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7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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www.hopewellsun.com JULY 25-31, 2012 FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-15Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUEPool drowning
Man drowns at Hopewellresidence. PAGE 2
HEATHER FIORE/The Hopewell Sun
The new turf fields construction continuesto unfold at Hopewell Valley Central HighSchool, and is set to be finished by early
September.
BY HEATHER FIOREThe Hopewell Sun
On July 5, the Recreation Foundationof Hopewell Valley held a ground-break-ing ceremony for the new turf field that isin its beginning stages of construction atHopewell Valley Central High School(CHS).
Trustee of the Recreation FoundationSheryl Stone hosted the event, whichdrew about 75 people, including all of thesupporters who helped raise almost $1
million to fund this community-basedproject.
I know for a number of years theresbeen some discussion about having a turffield, Principal of Hopewell Valley CHSMike Daher said. Probably everyonehere, at one time or another, it crossedyour mind that it was never going to hap-pen, including me. And, I know we allprobably thought that except for SherylStone; she probably never thought that
BreakinggroundConstruction begins on new turf field
please see CEREMONY, page 10
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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2 THE HOPEWELL SUN JULY 25-31, 2012
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A 21-year-old man drowned at aHopewell Township residence, po-lice said.
On July 14 at 2:50 a.m., a 21-year-old man of Creek Rim Drivein the Forrest Blend section ofHopewell Township had severalpeople over to the house with anin-ground swimming pool. Thepool is approximately 8-feet deepat the deepest section.
The victim was last seen swim-ming in the pool by himself ap-proximately 30 minutes prior to
being discovered, according totownship police.
A 21-year-old man, a friend, dis-covered the victim at the bottomof the pool and pulled him fromthe deep end. A 9-1-1 call wasplaced via cell phone and receivedby Bucks County Communica-tions.
The call was routed to MercerCounty emergency services (LifeCom) where police and EMS were
immediately dispatched. UnionFire and Rescue Squad respondedalong with the Hopewell Town-ship Police.
Hopewell Township Policewere the first to arrive and CPRwas in progress. Officers contin-ued CPR and the victim wastransported to Capital Health Sys-tems Hopewell Campus by UnionFire and Rescue Squad. The vic-tim died at approximately 4 a.m.at the hospital.
Hopewell Township Police are
investigating the incident to de-termine the cause. It is believedthe victim could swim at the timeof the incident.
The incident remains under in-vestigation by Officer Joseph Mc-Neil and Detective Michael Sher-man of the Hopewell TownshipPolice Department. The MercerCounty Prosecutors and MedicalExaminers offices have been noti-fied as well.
Man drowns in poolat township residence
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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JULY 25-31, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 3
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BY HEATHER FIOREThe Hopewell Sun
Hopewell Townships Commit-tee held a special meeting on July16 to talk about its future plansfor sewer capacity at the afford-able housing units located off ofDenow Road The Hamptons inPennington.
Originally, the Ewing-Lawrence Sewerage Authority(ELSA) was to provide capacity to
the 19-unit residential unit at arate of $45 per gallon for a maxi-mum of 267,000 gallons per day.
However, in May, the residentsof Hopewell voted down the $4.1
bond ordinance to approve themove, which would have raisedtaxes.
Now, the township is trying tofigure out whats next.
There were many suggestionsthat were given at the meeting, in-cluding alternative wastewatertechnology sources.
Although Mayor MichaelMarkulec mentioned creating apackage plant on a piece ofHopewell Townships useable
land or installing sewer lines,members of local environmentalorganizations and of the publicsuggested otherwise.
Executive Director of the
Stony Brook-Millstone WatershedAssociation Jim Waltman intro-duced the idea of alternativetechnology sources that havebeen implemented and executedin various other areas to conserveenergy and resources. He specifi-cally noted how Hopewell Town-ship could create an artificial wet-land, which is better and more en-vironmentally-friendly thanbringing in sewer lines.
There are basically three
steps in the treatment, he said.The first two steps have a linerso that theres no water thats per-colating down into the aquifer,and beyond that liner, you have a
layer of gravel and soil throughwhich wetland plants are grow-ing. You move the water throughthe liner and the wetland plantsand roots, and the microbes thatgrow on plants and in root zoneactually treat the wastewater. Thelast stage, where the remainingwater that should be cleaner thanwhat comes out of a normal sep-tic system, is where that waterpercolates down through and intothe aquifer.
Chief Executive Officer of Nat-ural Systems Utilities Ed Clericoalso spoke about his company
Meeting looks at options for sewer capacityInitial plan for affordable housing units was voted down in May
please see OPTION, page 9
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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4 THE HOPEWELL SUN JULY 25-31, 2012
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Blue Moon Acres grand open-ing of its farm market, the BlueMoon Acres Farm Market, is onSaturday, Aug. 4, from noon to 4p.m. at its Pennington farm locat-ed at 11 Willow Creek Drive inPennington just off Route 31 byRosedale Mills. The market willprovide quality, locally producedgoods to the community.
There will be live music, pizza
from the Nomad Pizza Truck,wine tastings from UnionvilleVineyards, kids games, beer sam-ples from Triumph Brewing Co.,a cooking demonstration by ChefWill of Brother's Moon, and anopportunity to meet the folks whoare growing the Certified Organicproduce in our fields, as well themakers of some goods they carryin store.
The ABCs of exercise, a dia-betes series, will be held from 2 to3 p.m. on Thursday Aug. 2 at the
Novo Nordisk Diabetes FamilyResource Room at CapitalHealth Medical Center in Pen-nington.
Learn about starting an exer-cise program, the importance ofwarm-up and cool-down and also,
self monitoring during exercisefrom Jack Stolte, exercise physiol-ogist.
Call (609) 537-7081 to register.
Farm market opens Aug. 4
Diabetes series on Aug. 2
Parents Anonymous/Family Helpline
(800) 843-5437
PSA
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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JULY 25-31, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 5
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police reportThe following reports are on
file with the Hopewell TownshipPolice Department:
On July 8 at 11:13 p.m., OfficerGeorge Sabatino responded to aburglar alarm at the PenningtonExxon Gas Station. OfficerSabatino arrived and found thatsomeone had entered the busi-ness and removed money fromthe cash register and a safe. Theloss was estimated at over $4,000.Detective Kevin Zorn is assistingwith this investigation.
On July 5 at 11 a.m., Officer
Mandy Grey observed a car trav-eling at 44 mph in a 25 mph zonealong Princeton Avenue. OfficerGrey stopped the car and spokewith the driver, a 20-year-old fe-male, who had the odor of alcoholon her breath. After performingfield sobriety tests, she wasplaced under arrest and trans-ported to police headquarters forprocessing. She was charged withunderage DWI, reckless driving,
speeding and failure to maintainlane. She was later released to anacquaintance and her case will beheard in municipal court.
On July 9 at 1:15 a.m., OfficerGerard Infantino observed a cartraveling along Pennington Roadwith an obstructed license plate.A computer check revealed thatthe registered owners drivers li-cense was suspended and thatthere was also an arrest warrantout of Florence Township. OfficerInfantino stopped the car andspoke with the driver, a 40-year-old female, who was the regis-
tered owner of the car. She wasplaced under arrest and trans-ported to police headquarters forprocessing. She was charged withunclear plates and driving whilesuspended which will be heard inmunicipal court. She was later re-leased after posting bail on theoutstanding warrant.
please see POLICE, page 11
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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6 THE HOPEWELL SUN JULY 25-31, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by ElauwitMedia LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly toselect addresses in the 08560, 08525 and08534 ZIP codes. If you are not on the mail-ing list, six-month subscriptions are avail-able for $39.99. PDFs of the publication areonline, free of charge. For information,please call 609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please [email protected]. For advertising
information, call 609-751-0245 or [email protected]. The Sunwelcomes suggestions and comments fromreaders including any information abouterrors that may call for a correction to beprinted.
SPEAK UPThe Sun welcomes letters from readers. Briefand to the point is best, so we look for lettersthat are 300 words or fewer. Include yourname, address and phone number. We do notprint anonymous letters. Send letters to
[email protected], via fax at 609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course, you can dropthem off at our office, too. The Hopewell Sunreserves the right to reprint your letter in anymedium including electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
NEWS
MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS Kevin Canessa Jr.
MANAGING EDITOR, PRODUCTION Mary L. Serkalow
HOPEWELL EDITOR Heather Fiore
OPERATIONS
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Tim Ronaldson
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer
Megans Law was, if anything,
an extremely forward-think-
ing way of ensuring that
convicted sex offenders were easily
identifiable wherever they might live
after spending time locked away. Now,
if one state senator has his way, sex of-
fenders would not only have to registertheir residential locations, theyd also
be required to identify themselves as
convicted sex offenders on social-
media websites such as Facebook.
We applaud this bill, and hope it ulti-
mately winds up on the governors
desk to be signed into law.
In addition to having to publicly dis-
close sex-offense convictions, the bill,
sponsored by state Sen. Kip Bateman,
R-Somerset, would also require offend-
ers to list, on their public profiles,
home addresses, where crimes tookplace and a self description.
While there will be some who say a
bill such as this one goes too far and
is an invasion of privacy we believe
its for the best.
Far too often, we hear stories of sex-
ual predators who use the Internet to
prey on the vulnerabilities of young
people.A few years ago, the Dateline NBC
specials To Catch a Predator re-
vealed just how many people used the
Internet to set up what they believed
were trysts with young people.
The penalties for failing to comply
with the proposed law are swift, as
well. A sex offender caught with a pub-
lic profile that doesnt identify a
Megans Law status would carry with
it a potential fine of $10,000 and up to ayear-and-a-half in prison.
A similar law was adopted in
Louisiana recently.
We commend Bateman for propos-
ing this bill. And we hope other states
take notice and enact similar legisla-
tion. There is no doubt that by having a
law such as this one on the books, pred-
ators will think twice about preying
upon the young.
And the children of our state will be
that much safer because of it.
in our opinion
Taking Megans Law to FacebookState Senate bill would require sex offenders to self-ID on social-networking sites
Is the proposed lawtoo invasive?
A bill proposed by state Sen. KipBateman, R-Somerset, would requireconvicted sex offenders to identifythemselves, as such, on social-network-ing websites. Would such a law be fair?
Special to The Sun
The Hopewell 12U District A teamwas runner-up in the recent District 1tournament losing a heartbreaker toUpper Freehold in the championship
game 7-6. Both teams will be repre-senting District 1 in the Southern
States tournament that started onJuly 11 hosted by Brick American. The
highlight of the district tournamentwas when Hopewell defeated Mont-
gomery, the defending southern statechamps, 10-1, and sent them home.
The team is comprised of: front row,Max Brass, Adam Wijaya, Michael
Savas, Sean OBrien, Andy Blake andSam Margulis; middle row, Robbie
Wiley, Nick Psomaris, Jack Kandell,
Cole Hare, Jake Tobia and Dom Gam-bino; back row coach Al Kandell, man-ager Joe Gambino, coach Chris Tobia
and coach John Savas.
Hopewell team finishes runner-up in tournament
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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JULY 25-31, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 7
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37 W. Broad Street
Hopewell, NJ 08525(609) 466-8200
FEATURING:Rojo's Roastery Coffee and Terra
Momo Breads & PastriesFree Wi Fi
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Singers from the Princetonarea and Bucks County, Pa., areinvited to join VOICES Choralefor an informal reading of vari-ous Christmas carols and an-thems on Wednesday, Aug. 1, at7:30 p.m. at the Music TogetherCommunity Room located at 225Pennington-Hopewell Road (Rt.654) in Hopewell.
Conductors will be Lyn Ran-som, VOICES Music Director, An-drew Monath, VOICES Associate-Conductor, Paul Chapin, vocalmusic teacher at Riverside Ele-mentary School in Princeton, andJanice Chapin, choir director at
West Windsor-Plainsboro HS.Camilla Jarnot will accompany atthe piano. Scores will be provided.
Following the songs, an old-fashioned ice-cream social will be
provided with fresh fruit and icecream. There is a suggested dona-tion of $10 at the door.
Singers interested in joiningVOICES Chorale in the fall for its25th Anniversary season shouldcontact Sandy Duffy, membershipchair at (609) 799-2211, or write [email protected] schedule an audition before orafter the sing. The audition is in-formal and conducted in a friend-ly atmosphere.
The 2012-2013 concert seasonincludes Christmastide: ChoralGems from the Past 500 Years inDecember; The Year 1887 in
March, with works by Brahms,Debussy, and Gilbert & Sullivanpremiered in that year; Anniver-saries Time Passing, TimeStanding Still with the Prince-
ton Area Homeschool Choir inMay, with music by Michael Tip-pett, Randall Thompson, StephenChatman; a 25th AnniversaryGala event in June to close theseason.
Rehearsals are held on Mondayevenings from 7:30 to 9:45 p.m. atMusic Together in Hopewell andwill start again on Sept. 10.
VOICES Chorale, an audi-tioned chorus with more than 60members from New Jersey andPennsylvania, was founded in1992 to provide outstanding per-formance opportunities for com-munity singers.
For further information onVOICES Chorale, please visitwww.VOICESChorale.org, or sub-scribe to VOICES Newsletter atwww.enewsarchive.com/VOICES.
Christmas carols planned for Aug. 1
7/31/2019 Hopewell 0725
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JULY 25Movies for Adults: 1:30 to 3:45 p.m.
and 6:15 to 8:30 p.m. at HopewellBranch Library. Watch J. Edgar,
starring Leonardo DiCaprio andNaomi Watts. Rated R.
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblingswelcome. 11 to 11:45 a.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Actionrhymes, songs and felt boardactivities. Age-appropriate craftfollows story time. Parentalsupervision required.
PJ Story Time: Ages 2 to 5. Siblingswelcome. 7 to 7:45 p.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Introduce
children to best age-appropriatestories in childrens literature.Action rhymes, songs and feltboard activities are part of the
program. Content of each storytime centers on a differenttheme. Age-appropriate craft fol-lows.
Bookworms Book Club: First to
third graders. 1 to 2 p.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Bring afavorite book with the themeouter space to share with thegroup. Bring a lunch to eat duringthe meeting. Registrationrequired.
Page Turners: Fourth to fifthgraders. 2 to 3 p.m. at HopewellBranch of the Mercer CountyLibrary System. A different kindof book club. Every week will readaloud for the same book and then
work on an activity related towhat was read. Each week will getfurther into the book. The book isFrom the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs.Basil E. Frankweiler by E. L.
Konigsburg.
JULY 26Create a Website Free and Easy:
7 to 8:15 p.m. at Hopewell BranchLibrary. Using Google Sites youcan easily create and edit a web-site for any organization or onany topic of your choice. Thishands-on workshop includes anoverview and demonstration ofGoogle Sites, covering many ofthe features available plus sometips to create a user-friendly web-site. You are encouraged to bringyour own laptop to follow alongusing the librarys wireless net-work. A limited number of laptopsmay be reserved at the time ofsign up. Registration requested.
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblingswelcome. 11 a.m. to noon atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Actionrhymes, songs and felt boardactivities. Age-appropriate craftfollows story time. Parentalsupervision required.
Toddler Rock: Ages 18 months to 3.10 to 10:30 a.m. at HopewellBranch of the Mercer CountyLibrary System. Singing, dancing
ad rhymes. Play with musicalinstruments, puppets, parachutesand more.
Super Scientists: First to thirdgrade. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Eachweek focuses on a differentexperiment to explain the world.This week is Simple Machines:Use an Inclined Plane to Make IceCream. Registration required.
Game Night: Third grade and older.
6 to 7 p.m. at Hopewell Branch ofthe Mercer County Library Sys-tem. Play board games, listen tomusic and enjoy some snacks.Feel free to bring favorite boardgames and friends!
Jr. Game Night: Kindergarten tosecond grade. 7 to 8 p.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Boardgames, group games and snacks.Feel free to bring a favorite boardgame or some friends!
Teen Game Night: Ages 12 and old-er. 7 to 8 p.m. at Hopewell Branchof the Mercer County Library Sys-tem. Magic the Gathering, Set-tlers of Catan, Pokemon, Chess,Poker and more! Play board
games, listen to music and enjoysome snacks. Feel free to bringfavorite games and some friends!
Hopewell Township Planning Boardmeeting: 7:30 p.m. the fourthThursday of the month in theMunicipal Auditorium. For moreinformation visit hopewelltwp. org.JULY 29
Hopewell Presbyterian Church:Worship service at 10:30 a.m.Intergenerational Sunday School
from 9 to 10:15 a.m. Coffee fellow-ship from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.80 West Broad St., Hopewell.
Hopewell United MethodistChurch: Worship service at 10a.m. Teen/adult education from 9to 9:45 a.m. Sunday school at 10a.m. Youth group at 6:30 p.m. 20Blackwell Ave., Hopewell.
St. Alphonsus Roman CatholicChurch: Mass at 7:30, 9 and 11:15a.m. 54 East Prospect St., Hopewell.
Word Christian Fellowship Interna-tional: Worship service at 10 a.m.Sunday school at 10:30 a.m. 44Van Dyke Road, Hopewell.
JULY 30Yoga: 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at HopewellBranch of the Mercer CountyLibrary System. Bring yoga mator large towel. Registrationrequired; call (609) 737-2610.
Tai Chi: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. atHopewell Branch of the MercerCounty Library System. Learnthis ancient art to promote goodhealth and relaxation. No regis-tration required.
nineAbove Craft Time: Ages 9 and
older. 6 to 7 p.m. at HopewellBranch of the Mercer CountyLibrary System. Make a cool craftproject every week. Registrationrequired.
Story time: 10:30 a.m. at HopewellPublic Library. For toddlers andpre-schoolers. Stories, songs andfingerplays. Registration is notrequired. JULY 31
Tuesday Night Knitters: 7:30 to 9
p.m. at Hopewell Public Library.Welcomes knitters of all levels. Acozy evening of stitching andconversation.
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblingswelcome. 2 to 3 p.m. at HopewellBranch of the Mercer CountyLibrary System. Action rhymes,songs and felt board activities.Age-appropriate craft follows sto-ry time. Parental supervisionrequired.
Baby Time: Ages birth to 2. 11 to
11:30 a.m. Adult supervisionrequired. This program is a greatway to introduce children tolibrary story times and reading.Age appropriate books areshared with the group. Songs,nursery rhymes, puppets, and feltboard figures create a rich audio-visual and social experience.After about 20 minutes of struc-tured group time, there is timefor play and for socializing.
Glow Party: All ages. 7:30 to 8:30p.m. at Hopewell Branch Library.
An outside campfire with storiesand snacks and glow-in-the-darkgames. This is a closing party tocelebrate everyone who has readduring the summer. Inside activi-ties planned in case of rain.
CALENDARPAGE 8 JULY 25-31, 2012
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JULY 25-31, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 9
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and its projects, and how hesworked with several towns inNew Jersey and other states tohelp them find ways to imple-ment alternative resource man-agement.
Clerico mentioned several al-ternative approaches to creatinga sewerage infrastructure for The
Hamptons, which included dis-tributed and soft path ap-proaches, groundwater rechargeand natural systems.
The distributed approach en-tails spreading out water accord-ing to the development of thecommunity to easily manage it,keeping with what nature wouldtypically do, as opposed to gather-ing it in one place.
One of the soft path ap-proaches was using wetlands,which Clerico explained. You can
create an artificial wetland,which uses a liner so that thewater passes through the stonesand roots and is treated by natu-ral microbiology.
Essentially, when you see one,you think youre going to be walk-ing upon a wetland, but then itsdry, he said. But, down under-neath is where the water is con-tained to support the vegetativegrowth.
Clerico further explained that
the depth varies with each site,because of the different soils thateach plot of land in New Jerseyhouses, but theyre usually fourto five feet deep.
The practice of groundwaterrecharge involves ground water water below plants roots beingrecharged through a routed sys-tem so it essentially mimics na-tures water cycle.
Lastly, Clerico explained a nat-ural system, which is more cost-effective than building another
infrastructure or installing sewerlines.
The cost is about the same orcomparable with a packageplant, he said. Using a naturalsystem might not cost less at the
outset, but it costs much less over
the life cycle of the system be-cause its using much less energyand much less labor to maintain.
Overall, Clerico volunteered towork with Hopewell in devising aplan, and suggested that it lookinto one of these methods. He ex-plained how there are alternativemeans of funding systems likethese, and how they last for near-ly 50 years.
Leader of Citizens for TaxChoice the group that petitioned
against the ELSA referendumand ultimately defeated it Robert Kecskes added to Clericoscomments and stated how thereare plenty of alternatives op-posed to using ELSA.
I think that some people onthe committee may have it nar-rowed down to ELSA or wet-lands, he said. I would say lookat it further and a bit deeper. But,here are some types of optionsthat you may want to think aboutincluding spray irrigation. There
are people out there who are pay-ing $5 for 1,000 gallons to spraywater, and it only costs $8 to treatwater. Maybe you could sell someof this water to people. Theresalso using gray water systems.Let some of these neighborhoodscontinue to use their septic sys-tems for gray water, and send thedark water to wetlands or sprayirrigation. If youre going torecharge the wetlands, you may
not need to bring in other water
now. So, 25 to 30 percent of thatcost could be offset.
After much discussion aboutthe alternatives, Markulec sug-gested forming a working groupof experts to research all of thealternatives, and provide the com-munity and committee memberswith more extensive information.Committee members and the resi-dents attending all agreed, andconcluded that it should containsome members of the Affordable
Housing Committee, PlanningBoard, the Green Team, Environ-mental Commission, professionalconsultants, and other local busi-ness experts such as Waltmanand Clerico.
The group, which will beknown as the Wastewater Alter-native Group (WAG) at the sug-gestion of Committee memberVanessa Sandom, will consist ofeight to 12 people. According toMarkulec, they will be given 90days an accelerated timeline
to devise an analysis and presentit to the committee and public forreview.
From my perspective, this isgoing to be a process, Markulecsaid. Were going to get to a partwhere were going to have diffi-cult discussions. I dont thinkweve solved anything heretonight, but hopefully weve takenthe first couple steps in the rightdirection toward the solution.
OPTIONContinued from page 3
Option of a natural system wouldbe more cost-effective, says Clerico
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even for a second. But if you looknot that far behind me, its trulyhappening.
Although the construction ofthe field has already begun, thepurpose of the ceremony was toformally recognize the strenuousefforts of all of the parties in-volved in this project over the lastyear.
At the fields site, Stone organ-ized a grand scenario for a
groundbreaking ceremony, whichincluded a two-foot golden bull-dog statue (the mascot ofHopewell Valley CHS), a tablewith all of the information re-garding the field, a proposed lay-out and picture of what the fieldis expected to look like, and apodium for donor speeches.
This is so exciting, she said.When we were preparing the in-vitation for this afternoons cele-
bration, my instinct was to in-clude a line that said, Bring yourshovel, because I know we wouldnot be here today without each
one of you.By each one you, Stone is re-
ferring to over 40 more than busi-nesses, organizations and individ-uals that helped either raisefunds or donate materials andtime to make this community-wide venture possible.
To honor these dignitaries,Stone had a selection ofHopewells student athletes ac-companied by four golden shovelsto symbolize each of the major
contributors. Each of the shovelsrepresented the Recreation Foun-dation, the Hopewell Valley Re-gional School District, major fi-nancial contributors and in-kindcontributors.
Representatives from theRecreation Foundation includedPresident of the Hopewell ValleySoccer Association Brian Barrand President of Hopewell ValleyLacrosse Steve Faber, whose or-
ganizations collectively con-tributed $250,000.
Representatives from theHopewell Valley Regional School
District and the Hopewell Town-ship Committee included Super-intendent Dr. Thomas Smith,President of the Board of Educa-tion Lisa Wolff, Hopewell Town-ship Mayor Michael Markulec,Committee member Allen Can-non and Township Administratorand Engineer Paul Pogorzelski.
The major financial contribu-tors included owner of The FrontPorch Chris Murphy, Chairmanof the Hopewell Valley Communi-
ty Bank Pat Ryan, and PresidentJim Hyman, who each donated$25,000. The donations will be per-manently recognized on thefield.
The in-kind contributors,which represent more than$600,000 of the $1 million raised,included Secretary/Treasurer ofTrap Rock Industries GeorgeConway, who donated $140,000 ofstone and paving materials; Presi-
dent and CEO of IEW Construc-tion Group Chip Grundy; andowner of Ackerson Contracting,Inc. Mike Ackerson, who is the
general contractor that is essen-tially making this field come tolife, and who is also donatingmore than $400,000 of time, equip-ment, energy and expertise.
Whatever problems or chal-lenges crop up, Mike seems to beable to find a solution by makinga call or just taking on more workhimself, Stone said. With thetownships support, Mike is ableto work his regular job from 7a.m. until 3 p.m., and then come
and work here until 9 p.m. and allweekend.Aside from the donations that
were already collected, RobertColeman from the Hopewell Val-ley CHS GridIron Club also pre-sented a $25,000 donation check toStone and the Recreation Founda-tion at the ceremony.
We made a pledge about ayear ago for this, because wethink its a great opportunity forall sports, Coleman said. We re-ally wanted to thank the commu-
nity who really supports us in allof our fundraising, attending thegames, buying our concessions
and everything we do.Stone also explained that the
Recreation Foundation is within$20,000 of the $1 million it set out
to raise in June 2011.With continued community
support and your enthusiasm andendorsement, we hope to com-plete this phase of fundraising bythe time our field is complete, andIm sure that will happen, shesaid.
Stone noted how this projectwouldnt have been possible with-out the help of every individualinvolved.
It has just all come together
like a puzzle, really, she said.We couldnt have done it withouteach piece happening, so its real-ly a true community project.
Since Ackersons predictedcompletion date is Sept. 8, just intime for the first sports game ofthe season, the turf for the fieldshould be arriving between Aug.13 and 20.
This is a Cadillac turf, repre-sentative from AstroTurf DanDriscoll said. We do not do thisprogram to put down an economi-
cal turf. This turf is the premierproduct in the industry, and thatswhat you guys paid for.
10 THE HOPEWELL SUN JULY 25-31, 2012
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CEREMONYContinued from page 1
Ceremony recognized efforts of all parties involved
Meredith Megaffin, a residentof Hopewell, was named to theSchool of Engineering 2012spring honor roll at the Universi-ty of Kansas.
Meredith Megaffinmakes honor roll
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On July 6 at 7:18 p.m., whilechecking an unoccupied car, a1998 Mercury, parked in thePhillips Farm parking lot, Offi-cer Christopher Vaccarinosmelled the odor of burnt mari-
juana coming from it. A shorttime later Officer Vaccarino ob-served the car exit the parking lotand travel at a slow rate of speedalong Bear Tavern Road. OfficerVaccarino stopped the car and
spoke with the driver, a 19-year-old male, and a passenger, an 18-year-old male. Officer Vaccarinocould again smell the odor ofburnt marijuana. The Mercurywas impounded and a search war-rant was obtained. Over 50 gramsof marijuana, three glass pipesand a bong with marijuanaresidue, several packs of rollingpapers, a digital scale, a partiallyconsumed marijuana cigaretteand over $2,000 in cash was foundduring the search of the car. The
driver was charged with the pos-session of marijuana (over 50grams), possession with the in-tent to distribute CDS, possession
with the intent to distribute CDSwithin 500 feet of a park, posses-sion of drug paraphernalia, CDSin a motor vehicle and obstruct-
ing traffic. The passenger wascharged with the possession ofmarijuana (over 50 grams), pos-session with the intent to distrib-ute CDS, possession with the in-tent to distribute CDS within 500feet of a park, and possession ofdrug paraphernalia. Both menwere processed at police head-quarters on July 8 and were laterreleased. Their cases will be for-warded to the Mercer CountyProsecutors Office for review.
On July 10 at 9:57 a.m., OfficerJames Rosso responded to Route546 near Independence Way forthe report of a one car motor ve-hicle crash. Officer Rosso arrivedand found a car, a 2000 SubaruForrester, overturned in the road-way. An investigation found thatthe driver, a 29-year-old male, hadbeen traveling eastbound andfailed to negotiate a curve in theroadway. The car left the roadway,struck a utility pole, struck a tree
and then overturned. The driverwas treated on the scene byHopewell Valley Emergency Serv-ices personnel for chest pain. He
was issued a summons for care-less driving, which will be heardin municipal court. Route 546 wasclosed between Bear Tavern Road
and Jacobs Creek Road for ap-proximately four hours whilePSE&G personnel replaced thedowned utility pole.
On July 8 at 9:12 p.m., OfficerLouis Vastola responded to the in-tersection of Broad and Green-wood for the report of a one carmotor vehicle crash. Officer Vas-tola arrived and found a 2004 Mer-cedes had crashed into a utilitypole and a traffic signal box. The
driver, a 50-year-old female, wastransported by the Hopewell FirstAid Squad to an area hospitalwhere she was admitted for chestand leg injuries. She was chargedwith DWI, reckless driving, fail-ure to maintain lane and failureto observe a traffic signal, whichwill be heard in municipal court.
On July 13 at 12:50 p.m., OfficerGerard Infantino responded to
Brandon Road West for the reportof criminal mischief. Sometimebetween 6 p.m. on July 11 and 9a.m. on July 12, someone dam-
aged two mailboxes along theroadway. The damage was esti-mated at $40.
On July 12 at 1 p.m., OfficerGeorge Sabatino responded to aReed Road address for the reportof a burglary. Sometime between12:30 p.m. and 1 p.m., someone en-tered the home and removedbanking documents from thehome. It is believed that thehomeowner was distracted by a
thin male outside of the resi-dence who was talking about cut-ting a neighbors trees. Duringthis time, two other males whohad been with him, disappearedfrom the homeowners sight.Once the men left, the homeown-er noticed items moved and somebanking documents missing fromwithin the house. The males mayhave been driving a tan or whiteSUV. An estimate of the loss was
unavailable. Detective MichaelSherman is assisting with this in-vestigation.
On July 14 at 9:52 a.m., OfficerChristopher Vaccarino stopped acar along Route 29 after observinga large crack in the windshield.Officer Vaccarino spoke with thedriver, a 47-year-old male, whowas found to have a suspendeddrivers license and outstandingwarrants out of Trenton and Rob-binsville. A passenger, a 41-year-old female, was also found to haveoutstanding warrants out ofTrenton and Lawrence Township.
They were both placed under ar-rest and transported to policeheadquarters for processing. Thedriver was charged with having acracked windshield and drivingwhile suspended, which will beheard in municipal court. He waslater turned over to RobbinsvillePolice on their outstanding war-rant. The passenger was laterturned over to Trenton Police ontheir outstanding warrant.
JULY 25-31, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 11
police report
POLICEContinued from page 5
The following are statistics forthe month of June 2012:
TownshipOfficers responded to 56 motor
vehicle crashes; six of thesecrashes involved deer.
461 traffic summonses were is-sued and five DWI arrests weremade.
Officers investigated seven as-saults, seven burglaries, 10 thefts,seven domestic violence inci-dents, seven CDS violations, sixcriminal mischief incidents, 10harassment incidents and onetrespassing complaint.
28 adult males, 12 adult fe-males, and one juvenile female
were arrested.Officers assisted with 70 ambu-
lance calls and 17 fire calls.Officers responded to 83 alarm
calls. Officers investigated 16 sus-
picious occurrence calls and 40suspicious car/person calls.
BoroughOfficers responded to 3 motor
vehicle crashes.78 traffic summonses were
issued and 1 DWI arrest wasmade.
Officers investigated threethefts, two domestic violence inci-dents, one criminal mischief inci-dent and one harassment inci-dent.
Two adult males, two adult fe-males, and six juvenile maleswere arrested.
Officers assisted with four am-bulance calls and three fire calls.
Officers responded to twoalarm calls. Officers investigatedtwo suspicious occurrence callsand three suspicious car/personcalls.
Police release June statistics
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