ydondos should be reduced from 45 to 35 feet. A resolution naming 18 tenfporary seasonal police officers, including three \women and nine repeats from last year, was passed. T/ie summer policemen are Raymond Allen, Ed Beamon, Robert J. Brutschca, Ralph Caprio, Gordon Clark. Thomas S. Costa. Gary Dailett, Clare Davis, Bertram S. Halbruner Jr., Celina McNeill, David and Jeffrey Molson, Vickey Mouser, Damon Ogando, Margaret Parker. Frank Smith. William SZtemcsak and Todd Unger.
To Fund Spraying
COMMITTEE CANDIDATE Charles Leusner, right. with Dennis Township Mayor Frank Murphy, who has endorsed Leusner's bid for Democratic nomination in Middle Township.
TRENTON / Assemblyman^Josepfi W. Chinnici ' (R-Cape* Cumberland), senior member of the Joint Appropriations Committee, said Friday that Gov. Kean has agreed to supply approximately $300,000 to spray all state lands against the gypsy moth. The money, which will be Supplied to the Dept, of . Agriculture, was to be
available in time to meet a May 15 deadline for spraying, Chinnici said. "IT IS CRITICAL that the spraying be done at a particular stage cf gypsy moth development, or we will have lost the battle for another year,” he said. "The greatest damage is done during June tuid July and by then the spraying will be ineffective.
Leusner Bid Endorsed By Ex-rival
COURT HOUSE - Dennis Township Mayor Frank Murphy has announced his endorsement of Charles Leusner. for the seat An Middle Township Committee being vacated by Mayor Samuel DeVico. Murphy said, "I have decided to support Chuck
Leusner because he is a loyal Democrat who is well qualified to represent the citizens of Middle towaship." In 1979, Murphy and Leusner opposed one another in the primary election for freeholder. Murphy won that election 0
and was endorsed by Leusner in the general election. "When I am elected ! would like to run Middle Township much the same way Frank governs Dennis Township^-with respect, common sense, and hard work," Leusner commented.
Against ‘Hot’ Waste Dumping in Ocean
VILLAS — The Lower Township Committee has passed a resolution expressing opposition to the dumping of radioactive waste, sewage sludge and chemicals into the ocean off the Jersey coast. Acted on at the request of Committeewoman Peggie Bieberbach, the resolution calls on the U.S. Enrironmental Protection Agency not to pursue consideration of any regulations that will relax or alter any existing laws prohibiting the use of the ocean as a burial ground for hazardous waste.
"THE TOWNSHIP of Lower endorses those laws, rules and regulations which ended the dumping of radioactive waste in 1970," the document states. It also says the Township endorses "any federal
legislation which would continue to prevent such dumping in the future." According to Ms. Bieberbach, the resolution is modeled after a similar one now on the books in Ocean City.
DeVico Hits At Deaver
COURT HOUSE - Middle Township Mayor Samuel S. DeVico, ip a release. criticized Republican Township Committee Candidate William Deaver for his remarks concerning the defeated school budget. DeVico said Deaver obviously made a list of charges against the committee without first checking The facts. "WHY DIDN’T Mr. Deaver attend the public hearing at the Board of Education or the April 23 public hearing between the Township Committee and the Board of Education?" he asked. "It appears to me that Mr. Deaver is Grandstanding!" While Deaver criticized the Township Committee for not cutting the defeated school budget, DeVico pointed out that Title 18 does not require the committee to make cuts. It provides for the committee to "review" the budget, and since $448,000 was cut by Republican Governor Tom Kean, a member of the same political party as Deaver, the committee felt that any further cuts would be damaging to the educa-
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