2022-04-30 - The Howell Times

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The HOWELL Times

Vol. 19 - No. 48

In This Week’s Edition

MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS

JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM

April 30, 2022

The Hidden Gem Of Alfred C. Sauer Park At Echo Lake

BREAKING NEWS @

jerseyshoreonline.com

Community News Page 6-7

Inside The Law Page 10

Dear Pharmacist Page 11

Classifieds Page 13

–Photos by Mark Bator (Top left) The lake from the western shore facing east towards Maxim. (Bottom left) Part of the 0.2 mile trail through the woods. (Right) The “wooden bridge” from the nature trail that leads to the duck blind. By Mark Bator HOWELL – Alfred C. Sauer Park, more commonly referred to as Echo Lake Park, is a small municipal park that has a variety of activities for locals. But this hidden gem, which sits less than one half mile from the bustling corridor of U.S. Highway 9, was only made possible through the extraordinary efforts of two individuals. While it is generally regarded as a garden spot in the

$55.56M Budget Hearing Set For May 10

By Mark Bator and Alyssa Riccardi HOWELL - Appearing before the Mayor and Council, Township Manager Brian Geoghegan presented a proposed budget of $55,562,000 for 2022, which represented a $719,000 increase over the 2021 fiscal year. The public hearing (Budget - See Page 2)

township, it wasn’t always so. “It’s one of our most beautiful properties in our town,” said Councilwoman Suzanne Brennan, speaking about Echo Lake at a recent Howell Township Council meeting. “No matter how many people use it, I don’t think it’s ever enough because it really is quite [an] exquisite place to be.” There are numerous sites named Echo Lake around the United States, and curiously, several

in New Jersey alone. But one in particular, tucked away in Monmouth County, appears to have been conceived by one township resident and saved by another. Situated on Maxim Southard Road between Lanes Mill Road and Locust Avenue in Howell, the park has two parking areas, located on the north and south sides of the lake. Fed by a nearby brook, (Echo Lake - See Page 3)

Inmates Go Back To School, Strive For A Brighter Future

By Alyssa Riccardi MONMOUTH COUNTY – Inmates at the Mon mout h Cou nt y Correctional Institution (MCCI) are making an effort to provide themselves with a better future by going back to school. Sheriff Shaun Golden announced that the

Mon mout h C ou nt y Sheriff’s Office Correctional Division continues to assist inmates and give them to opportunity to change their life. Over the past 18 months, nine inmates from the MCCI have been studying for their GED (high school equivalency di-

plomas) online through a program run by the Mon mouth- Ocean Educational Services Commission. “The inmate’s dedication to obtaining their diploma during the COVID-19 pandemic speaks volumes. They (Future - See Page 2)

–Photo courtesy MCSO Nine inmates graduated this spring, earning their GED.

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