The HOWELL Times
Vol. 21 - No. 19
MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS
JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM
Science Teacher Awarded For Environmental Advocacy
In This Week’s Edition
BREAKING NEWS @
jerseyshoreonline.com
Community News Pages 6-7
Dear Pharmacist Page 11
Classifieds Pages 13
Inside The Law Page 14
Photo courtesy Alexendria Langenberger Howell Teacher Josh Langenberger pictured with Deputy Mayor Evelyn O’Donnell and Councilman Fred Gasior, accepting an award. By Alyssa Riccardi HOWELL – The Howell Township Environmental Commission honored a local teacher, choosing Josh Langenberger as its annual Ann G. Ritchie Award recipient. The Ann G. Ritchie
Award is presented annually by the members of the Environmental Commission to honor the memory of Ann G. Ritchie, a devoted environmentalist who worked tirelessly to sustain the environ-
ment and quality of life in Howell Township. Langenberger is a well-respected science teacher in Howell Township, most notably at Howell Middle School South, for three decades. He is the
second Middle School South teacher to receive this award, after Danielle Gianelos received the award in 2019. “Josh continually works to bridge the gap between the students, the (Teacher - See Page 9)
County Continues Tradition Of Honoring Forgotten Veterans
By Alyssa Riccardi MONMOUTH COUNTY – The remains of 21 forgotten veterans and six family members were laid to rest at the Military Honors For Forgotten Veterans event. The ceremony paid tribute, honored and provided un-
claimed veterans with the proper sendoff they deserve. The remains of these heroes, some going back as far as World War I, sometimes sit on a shelf inside a funeral home for years, according to the Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA). (Veterans - See Page 3)
Photo courtesy Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office The procession brought the cremains from the ceremony to their final resting place.
October 14, 2023
Controversial Warehouse Decision Delayed By Stephanie Faughnan HOWELL – Those hoping the local planning board would decide on the Victory Road warehouse proposal must wait a little longer. The application is back on the schedule for November 2, 2023. Planning board members heard over three hours of testimony on the proposal from AAVRHW Property, LLC on October 5 before deciding it was too late in the evening to deliver an outcome on the project. That meeting was the fourth time the application’s presentation continued before the planning board. Since November 29, 2022, it had been listed and rescheduled more than a dozen times. The proposal, which includes cutting down a large portion of the woods and constructing a 203,802 square-foot warehouse/ office building, 25 loading dock spaces and multiple parking spaces for trailers and passenger vehicles, has been met with strong opposition from area residents. Over 100 signs have been erected in protest of the approval, and a group collectively referred to as the objector neighbors has retained attorney Brittany W. DeBord to represent their opposition to the application. One of the initial concerns raised by DeBord revolved around whether the planning board was the appropriate venue for the application. She highlighted the applicant’s intentions to enhance an access point located on private property at the intersection of Victory and Route 547. DeBord contended that this off-site improvement should be integrated into the warehouse application. Notably, the private property falls within a zoning district that does not allow warehousing. Therefore, she said, the developer should go before the town’s zoning board to get approval to get a commercial use on residential land. “It is also my understanding that the developer intends the space to be more of a flex space,” added DeBord. “The developer has added a number of office spaces to this warehouse development and has discussed this development as a flex space. That is not (Warehouse - See Page 2)
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