Cape May County Herald, 27 June 1984 IIIF issue link — Page 12

m \ / • . ■ i / 1 2 Herald & Lantern 27 June '84 |

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"Jews Notes from I ) Lower Township '■ J E. ). Duffy 465-5055

i "I'M GOING TO recom L mend that we hire him." I Deputy Mayor Robert « f Fothergill, speaking as a | member of the township i Municipal Incinerator r Authority, said of Charles Harris, a consulting; i engineer to Delaware | County. Pa. t He presented his credeni tials and fees for service as I the proposed consulting I engineer for the authority during its meeting last week. v "He wanted a $4,000 retainer," Fothergill said, plus $50 an hour. The deputy mayor, who becomes mayor Sunday under the new form of government said he will suggest the township hire Harris at the hourly rate only. "The going rate is well over $70 (an hour)," the mayor-elect noted, "so he's reasonable." Jijirris told the audience . at a mid-February authori ty meeting that he had been working since Jan. 5 on the proposed development of a? township-owned waste tog energy incinerator. A week before the February meeting . i Fothergill introduced a; resolution proposing that! township committee hire| Harris at $50 an hour; that| measure was tabled.! however. COL NT Y MUNICIPAL! Utilities Authority and^ township officials met last' week to discuss Lower's incineration ideas. Some MUA staffers have insisted on the authority's monopoly of solid waste disposal and Fothergill has been looking or a way around it. Both sides agreed to compare engineering information at some future date, but on little else. S.WBORVWIKI.KNG A .Associates of Kalamazoo. Mich., completed a study "f solid waste disposal alternatives for Lower in September The firm proposed township construction of a waste to energy incinerator with the closed Harbison - Walker magnesite plant. Sunset Beach, as the preferred site. Calling the Sanborn-i Wielenga report "a lolly-; pop study. " Michael Stubbs. son of Fothergill's regular GOP mayoralty opponent Samuel Stubbs. noted that the MUA paid Sanders & Thomas of Pott stown. Pa.. $100,000. which, according to Stubbs. criticized Sanborn Wielenga 's findings in February 'Actually, the MUA commissioned Sanders AThomas to study the feasibility of converting (he

; magnesite plant into a waste to energy in cinerator It did. but based ; its findings on a much larger incinerator than the one proposed by SanbornWielenga. > The St ubbes. said Samuel's unsuccessful Third Ward council running mate. Debi de la Cretaz. earlier this year, asked the state Department of Community Affairs i DCAj to investigate township hiring of SanbornWieleng^. The DCA suggested they take their complaints to the county prosecutor where the elder Stubbs left them. Michael Stubbs agrees % with MUA staffers that on- ? ly the MUA can operate an | incinerator Furthermore. I he aruged Friday, "in- | cineration will work most | efficiently in a tri-county approach and then the

; likelihood of it producing if electricity will be in doubt, is "The cost involved is astronomical. " Stubbs 'i maintained, referring to | the township incineration . proposal. "The affects on the environment are unknown since Lower ! Township's so-called study lacked an environmental impact statement Addressing Fothergill in a letter to the editor, the younger \Stubbs wrote. "Bob. your sales pitch lacked one important element — substance." M.ARvf BAXTER, com munity activist, sides with Fothergill. however She attended last week's meeting betweeen MUA and township officials In her letter to the editor, she concluded: "If can't' had not dominated their 1 MUA officials' > approach to the problem, and they had initiated studies! similar to Lower Township's, the county might well be currently successfully functioning in the incinerator business " TOWNSHIP PI. ANN Kit# will hold their reorganization meeting at 7:3(1 p m , July 5, in Township Hall. Bayshore Road. Villas, with their next work review meeting there at the same time July 12 Their next regular meeting will be in Township Hall at 7:30. Julv 19. LOWER'S ZONING Board of Adjustment reorganizes Tuesday at 7 p.m with its next regular meeting at the same time July 10 Both will be held in Township Hall EDWARD J. CAMPBELL. superintendent of the Lower Township (elementary) School District, confirmed that its

board last week approved funding to remove 500 square-feet of asbestos during the summer vacation from Lower Township Consolida t ed and Maud Abrams schools. Cold Spring. He had estimated removal costs at $6,500. Asbestos was reported in those schools and in five others throughout the county. DISTRICT OFFICIALS, the superintendent said, have been interviewing candidates interested in replacing Jerry Livingston as Consolidated's principal. Ten semi-finalists will be selected by next month with a jiew principal later chosen from several finalists. Campbell explained. Livingston has accepted

a position as a school ad ministnator at Lower AUfiviray^tfreek school. Salem, QJfnty. LLMJA MERRILL of the local Democratic Club reports that members will model women's fall fashions during a luncheon show Aur. 25 at the Car riage Lamp restaurant. Cloverdale Avenue. Villas Fashions will be provid ed by Post Horn shops in Cape May and Stone Har bor with music by Roy and Ethel Brown. For $8 each, guests can enjoy the show, and their choice of Seafood Newburg or boneless stuffed chicken, plus a salad, beverage and a Pina Colada desserL__ To oriJer tickets, call Merrill at 886-1468V>r Susan Kenny tat 886-663 lj/. MASTER SUNG WOO. author oK "Rape Prevention," will ttaach a free rape defense class tommorrow at 8 p.m. in Villas Karate Studio. 1300 Bayshore Road.

STUNK IIVKKOK DUPLICATE BRIDGE < I.CB WINNERS NORTH A N|> SOI Til 1 Bill Coan and Bob Owens 109 2 Bud Volk and Chuck ReOshaw 99 3 Mr and Mrs Bert Graff 93 I Messrs Bardogno and-Ditrra 91 E AST AND W EST / 1 Willie Doyle and Carolyn EldenlOT 2 Dot Welsh and Helen Jo Ownes 3. Ruth Reese and Bill HUntner '|00 4 Jane Ph. li ps and Mar Kampetis97

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