Pennsauken Township recently announced that they have received a $200,000 design assistance grant from NJ DOT for a multi-use trail connecting Merchantville with Pennsauken. This award combined with an award received in 2015 will provide almost one million dollars to fund the project. This new project will begin at the junction of Cove Road and East Chestnut Avenue, and extend to Bethel Avenue in Pennsauken. The project is expected to be completed in 2019 and will include installation of crosswalks, lights, benches and path beautification.

Two families are at least temporarily displaced after a fire ripped through one half of a duplex in Cherry Hill Sunday afternoon. Cherry Hill Fire Department called all hands to the fire around 12:30 p.m., at the dead end of Orchard Avenue near the Merchantville line. Assistant Fire Chief Chris Callan said it took firefighter 28 minutes to knock down the fire, which mostly affected the second and third floors on one side of the building. Callan said no one was home on the side of the duplex where the fire started, but the family that lived in the other half was home, and evacuated the house into the rainy afternoon. No one was injured. https://www.nj.com/camden/index.ssf/2018/09/all-hands_fire_in_south_jersey_displaces_families.html

An upscale food market — once expected to arrive here by the spring of 2015 and again by early 2016 — is finally opening this week. The arrival of McFarlan’s Market fulfills a vision for its husband-and-wife operators — and for borough officials who have long sought to reclaim a blighted property in the downtown business district. “We’re excited — and terrified,” said Peter Burgess, who with his wife, Janet Stevens, invested more than $1 million in the project. https://www.courierpostonline.com/story/news/local/south-jersey/2018/09/19/mcfarlans-market-opens-haddon-avenue-collingswood/1346196002/

 

Beginning Wednesday, September 5 and Monday, September 10 and continuing until early 2019, NJ TRANSIT will continue the installation of Positive Train Control (PTC) equipment on its rail fleet throughout the state. To accommodate this critical safety upgrade, all service on the Atlantic City Rail Line (ACRL) will be temporarily suspended beginning Wednesday, September 5, and off-peak one-seat Raritan Valley Line (RVL) service to Penn Station New York (PSNY) will temporarily terminate and originate at Newark Penn Station beginning Monday September 10. Throughout this time period, ACRL customers will have alternate travel options with discounted fares to and from Philadelphia. https://www.njtransit.com/sa/sa_servlet.srv?hdnPageAction=CustomerNoticeTo&NoticeId=2532

 

Two families are at least temporarily displaced after a fire ripped through one half of a duplex in Cherry Hill Sunday afternoon. Cherry Hill Fire Department called all hands to the fire around 12:30 p.m., at the dead end of Orchard Avenue near the Merchantville line. Assistant Fire Chief Chris Callan said it took firefighter 28 minutes to knock down the fire, which mostly affected the second and third floors on one side of the building. Callan said no one was home on the side of the duplex where the fire started, but the family that lived in the other half was home, and evacuated the house into the rainy afternoon. No one was injured. https://www.nj.com/camden/index.ssf/2018/09/all-hands_fire_in_south_jersey_displaces_families.html

 

A6 ABC News covered a South Jersey community puting on a touching display overnight to remember the lives lost in the September 11th terrorist attacks, 17 years ago today. First responders and Pennsauken residents prayed together at the 9/11 memorial on Route 130 and Merchantville Avenue. Before that, the volunteers put out 2,997 American flags on the grounds of the memorial -- one for each life lost. https://6abc.com/community-events/pennsauken-first-responders-residents-remember-lives-lost-in-9-11-attacks/4209479/

 

Lydia B. Stokes, a township resident, was a champion for education and a lover of nature, among many other things. The advocate was active from the 1950s until her passing in the 1980s, according to the Lydia B. Stokes Foundation. Maria Montessori, the Italian founder of the education method that bears her name, believed a school should be a “children’s house.” She opened the first of her non-traditional schools in 1907 and went on to spread her methods internationally over the next 40 years. The two women never met, but if Matthew Simberg’s plans come to fruition, he believes he can honor the legacies of both. Simberg, the owner-operate of the Merchantville, Camden County, Montessori Seeds of Education School, is seeking permission from the township to move his school to Stokes’ Chester Avenue property. http://www.burlingtoncountytimes.com/news/20180822/montessori-owner-plans-potential-moorestown-move

 

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