■ . f 20 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 28 May '86
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TOWNSHIP MANAGER James R Siugtp plans a public hearing tomorrow on his proposed application for a $300,000 Small Cities grant from the state l>epartment of Community Affairs That hearing's scheduled lor 10 a.m. in Township Hall. 2600 Bavshore Rd . Villas •One projeet that I am considering as a possibility , lor .this grant is the installation of a water system in the Villas. " Stump wrote Council on May 2. T o supply t he whole com - munity with public water lines would cost $13-516 million. Stump has most recently estimated « that \as $500,000 early last year > Because ol the projected cost, he told Council last week, he wants to apply for a l;rant toward a "very basic system" that would connect houses with salt contaminated wells. The county Health Department reported nearly two years ago that 247 Villas wells suffered sali water intru> ion First phase of a "very basic system" would cost $16 million. Stump estimated. A lot of people. 1 think, in the Villas, don't want that <publici water." Stump observed last woek
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"They're happy with what they have. "I don't think we'll dictate: 'Yes. everybody must connect.' " he said, "but it would endanger the fiscal viability of the project if too many didn't. "1 think there are some people in Villas who would love to have < public > water." Stump added. "If the state's going to give us the money. I think we should accept it." Public water, however, still comes from wells and Stump, as township MUA executive director, also has l>een considering pumping water from township wells to Cape May: two of its three wells in Lower have been contaminated by salt. Water for Cape May. as much as 2.2 million gallons a day during peak summer days, would help keep the MUA out of red ink 'it lost $130,000 last year. and. perhaps, pay pari of the cost for a Villas water - system. Stump told the MUA in February. TOWNSHIP HALL will also b the site for 10 a m public hearings Monday on two CAFRA < Costal -Area Facility Review Act) applications to (he state Department of Environmental Protection. Bardon Development Inc. wants a CAFRA per mil to build Villa House Condominium. 22 two-story townhouses. on Raleigh ■Avenue. Diamond Beach, while A T & L. Inc. wants a CAFRA permit for construction of the 24-unit La Vida Del Mar Con dominiums there Written comments on either application can be submitted w ithin 15 days of (he hearing to John Keenan. Bureau of Planning and Project Review. Division of Coastal Resources. CN 401. Trenton. N.J . OK625 AT III \.M. TUESDAY, the slate Economic Development Authority will hold a public hearing on Cape may Mall Limited (Partnership's application lor $9 5 million in bonds to buy 27 acres on Bayshore Road, between Ferry and Town Bank roads. North Cape May. and to finance construction of a enclosed shopping mall there Conceptual plans, unveiled to township planners last month, called for a $14 million mall of 250.000 square feet on 37 acres. Lower planning director Harry W. McVey reported then But the state application 'No 86-7259) calls for "two department stores — one containing approximately 30.000 square feet and the other containing approximately 50.000 square feet - and approximately 55.660 square feet of enclosed mall space for leasing to retail tenants." The complex, to be called "Holly Beach Mall." would _bc controlled by the partnership which lists its • address as Brooklandville. Md . and its principals as Richard M Singer. Ptrick J B Donnelly. John G. Wharton. Andrew N Lutyk and William R. Russell Jr According to the development authority's May 22 hearing notice: "..•.members of the public may appear in person or by
attorney to provide information and make statements concerning the foregoing application. "Industrial development bond financing of the... development authority is not an obligation of the state.. . nor of any county or municipality . ." the notice stresses. "Funding of such financing is secured privately through conventional lending sources." COUNCIL IS Sl.ATED for Final action after an R p.m. public hearing Monday in Township Hall o an a nti- pornography zoning ordinance (85-16) that Council is recorded as having approved on lirsl reading last week, according to a legal ad Thursday. There's some confusion about that, which apparently will be ironed out Monday With Mayor Robert * Fothergill absent and Councilman Robert Conroy abstaining. Council approved an earlier version of the measure last June It was tentatively slated for final action Sept 16. but referred instead to the Community Standards Review Board after members were appointed the iollowing month With two members absent. the board recently voted 5-0 to recommend Council adoption of 85- -16 with an amendment that would restrict any adult businesses to. industrial zones rather than general business and industrial zones. Originally proposed in April 1984 by Deputy Mayor 'then Mayor) Peggie Bieberbach. the antiporn ordinance has been stalled since then. The latest version is the weakest of several including proposed Or dinancc 85-2. its most recent prececessor. which 3.435 petitioners urged Council to scrap last May as too mild. PLANNERS, during their May 15 meeting, con ditionally approved Albert Mucchetli's final site plan for "The Gables." town houses and duplexes for S Station Avenue. Diamond Beach, but tabled until June 19. his preliminary and final site plans for " The Cloisters." 24 residential units there, at Raleigh and S. Station avenues. They extended Philadelphia Beverly Gay's hardship variance of Feb 21. 1985 for a Forest Road subdivision. Villas, that splits a 100- by 100-foot lot into two 50- by 100-foot undersized lots. Builder Jack Bowman also received an extension, for 190-days. to submit subdivision plans approved October 17 for Cape Woods, a cluster development planned west of Fishing Creek Road The planners deemed incomplete a Stella Maris Knights of Columbus minor site plan application for a 16- by 20-foot addition to their Breakwater Road headquarters. Erma They continued until June 19. Coastal Research and Development's application for several hardship variances to build a marina, commer-
cial/residential complex. "Lighthouse Pointe." along Shawcrest Road on the Wildwood Yacht Basin. Tabled until June 19 was Morey Development Company's dune review application for S. Station and Abstin avenues. Diamond Beach. LINDA KAMPMKIKK. founder and president of the county Epilepsy SelfHelp Program, and its secretary. Jane Marten, both from Villas, will be attending the Mutual Aid .Self-Help Conference on June 7 at Rutgers Universi'y's Busch Campus Center. Piscataway. It's being sponsored by the St. Clair's-Riverside Medical Center. Kampmeier said she and Marten will be distributing how-to information on publicity, and influencing people. REMINDERS — Council's work sessiou is slated for 6 p.m. and its regular meeting at 8 Monday. • The Board of Health meets 6 p.m. and the Incinerator Authority at 7:30 Tuesday in Township Hall. 2600 Bayshore Rd.. Villas SCHOLARSHIP — Nancy J. Lravitt has been selected as a leadership scholarship recipient at Eastern College. St. Davids. Pa., for the fall. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Leavitt Sr. of Goshen, and attends Cumberland Christian School. New Degree For Sheftz NORTH CAPE MAY - Deborah Sheftz. daughter of Mr and Mrs. Stephen Sheftz this community and Chester. Pa., received her Juris Doctor degree from Antioch University. Antioch School of Law Division. Washington. D C., May 17. Sheftz attended Notre Dame High School in Moylan. Pa. and was a 1983 "cum laude" graduate of Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. with Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology and anthropology. SHE WAS elected to "Who's Who Among American Law Students in 1985". and in that year presented a talk on "Oil Overcharge Distribution" to the National Governor's Conference in Washington. Sheftz has served in a wide variety of internships, including as a researcher and law clerk for the Health and Energy Institute and as a law clerk for the National Consumer Law Center in Washington

