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SEPT. 39, 2014
FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-15
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
HSA outlook
Home and School Association wants
to work with community. PAGE 5
Making noise for new uniforms
NICK COHEN/The Sun
The Seneca High School marching band showed off its new uniforms under the lights during a performance for parents last week. This
years band is the largest in the schools history with more than 100 members. Seneca will host its annual competition for area bands
Saturday, Sept. 27.
By NICK COHEN
The Sun
Seneca may have just wel-
comed students back to school on
the morning of Sept. 3, but prepa-
rations for the new year began
months ago.
Like schools across the coun-
try, the administration and staff
at Seneca have been preparing for
the Partnership for Assessment
of Readiness for College and Ca-
reers, or PARCC. The test differs
from the previous HSPA exam in
that it is taken digitally.
We have a great administra-
tion team who have done a great
job of preparing for PARCC,
Principal Jeff Spector said. We
feel comfortable that we are pre-
pared for the technological as-
pects of administering the test.
The challenge is for our teachers
Ready
for the
new year
Seneca Principal
Jeff Spector says
staff has been
busy preparing
please see PROJECT, page 7
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Special to The Sun
Nothing like a bucket of ice
water to beat the late summer
heat. Students at Seneca High
School got to cool off while also
raising awareness as part of the
ALS Ice Bucket Challenge.
Lenape Regional High School
District Superintendent Carol
Birnbohm took on the challenge
two weeks ago, and students
across the district followed her
lead, holding their own events at
Lenape, Shawnee, Cherokee and
Seneca. Ice buckets were re-
placed with books and class
schedules not long after the
challenge, as the first day of
school for Seneca students was
Wednesday, Sept. 3.
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SEPT. 39, 2014 THE SHAMONG SUN 5
SCHANNE DANCE STUDIO
414 Oakshade Road Shamong, NJ
(609) 268-0501
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THE TRADITION CONTINUES:
9: |- I-!
By NICK COHEN
The Sun
Chances are, if youre reading
this article right now, you live in
Shamong. And if you do live in
Shamong, then there is also a
good chance that new Shamong
Home and School Association
President Scott Caloiaro would
like to speak with you.
We want the entire communi-
ty to be involved in the Home and
School Association. We want to
welcome everybody, moms, dads,
those without kids in the dis-
trict, Caloiaro said. Its our goal
to make the HSA a point of com-
munity pride and spirit.
Caloiaro has lived in Shamong
for the better part of 20 years
and has a son starting first grade
at Indian Mills School this year.
His work as an
officer and
now detective
with the
Lawrence
Township Po-
lice Depart-
ment showed
Caloiaro the
value of com-
munity in-
volvement in
the schools.
Through the department, I
was partially a liaison to the
schools in the area. You could re-
ally recognize the importance of
parental involvement in the
schools. Its important to have a
parent, male or female, in and a
part of the school, Caloiaro said.
To spark that community in-
volvement, Caloiaro said the HSA
would focus on community out-
reach through events. And he
stressed not just fundraising
events.
My goal is for the HSA to be-
come a social club. Parents and
those in the community coming
together and meeting with each
other, talking about things,
Caloiaro said.
To the theme of more commu-
nity involvement, the HSA will
host its inaugural Back to
School BBQ for both Indian
Mills Elementary School and In-
dian Mills Memorial Middle
School on Sept. 5 and Sept. 12, re-
spectively. The HSA, along with
IMS Principal Nicole Moore and
IMMS Principal Timothy Carroll,
will kick off the school year with
CALOIARO
Home and School Association
wants to work with community
please see HSA, page 11
6 THE SHAMONG SUN SEPT. 39, 2014
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rd
Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed
weekly to select addresses in the 08088 ZIP
code.
If you are not on the mailing list, six-month
subscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFs
of the publication are online, free of charge.
For information, please call 856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@shamongsun.com. For advertising
information, call 856-427-0933 or email
advertising@shamongsun.com. The Sun
welcomes suggestions and comments from
readers including any information about
errors that may call for a correction to be
printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers.
Brief and to the point is best, so we look for
letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include
your name, address and phone number. We
do not print anonymous letters. Send letters
to news@shamongsun.com, via fax at 856-
427-0934, or via the mail. You can drop
them off at our office, too.
The Sun reserves the right to reprint your
letter in any medium including electroni-
cally.
Dan McDonough Jr.
CHAIRMAN OF ELAUWIT MEDIA
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
CONTENT EDITOR Kristen Dowd
SHAMONG EDITOR Nick Cohen
ART DIRECTOR Stephanie Lippincott
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
PUBLISHER EMERITUS Steve Miller
EDITOR EMERITUS Alan Bauer
Tim Ronaldson
EXECUTIVE EDITOR
Joe Eisele
INTERIMPUBLISHER
The MOMS Club of Medford Area,
which includes residents of Shamong, is
holding its annual kickoff meeting and
open house on Wednesday, Sept. 17 from 10
a.m. until noon at St. Peters Episcopal
Church, 1 Hartford Road, Medford for ac-
tivities and snacks for the kids. New mem-
bers are encouraged to attend.
For more information, please visit our
website at www.medfordareamoms.com or
email us at momsofmedford@gmail.com.
Sheriffs department warns
of ongoing phone scam
There is an ongoing telephone scam ref-
erencing the Burlington County Sheriff s
Department. According to Sheriff Jean
Stanfield, a suspect identifying himself as
a member of the sheriff s department has
been calling victims and informing them
that they have a warrant issued for their
arrest on failure to report to jury duty. The
suspect then advises victims to purchase
Vanilla Visa or Green Dot cards to pay the
fine. Once purchased, the suspect advises
the victims to go to the county building at
49 Rancocas Road, Mt. Holly, threatening
that they will be arrested upon entering
the building and therefore should verify
the numbers and amounts on the card
prior to entry.
The sheriff s office would never contact
residents in this manner and does not so-
licit bail or fine money for payment over
the phone. The Burlington County Sher-
iff s Department and the Burlington Town-
ship Police Department are currently con-
ducting a joint investigation into the scam.
If you are contacted, please immediately
contact detective Paula Fox of the Burling-
ton County Sheriff s Department at (609)
265-5578 or detective Marc Carnivale of the
Burlington Township Police Department
at (609) 239-5859.
MOMS Club hosts kickoff meeting on Sept. 17
Email us at
news@shamongsun.com
N
ew Jerseys trial run if you
can call it that with red light
cameras didnt go so well. For
drivers who ran red lights, it went
swimmingly, but for the state not so
much.
Last week, word came down that
some drivers who were caught on cam-
era running red lights were never in-
formed of the fines they faced because
of a technical glitch in the system. The
state Judiciary, as a result, asked local
courts to throw out the infractions all
17,000 of them.
In New Jersey, red light camera in-
fractions result in an $85 fine, but no
points on a drivers license. At $85 a
pop, thats $1,445,000 in lost revenue, all
because of a technical glitch from a
company that supposedly specializes
in this.
State lawmakers are angry, and
rightfully so.
Said Assemblyman Declan OScan-
lon, of Monmouth County: These
companies incessantly tout the sup-
posed accuracy and consistency of
their systems when the only thing
consistent about the camera company
representatives is their blatant misrep-
resentation of what the equipment
does and how accurately it does it.
People make mistakes, but this is a
big mistake by American Traffic Solu-
tions, which runs half of the states in-
tersections with red light cameras.
Lets just switch to the other compa-
ny that runs our red light cameras,
you might say. Well, the CEO of that
other company, Redflex, was just in-
dicted on federal corruption charges
for allegedly bribing Chicago officials.
Not to mention, a former Redflex exec-
utive also accused the company of pay-
ing bribes to government officials in 13
states, including New Jersey.
Seems to us that these red light cam-
eras, or at least the companies that
were hired to run them, need to be re-
moved, or at least replaced. Theres no
sense in paying for a service thats ei-
ther ineffective or, worse, possibly ob-
tained through illegal means.
We in New Jersey do enough wrong
ourselves that we dont need an outside
company to come in and screw things
up for us; were plenty good at that our-
selves, thank you very much.
The contract for red light cameras
expires in December, and it would be
best if the state didnt renew the agree-
ment, not until it studies its full results
and finds a new company or two to pro-
vide the service.
in our opinion
State should red light cameras
Corruption, technical glitches cause companies to fall short
Share your thoughts
What are your thoughts on New Jerseys
red light camera system in general, or the
companies that are responsible for
running it? Share your thoughts on this,
and other topics, through a letter to the
editor.
in managing and maintaining the
instructional time devoted to
PARCC and the normal curricu-
lum. It will be an adjustment.
Another potential adjustment
for students is the institution of
Project Lead the Way. Both
Seneca and Lenape were pilot
schools for the program a year
ago.
PLTW, a nonprofit organiza-
tion, is a provider of Science,
Technology, Engineering and
Math, or STEM, programs for ele-
mentary, middle and high schools
in all 50 states. STEM education
has become a focus for schools as
the U.S. Department of Com-
merce estimates that jobs in sci-
ence, technology, engineering and
math will grow 17 percent by 2018,
nearly double the growth for non-
STEM fields.
Project Lead the Way will pro-
vide great opportunities for our
students not only here at Seneca
but also in providing connections
at the college level. Its a partner-
ship we are really excited about,
Spector said.
According to Spector, both the
students and the staff share an
excitement over the Lenape
Regional High School Districts
One Book, One School
initiative.
This summer, all of the
schools students read Boy 21
by Matthew Quick. The book is a
story about two high school bas-
ketball players who live in a run-
down town and overcome adversi-
ty in their own lives through a
new friendship. LRHSD Director
of Curriculum Heather Xenakis
said the program has proven to be
successful in promoting school
spirit and unity. She said the stu-
dents are much more eager to
read the books than they would
be with a grade level-specific
book.
In the past, each of the differ-
ent levels read different books,
Xenakis said. Now, the entire
faculty and students are asked to
read one book. It has been em-
braced by the school communi-
ties.
Spector said Seneca has been
creative in ways to incorporate
the program into other events as
well as fundraisers.
In years past, weve held
school-wide events related to One
Book, One School. Weve raised
more than $26,000 for cancer re-
search. Weve held academic pep
rallies, which are pretty unique.
Most pep rallies are based around
sports, so to have one for academ-
ics is really cool, Spector said.
The students, the teachers, real-
ly the entire school have all em-
braced the program.
SEPT. 39, 2014 THE SHAMONG SUN 7
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RAY OF HOPE FUND
Make a fully tax-deductible contribution to
The Ray of Hope Fund today, and well be able to
help organizations in your neighborhood
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The Ray of Hope Fund is part of the Community Foundation of South Jersey,
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PROJECT
Continued from page 1
Project Lead the Way is new
WEDNESDAY SEPT. 3
Toddler time: Ages 2 to 3. 10:30 a.m.
at Pinelands Branch Library. Tod-
dlers are invited to join Mr. Rick
for stories, songs and a craft or
activity.
Chess club: Ages 7 to 16. 4 p.m. at
Pinelands Branch Library. Join
Mr. Rick and his young assistants,
Michael and Ryan, for an hour of
play or instruction. Bring your
chess set along if you have one.
THURSDAY SEPT. 4
Yoga pretzels: Ages 6 to 12. 4:30
p.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.
Yoga Pretzels is a fun and vibrant
way to get kids bending, breath-
ing, twisting and stretching. Kids
will find their connection with the
universe through playful poses
such as rabbit, dog, camel, river,
stone, star and more. Wear com-
fortable clothes and bring a yoga
mat or a large towel.
Candlelight yoga: 5:30 p.m. at
Pinelands Branch Library. Join
Babita Kapoor, a registered Shak-
ti Om Yoga instructor, to learn
yogas ancient science of breath
control and re-energize your
body and mind. Wear comfort-
able clothes and bring a yoga
mat.
FRIDAY SEPT. 5
Storytime with Mr. Rick: Ages 4 to
6. 1:30 p.m. at Pinelands Branch
Library. Join Mr. Rick for stories
of all kinds to be followed by an
engaging and creative activity.
Paws to Read: 3 p.m. at Pinelands
Branch Library. Children are wel-
come to practice their reading
skills and make a new friend by
reading aloud to Ocho, a regis-
tered therapy dog. Ocho is a 4-
year-old German Shepherd and
loves to hear a good story. Sign
up for a 15-minute slot.
MONDAY SEPT. 8
Stamping and paper crafting: 6:30
p.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.
This is a level one class in rubber
stamping and paper crafting.
Learn basic techniques to be
used to make beautiful hand-
made cards, scrapbook pages
and other projects.
TUESDAY SEPT. 9
Caterpillars and Butterflies: Ages 3
to 4. 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. at Wood-
ford Cedar Run Wildlife Refuge.
During this Mommy and Me
class, an educator will help you
and your child explore nature
through songs, crafts and out-
door adventures. The cost is $10
per child and pre-registration is
required.
Kids knitting club: Ages 7 to 16. 11
a.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.
Knitters of all levels are invited to
join for this five-week series.
Bring a project that you are work-
ing on or pick one out at class.
Beginners please bring size 10
knitting needles. The yarn will be
provided. Please note that when
you sign up, it is for all five weeks.
Monarchs and Migration: Ages 8 to
12. 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. at Woodford
Cedar Run Wildlife Refuge. An
educator will help your child
explore wildlife, plants and more
through hiking, experiments and
live animal encounters. The cost
is $10 per child and pre-registra-
tion is required.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 SEPT. 39, 2014
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your Shamong meeting or affair listed in the Calendar or
Meetings, information must be received, in writing, two weeks
prior to the date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Shamong Sun, 108
Kings Highway East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email:
news@shamongsun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing
through our Web site (www.shamongsun.com).
We will run photos if space is available and the quality of the photo
is sufficient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to all
organizations.
609-923-5264
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PSA
The Retired and Senior Volun-
teer Program of Burlington
County, supported in part by
Burlington County College, is
helping eligible Medicare recipi-
ents living on a limited income
understand and enroll in a
Medicare Savings Program.
Those who qualify may receive as
much as $5,000 in annual assis-
tance to help with Medicare ex-
penses.
Times are tough for many
people, especially those living on
fixed or limited incomes. I strong-
ly encourage Medicare benefici-
aries to learn more about these
savings opportunities and qualifi-
cations, said Karen Bennett, re-
tired and senior volunteer pro-
gram director.
By enrolling in a MSP, income-
eligible seniors and individuals
with disabilities who are enrolled
in Medicare can save a minimum
of $1,000 on health-care expenses.
MSP covers the Medicare Part B
premium, a savings of $104.90 per
month, for qualified individuals.
Recipients may also qualify for
an average annual savings of
$3,900 on Medicare Part D premi-
ums and prescriptions with a low
income subsidy. In addition to dis-
counts on brand name and gener-
ic medications, there are no co-
pays or deductibles for annual
wellness visits and personalized
prevention plan services.
For more information, please
contact the Retired and Senior
Volunteer Program (RSVP) of
Burlington County at (609) 894-
9311, ext. 1051 or email
MIPPA@bcc.edu.
SEPT. 39, 2014 THE SHAMONG SUN 9
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Decks & Porches Decorative Trims Crown Moldings
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FREE ESTIMATES - REFERENCES - LICENSED & INSURED
CALL TODAY! (609) 561-7751
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DEP Certified
Insurance Approved
NJ Grant Money
Available
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NJ LIC. # 13VH00102300
Tank RemovaI
Lic.# 13VH01426900
JUDYS WALLPAPER
REMOVAL + PAINTING
609-714-6878
FREE ESTIMATES
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Professional & Clean Service
IS NOW OFFERING
EXTERIOR PAINTING
FOR 1/2 PRICE (FOR THE MONTH OF AUGUST)
(609) 320-9717
Quality Work at a Reasonable Price
NJ Lic# 13VH00929000
Pauls Painting of Medford
Chris's HauIing &
Landscaping
Yard Clean-up, Leaf Clean
Up, Bushes Trimmed,
Mulching,Gutter Cleaning,
Sheds & Decks Removed
Basements & Garages
Cleaned, Powerwashing
609-654-8871
MERIDIAN
EARTHWORKS
Landscape Design & Maintenance
CALL DAVID SAMPLE