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Herald & Lantern 21 September '93
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TOWNSHIP POLICE handled 2,u20 complaints last month, 459 of them criminal. Fifty adults were arrested and 12 juveniles, according to Police Chief Robert M. Denny. Eight motorists were charged with drunk driving and 166 other traffic violations summons were issued, he told the township committee last week. Police, he said, recovered $1,495 of the $19,000 in property stolen last month, made 948 property checks and logged more than 46,000 miles in squad car patrols. • • • CAPE MAY County Freeholders have agreed to spruce up 13 acres of county-owned land behind the Joseph Millman Center, Miami Beach, as a picnic area. In a Sept. 1 letter to the freeholders, Barney Doyle, a township recreation commissioner, asked them for help in clearing the county property, building barbeque pits, providing other picnic equipment and to donate the tract to the township. Because the 13 acres had been purchased with state Green Acres funds, Freeholders Gerald Thornton and William Strun said last week that the county tract could not be turned over to the township, but none of the five-member board raised objections to county upgrading of the land for local use. ‘T think we should do it,” said Thornton, a VUlas resident and its GOP leader, “(but) I don’t think we should give it to them. “I don’t have any problem with that," he added, referring to township residents’ use of the county land. Sturm suggested “some good (building) set backs” for the barbeque pits, alluding to a precaution for fire prevention, while Freeholder James Kilpatrick noted that the township should be required to “assume the
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liability” for personal injury or property damage at the tract. The township signed an agreement of sale, July 18, authorizing the $13,000 purchase of 9.5 acres, near the county tract and behind Millman Center, and plans to develop it as a recreational area as well. TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE adopted a resolution (No. 83-141) during its regular meeting last week, authorizing the transfer of $10,000 in Revenue Sharing money “to fund a pressing need of the township" for recreational programs, particularly children’s sports. Unless new sources of funding were found, William Brown, township recreation superintendent, warned the committee early last month, several programs would have to be cut back. At an Aug. 22 committee meeting, coaches complained of faulty equipment for their young teams and Mayor Peggie Bierberbach promised to come up with the necessary township money to Finance sports teams. Hie committee, she insisted, has appropriated substantial sums for the purchase of new sporting equipment. According to the Revenue Sharing resolution, $8,500 will be transferred from funds budgeted for the township police and
another $1,500 will be transferred from an account earmarked for First aid. JAMES W. VERNA JR., chairman of the Lower Board of Recreation Commissioners, reported the results of the commission’s Sept. 8 raffle for youth recreational activities. The first $100 prize went to Donald DiGilio, a recreational commissioner from N. Cape May. Margie DeCamillio of Villas donated her $50 second prize to the commission.Kathryn Kwiatkowski won the $25 third prize. After deducting prize money, the commission realized a $361 profit from the raffle, Verna noted. RESIDENTS interested in helping out with the Recreation Commission's Oct. 29 Halloween Costume Party are asked to attend its next meeting at 8 p.m., Sept. 29, in the Recreation Center, Villas, according to Anna M. DeNapoli, commission corresponding secretary. REMINDER: Mayor Bieberbach will be honored during a fund-raising catered dinner at the Lower Township Democratic Club, Bayshore Road, Villas, from 4-8 p.m., Oct 8. For information and tickets ($8), call Pat at 886-4998 or Linda at 886-1468.
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