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MARCH 28, 2016

Police moving forward


with body cameras

Lenape defeats Washington Township, 58-43

Chief Dennis Cribben outlines program


to council, detailing benefits he believes
would come from recorded interactions
By ZANE CLARK
The Sun
As with many law enforcement
agencies across the state and nation, the Mt. Laurel Police Department is moving closer to outfitting its officers with body cameras to record interactions between police and members of the
public.
Mt. Laurel Police Chief Dennis
Cribben outlined the program to
Mt. Laurel Council at its Feb. 22
meeting, during which time he
detailed the benefits he believed
citizens and officers would realize from the initiative.
First and foremost, Cribben
said body cameras would provide
an increased level of transparency between the police department
and the community, while also increasing professionalism within
the police department.
When officers know theyre
being recorded, its human nature
that theyre going to be just a hair
more careful about how they act
toward the community, and thats
a good thing, Cribben said.
Cribben said cameras would
also help expedite allegations

against police officers, which he


said the department routinely receives but often has no definitive
way to prove or disprove.
Cribben noted one recent example where a Mt. Laurel officer
was accused of racially profiling
a woman after stopping her car
for a broken brake light and writing her a ticket.
The woman later filed an official internal affairs complaint
against the officer and said the
light was not broken, but video
recorded by the camera mounted
in the officers vehicle disproved
the womans claims.
As the citizen heard that the
incident was on video, she withdrew the complaint, no further
action, Cribben said. The officer did his job exactly how he was
supposed to.
Cribben said body cameras
would enable officers to record
video throughout all calls,
whether they were near a police
vehicle or otherwise.
According to Cribben, once a
body camera is placed into a
charging port at the police staplease see VIDEOS, page 11

SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun

No. 23 Kendall Keyes takes her defender off the dribble with a ball fake and earns herself two free
throws. Keyes reached double digits, contributing 12 points in Lenape High Schools win against
Washington Township, 58-43. The girls are looking to keep this momentum going into the playoffs.
For another photo, please see page 7.

INSIDE THIS ISSUE


BOE meeting
Officials outline recent
PARCC data. PAGE 6

Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 1315
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

2 THE MT. LAUREL SUN MARCH 28, 2016

Voters approve fire budget


In the unofficial Mt. Laurel fire
district election results, 75 percent
of voters approved the first districts
proposed
budget
of
$9,963,211. The fire district tax rate
remained at 14.3 cents per $100 of
assessed property valuation.
In the Board of Fire Commissioners election, Cynthia Dipi-

etrantonio was elected to a threeyear term.


Dipietrantonio was the only
candidate on the ballot.
A full version of the Mt. Laurel
Fire District No. 1 budget and unofficial election results are available to view on www.mountlaurelfire.com.

Health care symposium March 15


Cooper University Health Care
and the Cooper in Schools Program invite school nurses, coaches, athletic trainers and school administrators to a continuing-education symposium, Health Care:
High Stakes, High Standards, on
Tuesday, March 15 from 7:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m. at the Westin Mt. Laurel,
555 Fellowship Road, Mt. Laurel.
The
symposium
features
prominent Cooper physicians
and clinicians addressing issues
that affect a childs physical and
mental well-being. Topics include

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pediatric trauma, sport and hand


injuries and obesity as well as difficult behavior and mindfulness
recognition.
New Jersey State Nurses Association contact hours will be provided to nurses. Registration is
required.
The cost is $45 in advance and
$55 on the day of the event. A
continental breakfast and lunch
are included.
To register, visit events.cooperhealth.org or call 1-800-8-COOPER
(1-800-826-6737).

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MARCH 28, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN 3

Jacqueline "Jacki" Smoyer

Coloring contest
winners announced

The Smart Move

Mt. Laurel winners include Caroline Bogdan,


Kayla Felicia and Graham Severs
The Sun newspapers announced the winners of their
Valentine Coloring Contest. Readers were asked to color a picture
and send it to us for entry into a
contest. Each winner received a
four-pack of tickets to Sahara
Sams.
There were 134 total entries,

and three winners from Mt. Laurel. They are: Caroline Bogdan
(8.5), Kayla Felicia (11) and Graham Severs (6).
To see the winning entries,
please visit our Facebook page,
www.facebook.com/mtlaurelsun.
Congratulations to the winners!

on campus
The following Mt. Laurel students at Fairleigh Dickinson University's Metropolitan campus, located in Teaneck, have been
named to the dean's or honors
lists for the fall semester: Taylor
Serio, Rebecca Lillie and Sarah Lil-

T
S
JU STED
LI

lie.
The following Mt. Laurel residents made the dean's list at
Rochester Institute of Technology
for fall semester: Jeffrey Bauer,
David Korhumel and Lauren Carney.

Sales Associate | ABR, MRP


cell: (856) 296-7226
office: (856) 235-1950
202 W. Main Street, Moorestown, NJ 08057

email: Jacki@TheSmartMove.com
www.TheSmartMove.com

MARCH 28, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN 5

Kindergarten registration
is week of March 7
Springville and Hillside Schools.
Countryside School and Fleetwood School registration will be
on the same days from 1 p.m. to
2:30 p.m.
An evening registration on
Wednesday, March 9 from 6 to 8
p.m. has been set at all six schools
for parents who cannot attend
during the day.
Those who are not certain of
their sending area school may use
the following link to check for
their
childs
school
site:
http://www.mtlaurelschools.org/
district/attendance.php.

on campus
Austin J. Montgomery of Mt.
Laurel is on the dean's list at
Clemson University for the fall semester. Montgomery is majoring
in general engineering.

The following Mt. Laurel residents have been named to the fall
2015 dean's list at University of
the Sciences: Radhika Patel and
Jacqueline Dunning.

GET ORGANIZED

NJ Lic. #13vh0111555900

Registration of children who


will enter kindergarten next September will be held at Mt. Laurel
Schools during the week of
March 7. At the same time, the
district will also register any student who is currently attending a
private kindergarten but will be
transferring to Mt. Laurels firstgrade classes in September.
Kindergarten and first-grade
roundup will be held on Monday,
March 7; Tuesday, March 8;
Thursday, March 10 and Friday,
March 11 from 1:30 p.m. to 3:00
p.m. at Larchmont, Parkway,

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THE MT. LAUREL SUN MARCH 28, 2016

in our opinion

Phew!

108 Kings Highway East


Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933

No school district will see a decrease in state aid


chool administrators throughout the state were holding their
collective breath leading up to
Gov. Christies 2016 budget address.
Where would state aid stand? was
the question on everyones mind. If
state aid went down considerably, how
hard would it hit the school districts
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, wouldnt reduce aid to any school district.
Overall, Christie proposed a 4 per-

Its budget time


The school district will be releasing its
2016-2017 budget numbers, and the
impact on your tax bills, shortly. The Sun
will have all the details on the budget
when they are released. If you want to
share your thoughts on the topic, send
us a letter to the editor. Wed love to
hear from you.

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

Dan McDonough Jr.

like ours, which doesnt receive the


bulk of state aid to public schools anyway, is that we will not lose any state
aid from last year.
Well actually be seeing an increase
in state aid, which is a rarity, even
though that increase is only very minimal.
While we certainly could have used
more help from the Garden State, its
comforting to know we wont 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 important aspects of life here in New Jersey our public schools.

Mt. Laurel Schools take closer look at PARCC scores

chairman of elauwit media

Tim Ronaldson

Joe Eisele

executive editor

publisher

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
editor emeritus

Steve Miller
Alan Bauer

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 08054 ZIP
code. If you are not on the mailing list, sixmonth subscriptions are available for
$39.99.
PDFs of the publication are online, free of
charge. For information, please call 856427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@mtlaurelsun.com.

At BOE meeting Feb. 23, officials outline data they have gained in recent weeks
By ZANE CLARK
The Sun
In late December, Mt. Laurel Schools released data detailing how the total population of the district and its schools performed on the first year of the Partnership
for Assessment of Readiness for College
and Careers exam compared to other districts in New Jersey and other PARCC testing states.
At the districts most recent board of education meeting on Feb. 23, the district outlined even more data it had gained in recent weeks on how different subgroups of
students in Mt. Laurel performed on the
exams.
As interim superintendent Sharon Vitella explained in December, students who
took the PARCC exams were tested in the
areas of mathematics and English lan-

guage arts.
Students scores then fell on one of five
PARCC scoring levels, where the fourth
and fifth levels were meant to meet or exceed the old standard of proficiency on the
formerly administered New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge standardized test that PARCC replaced.
With the newest data, Vitella was able to
outline how students who were white,
Asian, African American, Hispanic, general education, special education and economically disadvantaged performed on the
tests. For example, of the third-grade students who took the English language arts
exam, 57 percent scored equal to levels four
or five. However, when broken down by the
different subgroups, the numbers fluctuate
above and below that average.
The percentage of third-grade students
who scored equal to levels four and five in

Email us at news@mtlaurelsun.com

English language arts were 42.9 percent for


Hispanics, 80.3 percent for Asians, 34.6 percent for African Americans, 58.4 percent
for whites, 62.6 percent for general education, 27.5 percent for special education and
31.5 percent for economically disadvantaged.
Third-grade students who took the
mathematics exam had 53 percent scoring
equal to levels four or five. Yet, like the
English language arts exam, the scores
fluctuated between the different subgroups. The percentage of third-grade students who scored equal to levels four and
five in mathematics were 40 percent for
Hispanics, 80.3 percent for Asians, 41.5 percent for African Americans, 51.6 percent
for whites, 59.4 percent for general education, 21.7 percent for special education and
please see DISTRICT, page 10

For advertising information, call 856427-0933 or email advertising@mtlaurelsun.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@mtlaurelsun.com, via fax at 856427-0934, or via the mail. You can drop
them off at our office, too.
The Mt. Laurel Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium including electronically.

MARCH 28, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN 7

Opening tip

SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun

No. 32 Maddie Sims takes the opening tip for the Indians. Lenape
High School girls basketball team recorded its 23rd win of the season with a home victory over Washington Township High School, 5843. Sims led the way in scoring with 17 points.

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PAGE 8

WEDNESDAY MARCH 2
Info Table: US Family Health Plan:
Adult. 10 a.m. at the Mt. Laurel
Library. Health benefits consultant Josephine Grey will be in the
lobby to answer questions about
US Family Health Plan for qualified military personnel.
Crochet Anyone?: Adult. 1 p.m. at
the Mt. Laurel Library. Learn to
crochet or crochet with new
friends. Join craft enthusiasts for
crocheting and conversation.
Novices and experts welcome.
Instruction available if needed.

GUTTER
CLEANING

609-586-2300
GUTTER DOCTOR

No registration necessary. Please


bring personal knitting materials.
Intro to Meditation: Young Adult
Adult. 7 p.m. at Mt. Laurel Library.
Join an experienced meditation
instructor and achieve relaxation
of mind and body. Wear comfortable clothes, try not to eat a big
meal before class and bring a mat
or towel. Those who prefer not to
sit on the floor, may sit on a chair.
No registration needed.
Zoning Board meeting: 7 p.m. in the
courtroom at 100 Mt. Laurel
Road, Municipal Building, 100 Mt.
Laurel Road. Visit www.mountlaurel.com for more information
and to confirm meeting time.
Toastmasters Unity of Mt. Laurel
meeting: 7 p.m. on first and third
Wednesdays at Unity Church of
Christ, 629 S. Church St. For anyone interested in developing
community and leadership skills.
For more information, contact
Gregory
J.
Bartz
at
gbartz181@comcast.net or (609)
953-1603.
Rotary Club of Mt. Laurel meeting:
Noon at Laurel Creek Country

Club, 655 Old Centerton Road.


For more information, visit
www.mountlaurelrotary.org or
call (856) 234-7663.
Storytime: 11 a.m. every Wednesday
at Kids Play Lounge in Mt. Laurel.
Come hear a new story every
week and then stay and play the
rest of the day! Call (856) 2739500 or visit www.kidsplaylounge.com for more information.
New Covenant Presbyterian
Church Adult Bible Study: 2 to 3
p.m. Church is at 240 Creek Road,
Rancocas Woods, Mount Laurel.

SATURDAY MARCH 5
Lego League: Grades K-four. 10:30
a.m. at the Mt. Laurel Library.
Registration required. Join us for
this month's meeting of the
librarys Lego League. Each
month the library gathers together and build around a specific
theme. This group is not sponsored by the Lego Group.

SUNDAY MARCH 6
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MARCH 28, 2016


Church: Sunday worship 11 a.m. to
noon. Adult Bible study 9:30 to
10:30 a.m. Coffee and fellowship
after the church service each
third Sunday. Church is at 240
Creek Road, Rancocas Woods,
Mount Laurel.

MONDAY MARCH 7
Baby and Toddler Story time: Up to
age 3. 10:30 a.m. at the Mt. Laurel
Library. Come to this event for
fun for the little ones. Join the
library for stories, songs, fingerplays, and musical instruments
for all. Best suited for babies and
toddlers up to 3 years old. Siblings are welcome. No registration.
Crochet Anyone?: Adult. 7 p.m. at
the Mt. Laurel Library. Learn to
crochet or crochet with new
friends. Join craft enthusiasts for
crocheting and conversation.
Novices and experts welcome.
Instruction available if needed.
No registration necessary. Please
bring personal knitting materials.

TUESDAY MARCH 8
Preschool Story time: Ages 3
through 6. 10:30 a.m. and 1:30
p.m. at the Mt. Laurel Library.
Join the library for a fun-filled
session of stories, songs, finger
plays and an art activity. Best
suited for ages 3-6 years. Siblings
are welcome. No registration.
People's Law School: Workers
Compensation: Adult. 6 p.m. at
the Mt. Laurel Library. Join Gary
Boguski, esq., from the Burlington County Bar Association to
learn about workers' compensation. There will be time after the
presentation for Q&A. No registration needed.
Mt. Laurel Historical Society meeting: 7:30 p.m. at Farmers Hall,
intersection of Hainesport Mt. Laurel Road and Moorestown Mt. Laurel Road. For more information, call
President Fran Daily at (856) 2352334.
Mt. Laurel I BNI Chapter meeting:
7:30 to 9 a.m. at Marcos Restaurant at Indian Spring C.C., 115 S.
Elmwood Drive.

MARCH 28, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN 9

Mt. Laurel AARP to meet on March 3


The Mt. Laurel AARP Chapter
4003 will meet on Thursday,
March 3 at 1 p.m. in the Mt. Laurel Community Center, 100 Mt.
Laurel Road.
Attendees can enjoy the delightful voices of the Harrington
Middle School Chorus Group
from the Mt. Laurel Township
school district.
Their enthusiastic performance and joy in singing is a pleas-

ure to see and hear.


Following the performance and
business meeting, the Hoagie Day
Luncheon will be enjoyed by all
members
who
ordered
their hoagie at the February
meeting.
Final reservations will also be
accepted for the March 17 bus trip
to see Nana's Naughty Knickers.
Only a few seats remain. Call

Lacrosse program seeks players


Mt. Laurel Lacrosse is still
looking for players for its U7 Boys
Scoopers program.
Scoopers is an instructional,
skill-building and fun division,
designed for beginning lacrosse
players. The level is open to boys

born between Sept. 1, 2008, and


Aug. 31, 2010.
The base cost is $65.
Parents can register their children on Mt. Laurel Lacrosses
website, www.mtlaurellacrosse.
com.

Email us at news@mtlaurelsun.com

(856) 581-9340 today. Everyone is


welcome to join us. You do not
have to be a member to attend.
Donations of canned or boxed
food will be accepted for the
Women's Opportunity Center at
every meeting.
New members are always welcome. Attend a first meeting as
the Mt. Laurel AARPs guest.
For membership information,
please call (856) 439-0995.
PSA

Parents Anonymous/
Family Helpline
(800) 843-5437
PSA

Addiction Hotline
of New Jersey
(800) 238-2333

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Continued from page 6

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5-C N. Main Street Medford, NJ 08055
609-654-5489 or visit

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32.5 percent for economically disadvantaged.


That trend of fluctuations continues throughout every grade
tested from three through eight in
both subject areas. Complicating
matters further, Vitella also noted
some students could be placed in
multiple subgroups.
You could have a white student who is a special education
student who is also economically
disadvantaged, and that students
scores are reported in each of
these three subgroups, Vitella

said.
Moving forward, Vitella said
the district would have further investment in its literacy program
and work to ensure children have
books that reflect their cultures
with students who look like them.
Vitella said the district is also
working with teachers to help
them understand different cultural norms, and the district is working to have better outreach with
families.
I know our principals are
looking at the reports and trying
to work with parents, Vitella
said. Were doing everything we
can. I have no idea what it will
look like again next year, but well
figure it out once we get year two
data and well take it from there.

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MARCH 28, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN 11

Videos stored for 90 days


VIDEOS
Continued from page 1
tion, the videos from that camera
would then be uploaded to the
same Mt. Laurel Police servers
that already store videos from officers vehicles.
Cribben said videos would then
be stored on the server for 90 days
unless needed for a criminal investigation.
Police would assign videos
from a criminal case a case number and also burn the videos to a
DVD to be kept with case evidence. That DVD would then remain with case evidence until the
case was closed and enough time
had passed where police were
legally allowed to destroy paper
records, at which time electronic
copies would be destroyed as well.
Cribben said the state attorney
generals office had already approved Mt. Laurel and 16 other
municipalities in Burlington
County for a grant providing $500
toward the purchase of each camera.
Cribben said he wanted to purchase 40 cameras for the department at a cost of $750 each, but
noted there were additional costs
the grant would not cover, such as
warranties, software licensing
and maintenance and peripherals.
After applying $20,000 from the
attorney generals office, Cribben
said the department would need
an additional $37,000 in startup
costs, but the department could
get that money through a state
Department of Transportation
highway safety fund grant, which
the department already receives
annually.
Cribben said once the program
is implemented, the department
would then endure an additional
annual cost of about $5,000 in
software licensing fees, but that
could also be funded each year
from the same highway safety
grant or by increasing the departments annual budget by the same
amount.
Cribben said he believed the
purchase of 40 cameras would
provide enough equipment to

allow every officer working in a


patrol capacity during a given
shift to have a camera on their
person while also allowing
enough cameras to remain charging at the station for officers starting the next shift.
Cribben said the grant from
the attorney generals office
would also require Mt. Laurel Police to use social media and the
departments website to advertise
to citizens that officers were outfitted with body cameras.
Cribben also said there were
lights on the devices, so a person
in front of an officer looking at
the camera should be able to realize when the camera is active.
However, Cribben said officers
would have to specifically let citizens know they were being
recorded in certain instances,
such as if entering a home,
school, health-care or substance
abuse facility, house of worship
or when speaking with a victim.

Those videos would then be


tagged when uploaded to police
servers, and for Mt. Laurel officers to view the videos, police
would need approval from the
county prosecutors office or an
individual in the Mt. Laurel Police Department designated by
the prosecutors office to determine if police viewing the video
was appropriate.
Overall, Cribben said the program would show the public that
the department was willing to
open itself to scrutiny.
Were willing to record what
our officers are doing on a day-today basis and were not worried,
Cribben said. We trust the actions theyre taking and were
fine for a third-party review after
the fact.
Mt. Laurel Council said it
would look to approve a resolution accepting the grant from the
attorney generals office at its
next meeting.

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609-267-1555 bcendoscopycenter.com

$ ($&' + &

%%, ($ $ (

Harry J.
Haeffner III

Chimney and Duct


Cleaning Service
LLC

Inspections, Repairs & Relining


Dryer Vent Cleaning
Wood Stoves & Inserts Installed
Gas Inserts & Gas Logs
Installed & Serviced

(856)235-0027
NJ License 13VHO3054600

WITH THIS
AD ONLY

$'#&

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12 THE MT. LAUREL SUN MARCH 28, 2016

200 Club honors Sgt. Werner


The 200 Club of Burlington
County celebrated the organization's 26th annual Valor Awards
Dinner on Friday, Feb. 19, at Merion Caterers in Cinnaminson.
The 200 Club of Burlington
County is a charitable, non-profit
organization comprised entirely
of dedicated volunteers with the
primary mission of providing financial assistance to the families
of fallen or injured members of
the State Police, county and municipal police, fire or emergency
medical services serving the citizens of Burlington County.
The club also supports these
public
safety
professionals
through the awarding of higher
education scholarships, advanced
training awards and special
recognition awards.
The program included the
presentation of awards to several
members of the Burlington County law enforcement, fire and EMS
community.
In addition, the 200 Club of
Burlington County distributed

$10,000 in scholarship funds by


presenting four $2,500 scholarships to family members of
Burlington County police officers, county detectives, troopers,
firefighters or EMS personnel to
offset the cost of college.
The winners of this year's
scholarships include Erin M.
Welling, Seneca High School;
Alexandria Geibel, Rancocas Valley High School; Zackery Booth,
Moorestown High School and Anthony DiLoreto, Rutgers School of
Law.
The 200 Clubs Honor-Valor
Awards Committee presented its
Honor/Valor Award to New Jersey State Police Detective II Timothy P. Long, Troop D, and New
Jersey Trooper II Philip J. Conza,
Troop D, for their actions in disarming an individual armed with
a rifle located outside a public
school in Evesham Township.
The 200 Clubs Honor-Valor
Awards Committee presented
Distinguished Service Awards to
Sgt. Leonard Werner of the Mt.

Laurel Police Department, Police


Chief Christopher Chew, Evesham Township Police Department, and Fire Chief William F.
Ruggiano (ret.) Lenola Fire Department. The three officers were
recognized for their years of dedicated service to the agencies they
represent and for their years of
providing leadership and expert
experience resulting in the betterment to this agency and enhancing the overall safety of the residents of their towns.
The capstone of the evening
was the presentation of the two
Distinguished Service Awards,
presented posthumously in memory of Kevin H. Tuno, director,
Burlington County Office of
Emergency Management, and
Earl H. Siegman, Evesham Township Fire Department and lifelong member and treasurer for
the Burlington County 200 Club.
Both men were recognized for
their lifetime devotion and contributions to the citizens of Burlington County.

T H E M T. L AU R E L S U N

classified

MARCH 3-8, 2016

L I N E Only$
per week
A D S List a text-only ad for your yard

55

BOX
ADS

Only

sale, job posting or merchandise.

W H A T

Cherry Hill Sun Haddonfield Sun


Marlton Sun Medford Sun
Moorestown Sun Mt. Laurel Sun
Shamong Sun Tabernacle Sun Voorhees Sun

65

per week

Y O U

N E E D

PAGE 13

T O

K N O W

All ads are based on a 5 line ad, 15-18 characters per line. Additional lines: $9, Bold/Reverse Type: $9 Add color to any box ad for $20. Deadline: Wednesday - 5pm for the following week.
All classified ads must be prepaid. Your Classified ad will run in all 9 of The Sun newspapers each week! Be sure to check your ad the first day it appears.
We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion, so call us immediately with any errors in your ad. No refunds are given, only advertising credit.

H O W

T O

C O N T A C T

U S

Call us: 609-751-0245 or email us: classifieds@elauwitmedia.com


" $

"
Need Your Home Cleaned?
Reliable results. Excellent references.
HOMES OFFICES
Life is too short.
Enjoy your free time!

Annes Cleaning
856-482-1327
" $

"(

NOW IS THE TIME TO CHECK YOUR CHIMNEY!

Your

Dog

In A Loving Home
NOT A KENNEL!

"(

C T Garro Mason Contractors

www.
OUR HOME
DOG BOARDING.com

Call Steven:
856-356-2775

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
Family Owned & Operated

(609) 230-1682 (609) 268-9497

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CELL 609-313-3606

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Custom Homes, Additions, Sun rooms,
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Basements, Roof, Windows
Since 1974 FREE ESTIMATES

Pizzazz!

MENTION
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856-627-1974
www.RASBUILDERSNJ.com
"

$"

- ( ! '+ %)
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' $#/'
$(.
Residential Service Upgrades
Recessed Lighting
Backup Generators & Installs

$"

(856) 235-8080
$"

***

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NEW SHINGLE
NEW
SHINGLE ROOF
ROOF SPECIALISTS
SPECIALISTS S
SLATE
LATE ROOF
ROOF REPAIRS
REPAIRS RUBBER
RUBBER ROOFS
ROOFS
SEAMLESS
SEAMLESS GUTTERS
GUTTERS SIDING
SIDING W
WINDOWS
INDOWS & D
DOORS
OORS C
CAPPING
APPING S
SOFFITS
OFFITS
EMERGENCY
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
EMERGENCY TARP
TARP SERVICE
SERVICE AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE R
ESIDENTIAL & C
OMMERCIAL

$"

3300 Years
Years Ex
Experience
xperience Fa
Family
amily OOwned
wned & OOperated
perated
FAST
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AST
High Quality
Quality Products
Products Senior
Senior Citizen
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Discount
High
EMERGENCY
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No High
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Pressure Sales
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No
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ERVICE! Professional
SERVICE!
Professional Installation
Installation Serving
Ser ving the
the Tri-State
Tri-State area
area

! "

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ESTIM
IMATES

Paperhanging,
Removal & Painting
Siding Capping Painting
Gutters Carpentry & More

(856) 810-2182
steveshomerepairplus.com

By Randy Craig

(856) 981-1359
www.rcpaperhangings.com

CHECK OUT THE SUN CLASSIFIEDS!

Any
Any new
new complete
complete roofing
roofing or
or siding
siding job
job
M
Must
ust ppresent
resent ccoupon
oupon aatt ttime
ime ooff eestimate.
stimate. N
Not
ot vvalid
alid w
with
ith oother
ther ooffers
ffers oorr pprior
rior sservices.
ervices. EExpires
xpires 33/9/16.
/9/16.

CLASSIFIED

14 THE MT. LAUREL SUN MARCH 3-8, 2016


" $

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"

Computer Prospecting / List Development


"!

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"!

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$
!

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EV ER LAS T
S H EDS

!
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203 Rt. 530, Southampton

GET $10.00 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE!


Locally owned and operated.

856-665-6769
www.alldogspoop.com

PHONE SALES/APPOINTMENT
SETTING (WESTMONT)
Seeking p/t phone sales professionals. Excellent phone and strong
computer skills reqd.

Pay: $12/hour

saving our planet, one pile at a time

- More w/ experience.

856-240-8109

' "

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PAINTING
"

strong,caring,reliable for
elderly person.

!! "$% $ #

Mon-Fri.10am-6pm. call for


details. need references.

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PETE GENTILI'S
POWER WASHING
& PAINTING
LIC/INS.

609-617-2874

Deborah 856-577-5455

JUDYS WALLPAPER

www.SellSJHomeFast.com

REMOVAL + PAINTING

"

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FREE ESTIMATES
Schedule Now
Professional
& Clean Service
"

$"

!" &

$
Lic.# 13VH01426900

609-714-6878
609-471-3082
TREE SERVICE

Over
p.
5
3 yr. ex
D.E.C. Contracting
609-953-9794
609-405-3873
Lic #13VH03950800
ISA Cert. Arborist NJ-0993A

HAPPY HELPER
CLEANING

Weekly Bi-weekly Monthly


Detail Cleaning

Pauls Painting of Medford

$25.00 OFF CLEANING

Spring is Coming!

CLEANING BY STEPHANIE

Let us help you grow your idea to full bloom!

House & Office Cleaning


Weekly, bi-weekly, Monthly
Linen changes, beds made,
low rates
20 years experience
call for appt. (609) 845-5922

Crown Moldings Decorative Trims Bookcases


Custom Mantles Built-Ins Baths Decks & Porches
FREE ESTIMATES - REFERENCES - LICENSED & INSURED

ERICS HANDYMAN
SERVICE.COM

"&

I CAN HELP WITH YOUR TO-DO LIST


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.

856-983-5325

Quality work at Reasonable Price

"

856-296-5515

HOME REPAIR!
Roofing, Siding,
Windows & Doors, Stucco
Gutter Cleaning, Paint,
Powerwashing, Drywall & more!!

FREE ESTIMATES
856-304-3916

COSTUME JEWELRY

(609) 320-9717
NJ Lic# 13VH00929000

CHINA DINNERWARE
SETS OR PARTS
!

CALL TODAY! (609) 561-7751


www.jhstraincarpentry.com

%(

Specializing in Interior &


Exterior Painting

Insured

856-304-5019

Beautiful first-floor
office space in the heart
of Haddonfield. 1,000 to
2,600 sq. ft. at $16 per
sq.ft. Available ASAP
#$ !
%! # $ ! "
or call

FURNITURE
LAMPS - MIRRORS
STATUES
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
!
CALL GINA"
856-795-9175
609-471-8391

LET
THE SUNS
WORK FOR
YOU!
Call
856-427-0933
for Advertising Info.

CLASSIFIED
#

MARCH 3-8, 2016 THE MT. LAUREL SUN


&

WILLIAM SHUSTER

OIL TANK
REMOVAL /
INSTALLATION

OWNER

Residenti
al
Snow Rem
oval!
Call Now
To Book
Services!

LIC#13085

ANY JOB OVER $200

oday!
Call T
BACK-FLOW TESTING SEWER JETTING SEWER EXCAVATION
PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE TRADITIONAL PLUMBING WATER HEATERS
VIDEO SEWER INSPECTIONS

Call 856-427-0933
to place your classified!

"

NOBLE
PAINTING
LLC

' &

!" &

WELWOOD
CONSTRUCTION

! " $

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!!$$ $ !!$$ ( !!"" "
P
roudly sserving
erving tthe
he S
outh JJersey
ersey aarea
rea
Proudly
South
A R S!
ffor
or oover
ver 2 5 Y EEA
No Dispatch Fees Affordable Service Rates
Easy Payment Options

CONSTRUCTION

ROOFING SIDING WINDOWS DOORS ADDITIONS


SOFFIT/GUTTERS & REPAIR COMPOSITE DECKING
Special
Winter Pricing
Jay C. Welwood
Medford, NJ
Office: 609-953-5773
Cell: 609-206-1722

FREE
ESTIMATES

NJ Lic. # 13VH05085200
www.welwoodconstruction.com
jaywoodmx@aol.com

Ocean City New Jerseys #1 Real Estate Team!

Matt Bader
Cell 609-992-4380

The Team You Can Trust!

Dale Collins
Cell 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 08226
Office: 609-399-0076 email: bca@bergerrealty.com

15

Painting & Staining Interior/Exterior


Respraying Aluminum,
Cedar, Asbestos,
Wood & Vinyl,
Siding, Stucco,
Carpentry Repairs

Residential
Specialist
Underground
Crawlspace
Above Ground
Tanks
Clean Ups
Structural Support
DEP Certified
Insurance Approved
NJ Grant Money
Available
Ask our expert!

"&

Pruning, Topping and Removal


Guaranteed To Beat Any Written Estimate
24 Hr. Emergency/Insurance Work

(856) 629-8886
(609) 698-4434
NJ LIC. # 13VH00102300

GREAT WINTER PRICES

$ "!"

National/American Waterproofing

POWERWASHING
FREE ESTIMATES

609-654-7651
856-667-7651
Cell: 609-868-1178

856-767-4443

www.americanwatermanagement.com.
Lic # 13VH06045200

Painting for Four Generations

3009 WEST AVE


Easily the nicest 1st floor condo on West Ave!
Improvements done in 2013-14 include: Installed a new high efficiency heater -Installed
a new air conditioner -Installed a new hot water
heater - Renovated the Kitchen and Great Room
- new cabinets, new appliances, granite counter
tops, new fireplace surround & hearth, installed
engineered hardwood floors & hardwood stairs.
Renovated the Bathrooms - new toilets, new
sinks, counter tops, and vanities Laundry installed new washer and dryer Entire inside
of house was painted - ceilings, walls, doors,
trim All new interior door hardware was
installed All new exterior door hardware was
installed Replaced recessed lights with energy
efficient lights Resurfaced the front porch and
installed a gate Replaced front stairs with
composite decking material Installed
sprinklers for front flower beds Installed new
landscaping and stone Property being offered
mostly furnished! $489,900

30

30

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