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2022-09-17 - The Brick Times

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The BRICK Times Vol. 22 - No. 18

MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS

JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM

September 17, 2022

In This Week’s Edition

BREAKING NEWS @

─Photo by Judy Smestad-Nunn The shopping plaza developer wants additional access to the site. By Judy SmesThis is the second tad-Nunn time the landlord, ParaBRICK - There will mount Realty, has made be no side entrance the request for an addito the Wawa/Panera tional driveway into the Bread shopping plaza site. They were able to off Duquesne Boule- reapply after making a vard since the Board substantial change to of Adjustment over- the original plan, which whelmingly rejected an would have moved the application for the new driveway back about driveway at their recent 100 feet towards North (Driveway - See meeting.

jerseyshoreonline.com

Community News Pages 8-10

Dr. Izzy’s Sound News

Candlelight Ceremony Honors Victims Of 9/11 Attacks

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Inside The Law Page 17

Classifieds

By Alyssa Riccardi ning to remember the BRICK – Despite the victims of the Septemheavy rain, local offi- ber 11, 2001 attacks. cials, law enforcement, This year marks the first responders, and 21st anniversary of the members of the Brick attacks on the World community joined to- Trade Center, the gether on Sunday eve- (Ceremony - See Page 4)

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─Photos by Alyssa Riccardi A remembrance ceremony and candlelight vigil was held at Windward Beach.

Transitional Living For Homeless On The Horizon

─Photo courtesy Just Believe The facility will be called Larry’s Home, after deceased veteran Larry Robertiello.

By Chris Lundy LITTLE EGG HARBOR – A transitional living facility where unhoused people could spend up to a year while learning skills to get them back on their feet is one step closer to reality. The property for the facility was donated to nonprofit organization

Just Believe from the Leary family in Little Egg Harbor. The program will be able to house six to eight men for up to a year following New Jersey Department of Community Affairs guidelines. Volunteer life coaches and interns from Ocean County College, Social Work

Program and Journey Health and Wellness will help them, said Paul Hulse, CEO of Just Believe. A case plan will be given for each individual which will be re-evaluated every 30 days. They will be taught life skills, and they will be helped in finding

(Homeless - See Page 6)

By Alyssa Riccardi BR ICK – As t he school year kicked off on a positive note, the Brick Township School District plans to keep the positivity flowing throughout the rest of the school year with their anti-bullying curriculum. With the coronavir us pandemic making students convert to online learning in 2020, it seemed bullying incidents increased last school year as kids returned to their class-

rooms. At the September 8 Board of Education meeting, Anti-Bullying Coordinator Earl Mosely gave a presentation on Harassment, Intimidation and Bullying (HIB) and expressed how they’re working towards a more positive school year. “One of the goals here is the create classrooms where everyone feels respected. That’s one of the things we’re working on. Not everything we will (Bullying - See Page 6)

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