Cape May County Herald, 2 January 1985 IIIF issue link — Page 17

i ' Herald & Lantern 2 lanuary '85 . * A 17

News- — Digest (From Page 1) Builders of Houston, Tex., is working 9-10 hours Monday through Friday and eight hours on Saturdays, too, said Hovick, who also is working those hours. Two Trees Offered COURT HOUSE - Middle Township has two offers of free live Christmas trees following the loss of this year's to a vandal with a chainsaw on Dec. 23. Frank Church of Church's Seashore Nursery in Ermas and Norman Smith of Smith's Family Bootery in Court House Village Shopping Center, made the offers. Township police have charged a 16-year-old from Rio Grande with "malicious damage." The original tree, donated to the chamber of commerce by JI4r. and Mrs. Philip Charles 3d of Court House, was valued at $600 and cost $150 to move. Irate chamber members say they intend to follow this one through the judicial process in the hope the youth will be forced to make restitution and recieve an appropriate penalty. Decorating the tree for the next 10 Chris tmases was one suggestion. < Rates l&ijfjibled , ' AVALON — Borough Council Thursday doubled annual sewerage rates from $9C to $180, diting the need to pay for $1 million in state-mandated repairs to their sewage treatment plant. Council also lowered from 15,000 gallons to 10,000 gallons the water usage available for the / quarterly rate of $22.50. Cost will be 90 cents for every 1,000 gallons over the 10,000 gallon minimum. c No Lights, Ernie COURT HOUSE - Freeholders last week turned down a request from Woodbine Mayor Ernest Materio for street lighting on Washington and Dehirsch both county roads. The mayor said this could help the borough with its "criminal mischief'' problem. Freeholder William E. Sturm Jr. said the county in the past has only provided lighting for county roads when they intersect with other county roads or state highways. Sturm said lighting was expensive and to do this for Woodbine could "open a Pandora's box and bring a deluge from other municipalities." Help Wanted COURT HOUSE - Like to help run Historic Cold Spring Village, the 15-acre, 15-site restored South Jersey farm village? The county owns it nov and is v looking for a director (a full-time paid job in the five figures) and for a couple unpaid advisory board members to join former owners Joseph and Patricia Anne Sal va tore (who are guaranteed positions) and Freeholder Herbert (Chuck) Frederick, former county administrator and clerk to the freeholder board Kathryn A. Willis, and Facilities and Services director Harry E. Kerr (yvho were mentioned as likely members last week). Contact any freeholder any freeholder and indicate your interest. They'll be interviewing soon. 2 Ballot Questions COLD SPRING — Lower Township voters will be asked to consider two ballot questions Jan. 30 to pay for repairs to Lower Township Consolidated School. Approving one question would authorize the transfer of $400,000 in district surplus for the repair project. The second question would authorize a $400,000 bond % issue for it. Polls will be open from 5-9 p.m. at Consolidated School, Villas and . Town Bank fire houses. Super Candidates ERMA — Lower Cape May Regional school board will interview job candidates for district superintendent during a private session, Saturday, Jan. 12. The successful applicant will replace Ephraim R. Keller who's expected to retire from his $54,000 a year post on June 1. Hie districtyincludes Lower Township, Cape May and West Cape May, with Cape May Point as a nonmember sending community.

. • • ' I Mar-Tee Again OCEAN CITY — The city split its 1 streets into zones this year in an effort go to get a less costly trash collection | contract. But the lowest of two bidders again was Mar-Tee Contractors of Rio Grande which last Thursday got a threeyear contract for $1,868,402 plus $36,000 for placing trash containers at various locations. Tipping fees (estimated at $400,006) are extra. Officials called the collection price "excellent." It works out i to an annual cost of about $622,800 i compared to this year's approximate $653,323. Architect Sues WILDWOOD - The city housing authority is being sued by an architectural-engineering consultant who claims he is owed more than the $20,000 he received for work done in 1980- '81. Frank Orleans, of Union County, contends he was not paid for his report on how to remedy design and construction defects in Sandman Towers and Commissioner's Court, which Orleans said had "life-threatening defects." / Water Fouled \ STRATHMERE — Coliform bacteria apparently leaked into the water system j , through line breaks while a chlorinator was being repaired early last month. The high bacteria readings showed up in samples by the County Health Department Dec. 12 and 13. Later samples showed none, however. The L system serves about 30 customers in winter. « Auto Natality \ OCEAN CITY — Lawrence E. Pardee. 64, of this city, was killed Dec. 21 when his car went out of control on the 9th Street Bridge and struck three other cars, one of them head-on. Injured in the accident were George L. Schneider, 20, Ruth H. Newsom, 49, and her husband, Lawrence, all of Somers Point.. Pardee was pronounced dead at Shore Memorial Hospital. Sauce for the Goose COURT HOUSE - The rare opportunity to discuss a governmental pay hike before it happens is slated for 4:30 p.m. Jan. 22 when the Board of Freeholders will hold a public hearing on their proposed 5 percent pay hike. It would increase the freeholders $750 to $15,750 a year, and the director of the board $800 to $16,800. They increased \ their pay by $3,000 last January. This 5 / percent proposal matches the increase other county workers will get in '75, freeholders said. Pleads Guilty NEWARK — Antonio Gambino, 30, of Cape May, pleaded guilty in federal court to charges of trafficking in cocaine. He is' presently serving 30 years in prison on heroin charges. Lawmen said Gambino unwittingly brought undercover agents info contact with kingpins in the mafia's drug organizations, allowing authorities to break the operations based in South "Jerspy. Tourism Grants TRENTON - Some $250,000 in matching state funds will be available to promote tourism in towns, counties and regions. Jan. 11 is the deadline for applying to the state Division of Travel and Toprism. No grant larger than $20,000 will be awarded to finance up to 50 percent of a project's estimated cost. The matching grants were first given out in 1983. Last year, only $50,000 was * available.

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