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www.mtlaurelsun.com MARCH 2–8, 2016 FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 13–15Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUEBOE meeting
Officials outline recentPARCC data. PAGE 6
K i d s
& C a m
p i s s u e !
SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun
No. 23 Kendall Keyes takes her defender off the dribble with a ball fake and earns herself two freethrows. Keyes reached double digits, contributing 12 points in Lenape High School’s win againstWashington Township, 58-43. The girls are looking to keep this momentum going into the playoffs.For another photo, please see page 7.
Lenape defeats Washington Township, 58-43
By ZANE CLARKThe Sun
As with many law enforcementagencies across the state and na-tion, the Mt. Laurel Police De-partment is moving closer to out-fitting its officers with body cam-eras to record interactions be-tween police and members of thepublic.
Mt. Laurel Police Chief DennisCribben outlined the program toMt. Laurel Council at its Feb. 22meeting, during which time hedetailed the benefits he believedcitizens and officers would real-ize from the initiative.
First and foremost, Cribbensaid body cameras would providean increased level of transparen-cy between the police department
and the community, while also in-creasing professionalism withinthe police department.
“When officers know they’rebeing recorded, it’s human naturethat they’re going to be just a hairmore careful about how they acttoward the community, and that’sa good thing,” Cribben said.
Cribben said cameras wouldalso help expedite allegations
against police officers, which hesaid the department routinely re-ceives but often has no definitiveway to prove or disprove.
Cribben noted one recent ex-ample where a Mt. Laurel officerwas accused of racially profilinga woman after stopping her carfor a broken brake light and writ-ing her a ticket.
The woman later filed an offi-cial internal affairs complaintagainst the officer and said thelight was not broken, but videorecorded by the camera mountedin the officer’s vehicle disprovedthe woman’s claims.
“As the citizen heard that theincident was on video, she with-drew the complaint, no furtheraction,” Cribben said. “The offi-cer did his job exactly how he was
supposed to.”Cribben said body cameras
would enable officers to recordvideo throughout all calls,whether they were near a policevehicle or otherwise.
According to Cribben, once abody camera is placed into acharging port at the police sta-
Police moving forwardwith body cameras
Chief Dennis Cribben outlines program to council, detailing benefits he believes would come from recorded interactions
please see VIDEOS, page 11
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MARCH 2–8, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 3
Jacqueline "Jacki" Smoyer
The Smart Move
J
U S T
L I S T E D
Sales Associate | ABR, MRPcell: (856) 296-7226
office: (856) 235-1950202 W. Main Street, Moorestown, NJ 08057email: [email protected]
www.TheSmartMove.com
The Sun newspapers an-nounced the winners of theirValentine Coloring Contest. Read-ers were asked to color a pictureand send it to us for entry into acontest. Each winner received afour-pack of tickets to SaharaSams.
There were 134 total entries,
and three winners from Mt. Lau-rel. They are: Caroline Bogdan(8.5), Kayla Felicia (11) and Gra-ham Severs (6).
To see the winning entries,please visit our Facebook page,www.facebook.com/mtlaurelsun.
Congratulations to the win-ners!
The following Mt. Laurel stu-dents at Fairleigh Dickinson Uni-versity's Metropolitan campus, lo-cated in Teaneck, have beennamed to the dean's or honorslists for the fall semester: TaylorSerio, Rebecca Lillie and Sarah Lil-
lie.
The following Mt. Laurel resi-dents made the dean's list atRochester Institute of Technologyfor fall semester: Jeffrey Bauer,David Korhumel and Lauren Carney.
Coloring contestwinners announcedMt. Laurel winners include Caroline Bogdan,
Kayla Felicia and Graham Severs
on campus
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MARCH 2–8, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 5
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Registration of children whowill enter kindergarten next Sep-tember will be held at Mt. LaurelSchools during the week of March 7. At the same time, thedistrict will also register any stu-dent who is currently attending aprivate kindergarten but will betransferring to Mt. Laurel’s first-grade classes in September.
Kindergarten and first-graderoundup will be held on Monday,March 7; Tuesday, March 8;Thursday, March 10 and Friday,
March 11 from 1:30 p.m. to 3:00p.m. at Larchmont, Parkway,
Springville and Hillside Schools.Countryside School and Fleet-wood School registration will beon the same days from 1 p.m. to2:30 p.m.
An evening registration onWednesday, March 9 from 6 to 8p.m. has been set at all six schoolsfor parents who cannot attendduring the day.
Those who are not certain of their sending area school may usethe following link to check fortheir child’s school site:
http://www.mtlaurelschools.org/district/attendance.php.
Austin J. Montgomery of Mt.Laurel is on the dean's list atClemson University for the fall se-mester. Montgomery is majoringin general engineering.
The following Mt. Laurel resi-dents have been named to the fall2015 dean's list at University of the Sciences: Radhika Patel andJacqueline Dunning.
on campus
Kindergarten registrationis week of March 7
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6 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MARCH 2–8, 2016
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
The Sun is published weekly by ElauwitMedia LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rdFloor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed weekly to select addresses in the 08054 ZIPcode. 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 protected].
For advertising information, call 856-427-0933 or email [email protected].
The Sun welcomes suggestions and com-ments from readers – including any infor-mation about errors that may call for a cor-rection to be printed.
SPEAK UPThe Sun welcomes letters from readers.Brief and to the point is best, so we look forletters that are 300 words or fewer. Include your name, address and phone number. Wedo not print anonymous letters. Send lettersto [email protected], via fax at 856-427-0934, or via the mail. You can dropthem off at our office, too.
The Mt. Laurel Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium – includ-ing electronically.
Dan McDonough Jr.chairman of elauwit media
manaGinG editor Kristen Dowd
senior associate editor Mike Monostra
mt. laurel editor Zane Clark
art director Stephanie Lippincott
advertisinG director Arlene Reyes
elauwit media Group
publisher emeritus Steve Miller
editor emeritus Alan Bauer
Tim Ronaldsonexecutive editor
Joe Eiselepublisher
By ZANE CLARKThe Sun
In late December, Mt. Laurel Schools re-leased data detailing how the total popula-
tion of the district and its schools per-formed on the first year of the Partnershipfor Assessment of Readiness for Collegeand Careers exam compared to other dis-tricts in New Jersey and other PARCC test-ing states.
At the district’s most recent board of ed-ucation meeting on Feb. 23, the district out-lined even more data it had gained in re-cent weeks on how different subgroups of students in Mt. Laurel performed on theexams.
As interim superintendent Sharon Vitel-la explained in December, students who
took the PARCC exams were tested in theareas of mathematics and English lan-
guage arts.Students’ scores then fell on one of five
PARCC scoring levels, where the fourthand fifth levels were meant to meet or ex-ceed the old standard of proficiency on the
formerly administered New Jersey Assess-ment of Skills and Knowledge standard-ized test that PARCC replaced.
With the newest data, Vitella was able tooutline how students who were white,Asian, African American, Hispanic, gener-al education, special education and eco-nomically disadvantaged performed on thetests. For example, of the third-grade stu-dents who took the English language artsexam, 57 percent scored equal to levels fouror five. However, when broken down by thedifferent subgroups, the numbers fluctuateabove and below that average.
The percentage of third-grade studentswho scored equal to levels four and five in
English language arts were 42.9 percent forHispanics, 80.3 percent for Asians, 34.6 per-cent for African Americans, 58.4 percentfor whites, 62.6 percent for general educa-tion, 27.5 percent for special education and
31.5 percent for economically disadvan-taged.Third-grade students who took the
mathematics exam had 53 percent scoringequal to levels four or five. Yet, like theEnglish language arts exam, the scoresfluctuated between the different sub-groups. The percentage of third-grade stu-dents who scored equal to levels four andfive in mathematics were 40 percent forHispanics, 80.3 percent for Asians, 41.5 per-cent for African Americans, 51.6 percentfor whites, 59.4 percent for general educa-tion, 21.7 percent for special education and
School administrators through-
out the state were holding their
collective breath leading up to
Gov. Christie’s 2016 budget address.
“Where would state aid stand?” was
the question on everyone’s mind. If
state aid went down considerably, how
hard would it hit the school district’s
bottom line?
Come last month, though, these
same administrators were able to
breathe a sigh of relief when Christie
announced that his budget proposal
would actually increase state aid to
schools and, more importantly, would-
n’t reduce aid to any school district.
Overall, Christie proposed a 4 per-
cent increase in education funding,
with $94.3 million more going to direct
support to schools, which represents a
1 percent increase over last year.
The rest of that 4 percent increase is
earmarked for debt, pension and
health care.
The good news for school districts
like ours, which doesn’t receive the
bulk of state aid to public schools any-
way, is that we will not lose any state
aid from last year.
We’ll actually be seeing an increase
in state aid, which is a rarity, even
though that increase is only very mini-
mal.
While we certainly could have used
more help from the Garden State, it’s
comforting to know we won’t have to
kick in more money out of our already
thin pockets.
So two thumbs up to Christie for
paying attention to one of the most im-
portant aspects of life here in New Jer-
sey – our public schools.
in our opinion
Phew!No school district will see a decrease in state aid
It’s budget time
The school district will be releasing its2016-2017 budget numbers, and theimpact on your tax bills, shortly. The Sunwill have all the details on the budgetwhen they are released. If you want toshare your thoughts on the topic, sendus a letter to the editor. We’d love tohear from you.
Mt. Laurel Schools take closer look at PARCC scores At BOE meeting Feb. 23, officials outline data they have gained in recent weeks
please see DISTRICT, page 10
Email us at [email protected]
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MARCH 2–8, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 7
WHAT YOU GET:
Price, Quality AND Services!
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SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun
No. 32 Maddie Sims takes the opening tip for the Indians. LenapeHigh School girl’s basketball team recorded its 23rd win of the sea-son with a home victory over Washington Township High School, 58-43. Sims led the way in scoring with 17 points.
Opening tip
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PROFESSIONAL WEBSITES.
PEASANT PRICES.
MARCH 2–8, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 9
The Mt. Laurel AARP Chapter4003 will meet on Thursday,March 3 at 1 p.m. in the Mt. Lau-rel Community Center, 100 Mt.
Laurel Road.Attendees can enjoy the de-
lightful voices of the HarringtonMiddle School Chorus Groupfrom the Mt. Laurel Townshipschool district.
Their enthusiastic perform-ance and joy in singing is a pleas-
ure to see and hear.Following the performance and
business meeting, the Hoagie DayLuncheon will be enjoyed by all
members who orderedtheir hoagie at the Februarymeeting.
Final reservations will also beaccepted for the March 17 bus tripto see “Nana's Naughty Knick-ers.”
Only a few seats remain. Call
(856) 581-9340 today. Everyone iswelcome to join us. You do nothave to be a member to attend.
Donations of canned or boxed
food will be accepted for theWomen's Opportunity Center atevery meeting.
New members are always wel-come. Attend a first meeting asthe Mt. Laurel AARP’s guest.
For membership information,please call (856) 439-0995.
Mt. Laurel AARP to meet on March 3
Mt. Laurel Lacrosse is still
looking for players for its U7 BoysScoopers program.Scoopers is an instructional,
skill-building and fun division,designed for beginning lacrosseplayers. The level is open to boys
born between Sept. 1, 2008, and
Aug. 31, 2010.The base cost is $65.Parents can register their chil-
dren on Mt. Laurel Lacrosse’swebsite, www.mtlaurellacrosse.com.
Lacrosse program seeks players
Email us at [email protected]
Addiction Hotlineof New Jersey
(800) 238-2333
PSA
Parents Anonymous/
Family Helpline(800) 843-5437
PSA
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32.5 percent for economically dis-advantaged.
That trend of fluctuations con-tinues throughout every gradetested from three through eight inboth subject areas. Complicatingmatters further, Vitella also notedsome students could be placed inmultiple subgroups.
“You could have a white stu-dent who is a special educationstudent who is also economicallydisadvantaged, and that student’sscores are reported in each of these three subgroups,” Vitella
said.Moving forward, Vitella said
the district would have further in-vestment in its literacy programand work to ensure children havebooks that reflect their cultureswith students who look like them.Vitella said the district is alsoworking with teachers to helpthem understand different cultur-al norms, and the district is work-ing to have better outreach withfamilies.
“I know our principals arelooking at the reports and trying
to work with parents,” Vitellasaid. “We’re doing everything wecan. I have no idea what it willlook like again next year, but we’llfigure it out once we get year twodata and we’ll take it from there.”
DISTRICTContinued from page 6
District to further investin literacy program
Please recycle this newspaper.
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MARCH 2–8, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 11
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tion, the videos from that camerawould then be uploaded to thesame Mt. Laurel Police serversthat already store videos from of-ficers’ vehicles.
Cribben said videos would thenbe stored on the server for 90 daysunless needed for a criminal in-vestigation.
Police would assign videosfrom a criminal case a case num-
ber and also burn the videos to aDVD to be kept with case evi-dence. That DVD would then re-main with case evidence until thecase was closed and enough timehad passed where police werelegally allowed to destroy paperrecords, at which time electroniccopies would be destroyed as well.
Cribben said the state attorneygeneral’s office had already ap-proved Mt. Laurel and 16 othermunicipalities in BurlingtonCounty for a grant providing $500
toward the purchase of each cam-era.
Cribben said he wanted to pur-chase 40 cameras for the depart-ment at a cost of $750 each, butnoted there were additional coststhe grant would not cover, such aswarranties, software licensingand maintenance and peripher-als.
After applying $20,000 from theattorney general’s office, Cribbensaid the department would needan additional $37,000 in startupcosts, but the department couldget that money through a stateDepartment of Transportationhighway safety fund grant, whichthe department already receivesannually.
Cribben said once the programis implemented, the departmentwould then endure an additionalannual cost of about $5,000 insoftware licensing fees, but thatcould also be funded each yearfrom the same highway safety
grant or by increasing the depart-ment’s annual budget by the sameamount.
Cribben said he believed thepurchase of 40 cameras wouldprovide enough equipment to
allow every officer working in apatrol capacity during a givenshift to have a camera on their
person while also allowingenough cameras to remain charg-ing at the station for officers start-ing the next shift.
Cribben said the grant fromthe attorney general’s officewould also require Mt. Laurel Po-lice to use social media and thedepartment’s website to advertiseto citizens that officers were out-fitted with body cameras.
Cribben also said there werelights on the devices, so a person
in front of an officer looking atthe camera should be able to real-ize when the camera is active.
However, Cribben said officerswould have to specifically let citi-zens know they were beingrecorded in certain instances,such as if entering a home,school, health-care or substanceabuse facility, house of worshipor when speaking with a victim.
Those videos would then betagged when uploaded to policeservers, and for Mt. Laurel offi-
cers to view the videos, policewould need approval from thecounty prosecutor’s office or anindividual in the Mt. Laurel Po-lice Department designated bythe prosecutor’s office to deter-mine if police viewing the videowas appropriate.
Overall, Cribben said the pro-gram would show the public thatthe department was willing toopen itself to scrutiny.
“We’re willing to record what
our officers are doing on a day-to-day basis and we’re not worried,”Cribben said. “We trust the ac-tions they’re taking and we’refine for a third-party review afterthe fact.”
Mt. Laurel Council said itwould look to approve a resolu-tion accepting the grant from theattorney general’s office at itsnext meeting.
VIDEOSContinued from page 1
Winter Programs Enrolling Now! Individualized Instruction & Customized Curriculum
Writing, Reading, & Math Extension, Study Skills & Learning
Strategies, Test Preparation
Videos stored for 90 days
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12 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MARCH 2–8, 2016Chimney and Duct
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The 200 Club of BurlingtonCounty celebrated the organiza-tion's 26th annual Valor AwardsDinner on Friday, Feb. 19, at Meri-
on Caterers in Cinnaminson.The 200 Club of Burlington
County is a charitable, non-profitorganization comprised entirelyof dedicated volunteers with theprimary mission of providing fi-nancial assistance to the familiesof fallen or injured members of the State Police, county and mu-nicipal police, fire or emergencymedical services serving the citi-zens of Burlington County.
The club also supports these
public safety professionalsthrough the awarding of highereducation scholarships, advancedtraining awards and specialrecognition awards.
The program included thepresentation of awards to severalmembers of the Burlington Coun-ty law enforcement, fire and EMScommunity.
In addition, the 200 Club of Burlington County distributed
$10,000 in scholarship funds bypresenting four $2,500 scholar-ships to family members of Burlington County police offi-
cers, county detectives, troopers,firefighters or EMS personnel tooffset the cost of college.
The winners of this year'sscholarships include Erin M.Welling, Seneca High School;Alexandria Geibel, Rancocas Val-ley High School; Zackery Booth,Moorestown High School and An-thony DiLoreto, Rutgers School of Law.
The 200 Club’s Honor-ValorAwards Committee presented its
Honor/Valor Award to New Jer-sey State Police Detective II Timo-thy P. Long, Troop D, and NewJersey Trooper II Philip J. Conza,Troop D, for their actions in dis-arming an individual armed witha rifle located outside a publicschool in Evesham Township.
The 200 Club’s Honor-ValorAwards Committee presentedDistinguished Service Awards toSgt. Leonard Werner of the Mt.
Laurel Police Department, PoliceChief Christopher Chew, Eve-sham Township Police Depart-ment, and Fire Chief William F.
Ruggiano (ret.) Lenola Fire De-partment. The three officers wererecognized for their years of dedi-cated service to the agencies theyrepresent and for their years of providing leadership and expertexperience resulting in the better-ment to this agency and enhanc-ing the overall safety of the resi-dents of their towns.
The capstone of the eveningwas the presentation of the twoDistinguished Service Awards,
presented posthumously in mem-ory of Kevin H. Tuno, director,Burlington County Office of Emergency Management, andEarl H. Siegman, Evesham Town-ship Fire Department and life-long member and treasurer forthe Burlington County 200 Club.Both men were recognized fortheir lifetime devotion and contri-butions to the citizens of Burling-ton County.
200 Club honors Sgt. Werner
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Reliable results. Excellent references.
HOMES OFFICESLife is too short.
Enjoy your free time!
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MASONRY & CONCRETE• Specializing in all types of Masonry, Brick,
Block, Stucco & Chimney repairs
• Concrete installed & repaired
• Concrete Leveling-Mudjacking
• French Drains • All Work Guaranteed
Residental - Commercial
(609) 230-1682 • (609) 268-9497S & J Construction, LLC
NOW IS THE TIME TO CHECK YOUR CHIMNEY!
Family Owned & Operated
(856) 235-8080
"$ #"( " $"$
Paperhanging,
Removal & PaintingBy Randy Craig
(856) 981-1359www.rcpaperhangings.com
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Pizzazz!
MENTIONTHIS AD AND GET
10% OFF
$
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CLASSIFIED14 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MARCH 3-8, 2016
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EVERLASTSHEDS
203 Rt. 530, Southampton
JUDY’S WALLPAPERREMOVAL + PAINTING
609-714-6878609-471-3082
FREE ESTIMATES
Schedule Now
Professional
& Clean Service
Lic.# 13VH01426900
"
" $
PHONE SALES/APPOINTMENTSETTING (WESTMONT)
Seeking p/t phone sales profession-als. Excellent phone and strong
computer skills req’d.
Pay: $12/hour- More w/ experience.
856-240-8109
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Beautiful first-floor
office space in the heart
of Haddonfield. 1,000 to2,600 sq. ft. at $16 per
sq.ft. Available ASAP
#$!
%!#$!"or call
strong,caring,reliable forelderly person.
Mon-Fri.10am-6pm. call for
details. need references.
Deborah 856-577-5455
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ERIC’S HANDYMAN
SERVICE.COM
856-983-5325
I do quality & affordable home repairs,locks, blinds, sheetrock repair, painting,staining, pressure washing, fence repair,
mulch, stone, and much more.
Call 3B's HONEY DO SERVICES
And ask for Bruce.
856-296-5515
I CAN HELP WITH YOUR TO-DO LIST
!"&$
Paul’s Painting of MedfordSpecializing in Interior &
Exterior Painting
Quality work at Reasonable Price
(609) 320-9717NJ Lic# 13VH00929000
Computer Prospecting / List Development "!##& # % "! "! $ "& ! ! ! & ! " ! ! "! !!' # & "
! $
PAINTING
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savin g our planet, one pile at a t ime
856-665-6769www.alldogspoop.com
GET $10.00 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE !
Locally owned and operated.
TREE SERVICE
D.E.C. Contracting
609-953-9794
609-405-3873
Lic #13VH03950800
ISA Cert. Arborist NJ-0993 A
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$ $ $
COSTUME JEWELRY
CHINA DINNERWARE
SETS OR PARTS
!
FURNITURE
LAMPS - MIRRORS
STATUES
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS!
“CALL GINA"
856-795-9175
609-471-8391
$ $ %(
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PETE GENTILI'S
POWER WASHING& PAINTING
LIC/INS.
609-617-2874
CLEANING BY STEPHANIE
House & Office Cleaning
Weekly, bi-weekly, Monthly
Linen changes, beds made,
low rates
20 years experience
call for appt. (609) 845-5922
%### !!"$%$#
www.SellSJHomeFast.com
!
HAPPY HELPERCLEANING
Weekly • Bi-weekly • Monthly• Detail Cleaning
$25.00 OFF CLEANINGInsured
856-304-5019
856-304-3916
HOME REPAIR!Roofing, Siding,
Windows & Doors, StuccoGutter Cleaning, Paint,
Powerwashing, Drywall & more!!
FREE ESTIMATES
LETTHE SUNSWORK FOR
YOU!
Call
856-427-0933for Advertising Info.
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Call 856-427-0933to place your classified!
%
WILLIAM SHUSTEROWNER
LIC#13085
C a l l T o d a
y !
• BACK-FLOW TESTING • SEWER JETTING • SEWER EXCAVATION
• PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE • TRADITIONAL PLUMBING • WATER HEATERS
VIDEO SEWER INSPECTIONS
ANY JOB OVER $200
CLASSIFIED MARCH 3-8, 2016 — THE MT. LAUREL SUN 15
#!
R e s i d e n t i al S n o w R e m o v al ! C al l N o w
T o B o o k S e r v i c e s !
OIL TANKREMOVAL /
INSTALLATION
(856) 629-8886(609) 698-4434
ResidentialSpecialist
Underground
Crawlspace
Above Ground
Tanks
Clean Ups
Structural Support
DEP CertifiedInsurance Approved
NJ Grant Money
Available
Ask our expert!
NJ LIC. # 13VH00102300
&
Ocean City New Jersey’s #1 Real Estate Team!
The Team You Can Trust! Matt BaderCell 609-992-4380
Dale CollinsCell 609-548-1539
Let the Bader-Collins Associates make all of your Ocean City
dreams come true! If you are thinking about BUYING, SELLING or
RENTING, contact us for exceptional service and professionalism.
3160 Asbury Avenue • Ocean City, NJ 08226Office: 609-399-0076 email: [email protected]
Easily the nicest 1st floor condo on West Ave!Improvements done in 2013-14 include: -Installed a new high efficiency heater -Installeda new air conditioner -Installed a new hot waterheater - Renovated the Kitchen and Great Room- new cabinets, new appliances, granite countertops, new fireplace surround & hearth, installedengineered hardwood floors & hardwood stairs.• Renovated the Bathrooms - new toilets, newsinks, counter tops, and vanities • Laundry -installed new washer and dryer • Entire insideof house was painted - ceilings, walls, doors,trim • All new interior door hardware wasinstalled • All new exterior door hardware wasinstalled • Replaced recessed lights with energy
efficient lights • Resurfaced the front porch andinstalled a gate • Replaced front stairs withcomposite decking material • Installedsprinklers for front flower beds • Installed newlandscaping and stone Property being offeredmostly furnished!
3009 WEST AVE
$489,900
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National/American Waterproofing
856-767-4443www.americanwatermanagement.com.
Lic # 13VH06045200
$"!"
• Pruning, Topping and Removal • Guaranteed To Beat Any Written Estimate• 24 Hr. Emergency/Insurance Work
GREAT WINTER PRICES
Respraying Aluminum,Cedar, Asbestos,
Wood & Vinyl,Siding, Stucco,
Carpentry Repairs
FREE ESTIMATES
609-654-7651
856-667-7651
Cell: 609-868-1178
Painting & Staining -
Interior/Exterior
NOBLEPAINTING
LLC
Painting for Four Generations
POWERWASHING
$
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Proudly serving the South Jersey areafor over 25 Y E ARS!
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ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS • DOORS • ADDITIONSSOFFIT/GUTTERS & REPAIR • COMPOSITE DECKING
NJ Lic. # 13VH05085200www.welwoodconstruction .com
Jay C. WelwoodMedford, NJOffice: 609-953-5773Cell: 609-206-1722
FREE
ESTIMATES
SpecialWint er Pricing
WELWOODELWOO
ONSTRU TION
ELWOOCONSTRUCTIONONSTRU TION
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