Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 14 August '85 77
Biker Dies ERMA — Alvin M. Greenweight. 38, of 36 Lake Ave., Pennsville, died in Atlantic City Medical Center Thursday night from massive injuries suffered in a motorcycle crash around 6:40 p.m. Aug. 5 on Fishing Creek Road near Tabernacle Road, Lower Township Patrolman Brian Dickenson reported Friday. The Salem County biker failed to negotiate a curve while speeding on a Triumph, the patrolman explained. It struck a rock hedge and flipped Greenweight 87 Mt feet, Dickenson said.
Ml) Still Missing TOWN BANK — No new clues surfaced by Monday afternoon, Coast Guard officials reported, in the search for Dr. i Harold L. Green, 35, of Somers Point, s whose rented aircraft crashed into the Delaware Bay about a mile offshore Thursday night. Searchers last week recovered a seat cushion, flight bag of information, and part of the fuselage from the single-engine Piper Cherokee Warrior II. Witnesses said the plane stalled before dropping 1,500 feet at a 70-degree angle into about 15 feet of water.
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Developers Buy Racquet Club
(From Page 1) Seven Mile Beach/Middle regional sewage treatment plant scheduled to open in July, 1987. Thompson said he'll enlarge his facilities at 336 96th St. in Stone Harbor. The Crest Haven site includes the indoor sports facility and 20 acres bordered on the north by the MUA's new composting plant and on the south by the county's vo-tech school. THE COUNTY and the MUA have said they have no interest in the location. It is zoned industrial-commercial, as are another 400 acres in the same area still owned by David J. Kerr, William Tozour, Henry Peddle, Robert Gillin and Thomas McCloskey. Gillin and McCloskey bought the dlub and its acreage from the other three the last week in June for $250,000. Narrigan said he and his partners paid $500,000 for . it 1 "We came in last weekend," Narrigan - said last Friday "when we realized they were anxiously trying to sell it. The owners wanted to get out as quickly as possible." NARRIGAN SAID he had "no intention of running it as a racquet club, but if the community wanted to take it over as a racquet club, we'd be happy to see that happen. The bottom line is the debt that has to be serviced." An Avalon Real Estate "For Rent" sign is at the location now. Kerr and Tozour are that agency's owners and William Soens of that firm handled the sale from the five partners to two partners. No Realtor was involved in last week's sale, Narrigan said. "As a builder and developer." he said, "I feel the value is there in the building itself, let alone the ground. This was strictly business. We bought a commercial warehouse. We're looking at the possibilities of renting out commercial space, whether for a warehouse or a showroom. "THERE ARE a number of potential uses that could benefit Middle and the whole community," he said, "both as a ratable and to bring some employment to the area. There could be the start of an industrial park out there. • "The key is the sewer," he added. "Mid- _ die Township has to realize the only way growth is going to happen is for them to work on a plan for bringing the proper facilities into use." Narrigan also raised the sewer issue in regard to the lumber yard, which he said was zoned "bayfront commercial." He would not name the price, but said $500,000 was "a good guess." No Realtor was involved, he said. t t'A number of things could be there." he said. "It's zoned for motel. There could be a first-class restaurant, stores, offices, with a wharf-type atmosphere, taking advantage of the bay. It has a spectacular view. You can't get into Stone Harbor without seeing what's happening there." NARRIGAN SAID he had held a sixmonth option to buy a restaurant liquor license from Stone Harbor Realtor William J. Diller Jr., but it has since expired. "However," Narrigan said, "Bill has expressed an interest in working with me or any entrepreneur who would like to see a first-class restaurant there." Diller bought that liquor license for a reported $250,000 when he purchased the bankrupt 76 House Dinner Theatre in Swainton in the fall of 1984. He subsequent-
ly sold the building to the Holy Redeemer Visiting Nurse ana Home Health Agency. The liquor license was supposed to be sold to a proposed shopping center planned by Baltimore developer Charles Shutter on the south side of Stone Harbor Boulevard just east of the Garden State Parkway The shopping center never happened. INSTEAD. BUKKK Motor Sales of Wildwood intends to put "one or two" dealerships there (it sells Chevrolet. Oldsmobile and Cadillac > , according to coowner David A Burke. He said that, despite sewage line rumors, he will install an "expensive" septic system "until sewage goes by" and open by the fall of 1986 Kindle Ford, Mercury, Lincoln Dodge of Wildwood owns property across the boulevard from the future Burke site, ac cording to Jim Saizlein, Kildle assistant manager. That sale took place "within the last two . months," he said, without a Realtor involved. He declined to say who the property was purchased from, or a price, and said he could not give an accurate guess how many acres. He did say there would be a car dealership located there "down the road. The size and lines (of autos) are years away." That might suggest a wait for sewage lines. MIDDLE TOWNSHIP Mayor Michael J Voll said MUA plans call Stone Harbor Boulevard "sewerable, but that's up to the sewer commission." Voll said he met recently with Stone Harbor Mayor Adren Hand, MUA Executive Director George Marinakis, and Health Department Environmental Program Ad ministrator Clay C. Sutton Jr. "and we all agreed it (Stone Harbor Boulevard) should be sewered to clean up pollution in the backbay area. "Everybody along the boulevard would be required to hook up, plus Stone Harbor Manor, which has a tremendous problem with septic systems leaching into the backbay area and causing pollution," Voll said. - "If the sewer line runs there." said Voll. "everybody, I think, wobld be required to hook up. The cost would be spread over the consumers. Customers would have years to pay." Voll said many of the homes along Stone Harbor Boulevard have "obsolete" septic systems that "don't work and a lot of stuff goes right into the water. "SEWERS would be a big plus for any expansion in the area," said Voll. "They would bring a nice ratable to be developed. Property values would go up along the golden entrance to Stone Harbor." William Cathcart, chief of operations and maintenance for the MUA's waste water operations, said it had "assumed Middle would want to sewer that area" when it designed the Seven Mile Beach/Diddle plant. , Narrigan. who said he primarily builds single-family dwellings and town houses on Seven-Mile Island, said this was his "first venture into Middle and I intend for it to be as first-class a project as Middle will allow me to do. I'm open to any successful operation I can be proud to put my name on. I have two very nice projects and we're anxious to*work with Middle in the development of both. "Neither deal is a quick score," he said. "I live here year-round and my partners vacation here on a six-month basis. All of us are looking to make the community better ."
Unbearable Odors <
( From Page 1 ) instructing Solicitor Bruce (Jorman "to ask for a court order to cease operation " after five days of Health Department citations He said Health inspector Joan Thaler "is not getting the cooperation she needs from the MUA" and agreed to cite the agency LAMAXNA SAID Thaler's notices were "standard procedure" and the plant probably could be closed "if the people are adversely affected, if it's a real nuisance " He compared the problem to a "tremendous odor" problem the MUA had with a pumping station in the south end of Ocean City two years ago "The MUA knows they have to install whatever it takes." said Lamanna. "It will be very, very expensive to correct." CATHCART. CHIEF OF operations and maintenance for the MUA's waste water operations, said that "in the worst case, it might cost another $50,000, which is not that much more on a $9-million project "We've been in touch with Volt and Thaler," he said, "trying to keep them up J to date with what's going on. We have con-
tinued to do all the things we said we'd do We're trying to get it into normal operating mode, we're just not there "There are some odors we haven't encountered before in other facilities." he said. "We've done a lot of work with odor, control of sludge; however, this process emits some odorous compounds not in sludge. "WE HAVE A CONSULTANT coming in to sample this stuff, and better identify it.'' he added "And we will be doing some pilot testing with secondary scrubbers But we haven't licked the problem yet." The plant is supposed to operate much like a backyard compost pile, taking waste water sludge, the semi -solid byproduct of wastewater treatment from MUA plants in Cape May and Ocean City, mixing it with sawdust, "cooking" it for about 40 days and creating a salable fertilizer An MUA news release in May said that odors had "literally defeated some other composting systems." but this plant would use new technology so that "...odor is not anticipated to be a problem." It called the plant "...a model to be studied..."

