Mount Ephraim Police Introduce New Program

By Bill Bates 

NEWS Correspondent 

Mount Ephraim Police Chief Edward C. Dobleman announced that the department is implementing a new program to the borough. The program is called \”Street Smart Is Street Safe\” and will help protect our school children, school crossing guards, and the citizens of our community. Residents and business owners will be able to contact the police to help with this quest.

Tragically, the pedestrian accident rate has significantly increased statewide. New Jersey is the most densely populated state in the nation, a situation made worse by the number of vehicles on the state\’s roads. For example, 30 years ago 50 percent of students walked to school. Today, 85 percent are driven to school, resulting in congestion in school zones far beyond what the streets were designed to handle.

Too many drivers are distracted by eating or drinking behind the wheel, using cell phones or simply not paying attention. There are also increasing incidents of aggressive driving. Unfortunately, most unsafe driving in school zones is by drivers who use the streets most often, the parents and grandparents dropping off or picking up children.

See children ahead? Don\’t assume they know you are coming, even if they are looking right at you. Children and senior citizens lack auditory localization – the ability to locate a moving object by hearing it. That is why children and older people are far more likely to be involved in pedestrian accidents.

Accidents involving children are especially common where there are parked cars that block a driver\’s vision of children darting into the street. Accidents involving senior citizens are more common at intersections because older people take longer to cross.

Many people are not even aware how fast they are going. If a car going 20 Mph hits a pedestrian, there is a 95% chance of survival. However, the survival rate declines to 45% at 30 Mph and less than 10% at 40 Mph.

To address this problem the Borough of Mt. Ephraim and Police Chief Dobleman will implement the \”Street Smart is Street Safe\” program starting this September. In this program, a Citizen Advisory Committee for Public Safety will be established and will consist of a member of the governing body, member of the board of education, the Chief of Police, the D.P.W. Superintendent, the municipal engineer and a number of civilian volunteers. Citizens wishing to participate in this program should call the Mount Ephraim Police Department at (856) 931-2225.

Also, in response to a statewide 65 percent increase in accidents involving crossing guards over the past 10 years, the MEPD will be implementing new training and requirements for crossing guards under the new \”Street Smart is Street Safe\” program. The program features a new training video for school crossing guards, classroom training for crossing guards and also standard medical requirements. This will create a safe working environment for crossing guards and also help to assure the safety of our children.

Any person seeing an incident of unsafe driving, including improper parking, or unsafe conditions, such as blocking the view of a crossing guard, is urged to notify the Mount Ephraim Police via phone at 856-931-2220 or via email at www.mountephraimpd.com as soon as it is practical.

 

Police Chief Dobleman stated, \”On behalf of the members of the Mount Ephraim Police Department, I wanted to thank everyone for their anticipated cooperation with this program and remember that the MEPD will be out there prior to school and during school hours to enforce these laws for the safety of all of our children and citizens.\”


 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Helen M. Buckley, 93, of Bellmawr; Former Manager of WT Grants

On August 28, 2007. Age 93. (nee Cusack) Of Bellmawr. Loving wife of the late James T. Buckley. Devoted mother of Helen B. Ade of Haddonfield, James T. Buckley, Jr. of Mullica Hill, Daniel P. Buckley of Arizona, Marie T. Gougon of Pitman, and Maureen Buckley-Pyne of Westmont. Beloved grandmother of 11 and predeceased by Reggie M. Buckley and great-grandmother of 8.

Helen was born in Philadelphia and was a 1933 graduate of West Catholic High School. Helen was a faithful and devoted parishioner of Annunciation Of The Blessed Virgin Mary R.C. Church in Bellmawr where she was a member of the Altar and Rosary Society. Helen was often reading the bible and saying the rosary. Helen worked more than 10 years as a manager of W. T. Grants in Brooklawn. She was a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians in Atlantic City. Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend her viewing on Friday morning from 9:30 to 11 am at Annunciation B.V.M. Church: 601 W. Browning Rd., Bellmawr, NJ. There will be no evening viewing and no viewing at the funeral home.

Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 am at the church. At the request of the family, burial will be private at New Saint Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr. Family requests that memorial donations be made in Helen\’s memory to Samaritan Hospice: 5 Eves Drive, Suite 300, Marlton, NJ 08053. Please write in the memo of the check: Helen M. Buckley. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through our funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Helen M. Buckley.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Chuckles by Rick

ATTORNEY: Doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse?

WITNESS: No.

ATTORNEY: Did you check for blood pressure?

WITNESS: No.

ATTORNEY: Did you check for breathing?

WITNESS: No.

ATTORNEY: So, then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy?

WITNESS: No.

ATTORNEY: How can you be so sure, Doctor?

WITNESS: Because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar.

ATTORNEY: I see, but could the patient have still been alive, nevertheless?

WITNESS: Yes, it is possible that he could have been alive and practicing law
.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

NY Times Archives/1899 Trolley Car Accident in Gloucester City

A Look back at History……the year 1899

T

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.