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Schools go remote for rest of 2020
Amazon’s coming to town? Retailer eyes new warehouse on Princess Road as last-mile hub
By ROB ANTHeS
By ROB ANTHeS
Online retail giant Amazon has its eyes on the new 340,000-square-foot warehouse on Princess Road, and has submitted an application to Lawrence Township to turn the site into a “last-mile” delivery hub. The warehouse at 10 Princess Road would be almost a 24/7 facility, with trucks arriving late at night and shifts running from 2 a.m. until 10:30 p.m. seven days a week. According to the application, the hub would open by 2022, and serve Amazon customers within a 45-minute drive of the facility. The site has been assessed at $23.8 million by Lawrence Township for 2021, and would generate approximately $690,000 in taxes. Of that total, $373,000 would go to the school district and $140,000 to the Lawrence municipal government. Both would be a substantial increase from 2020, when the developer paid a land-only tax total of $149,313, according to township records. The proposal anticipates 250 workers at the site, with increased hiring during peak periods. Of the people working there, 70 would have Amazon associate jobs, with 150 See AMAZON, Page 7
Lawrence residents Alexander and Eric Xia raised money for Lawrence-based nonprofit HomeFront in order to help local families struggling with hunger, job loss and homelessness during the pandemic.
The season of giving Volunteers help nonprofits provide amid pandemic By ROB ANTHeS aNd JOe EMaNSki
Every year, Meals on Wheels of Mercer County partners with The Church of St. Ann in Lawrence and the Trenton Kiwanis Club to provide Thanksgiving day meals to seniors who are spending the holiday alone. That was true even in this year of COVID-19, although the coronavirus forced the organizations—and their volunteers—to adapt to the con-
straints of the pandemic. In ordinary times, volunteers from St. Ann’s and the Kiwanis gather at the church to make the food before it is delivered by Meals on Wheels to those in need. This year, Leonardo’s, the Lawrence restaurant, agreed to prepare the meals in their kitchen to limit volunteers’ exposure to the virus. More than a third of Meals on Wheels of Mercer County’s 325 clients opted into this year’s Thanksgiving Day program. MOW volunteers picked up fully prepared meals on Thanksgiving morning and delivered them to 120 clients throughout the area.
While Meals on Wheels volunteers won’t be going out on Christmas day to deliver meals, they will be providing the nonprofit organization’s homebound senior clients with traditional Christmas meals earlier in the week that they will be able to heat and eat on the holiday. This month they will also be distributing “Blizzard Bags” to their clients—care packages full of nonperishable items intended to help the clients get through any winter emergencies that might arise. Meals on Wheels continues to fulfill its mission of providing nutritious meals and easing social isolation for homebound See NONPrOFITS, Page 4
HEALTH
HEADLINES M O N T H LY N E WS F R O M
Lawrence Township Public Schools will spend the rest of 2020—and a bit of 2021—in full-remote instruction. Just weeks before it could complete its plan to reintroduce students to school buildings, the district decided to call an audible by returning all students to remote learning until Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021. It is the first school district in Mercer County to make such a call. LTPS superintendent Ross Kasun said on Nov. 17 that he made the decision based on the rising number of COVID19 cases in the area, a difficulty maintaining proper staffing levels and the approaching holiday season and flu season. “Although I am saddened about not opening our schools for in-person instruction and reverting back to a complete remote model, I cannot, in good conscience, open as we planned,” Kasun wrote in a Nov. 17 letter to parents. “My responsibilities include being the steward of safety and learning. Both would be compromised by instituting what we previously planned.” The district had been reopening schools in waves, starting with special education students in October. By Nov. 9, all PreK-3 students opting for hybrid learning had started attending school inperson several times a week. Students in grades 4-12 have not been in a school See SCHOOLS, Page 6
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