Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Lopatcong Township, New Jersey" ¶ 13
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Lopatcong and Township
The chief state routes are Route 31, a north-south road that runs from Buttzville in White Township to Trenton, and Route 57 that runs between Lopatcong Township to Hackettstown.
* Lopatcong Township
It runs from an interchange with U. S. Route 22 in Lopatcong Township to an intersection with Route 182 and County Route 517 in Hackettstown.
Route 57 eastbound at New Jersey Route 31 | Route 31 in Washington, New Jersey | WashingtonRoute 57 begins at an interchange with U. S. Route 22 in Lopatcong Township, heading to the east on the Morris and Essex Turnpike, a two-lane undivided road.
The high school also serves students from five sending communities: Alpha, Bloomsbury ( in Hunterdon County ), Greenwich Township, Lopatcong Township and Pohatcong Township.
Lopatcong Township () is a Township in Warren County, New Jersey, United States.
Lopatcong Township was featured in a 2003 article in The New York Times which discussed problems of public school financing in suburban communities and various strategies communities have adopted to deal with the problem.
What is now Lopatcong Township was created as Phillipsburg Township on March 7, 1851, by an act approved by the New Jersey Legislature, and contained portions of Greenwich Township and Harmony Township.
Lopatcong Township is located at ( 40. 714352 ,- 75. 155769 ).
Delaware Park ( 2010 Census population of 700 ) and Lopatcong Overlook ( population 734 as of 2010 ) are census-designated places and unincorporated areas located within Lopatcong Township.
Lopatcong Township is governed by the Faulkner Act ( Small Municipality ) form of government.
Lopatcong Township is in the 5th Congressional district and is part of New Jersey's 23rd state legislative district.
The Lopatcong Township School District serves public school students in grades K-8.
The high school also serves students from five communities as part of sending / receiving relationships: Alpha, Bloomsbury ( in Hunterdon County ), Greenwich Township, Lopatcong Township and Pohatcong Township.

Lopatcong and ),
Phillipsburg High School ( 9-12, 1, 589 ) which serves students from the Town of Phillipsburg and from five sending communities at the secondary level: Alpha, Bloomsbury ( in Hunterdon County ), Greenwich Township, Lopatcong Township and Pohatcong Township, as part of sending / receiving relationships.
The high school also serves students from five sending communities: Alpha, Bloomsbury ( in Hunterdon County ), Greenwich Township, Lopatcong Township and Pohatcong Township.

Lopatcong and 2013
Based on the results of the 2010 Census, the New Jersey Redistricting Commission has shifted Lopatcong into the, a change that will take effect in January 2013, based on the results of the November 2012 general elections.

Lopatcong and .
* Phillipsburg High School, a part of the Phillipsburg School District ( PreK-12 ) with the school districts of Alpha Borough and the Townships of Lopatcong, Pohatcong, and Greenwich.
After Phillipsburg was incorporated as an independent municipality on March 8, 1861, the township changed its name to Lopatcong as of March 18, 1863, after a creek in the area.
Lopatcong is made up of several neighborhoods, including Morris Park, Delaware Park, Rosehill Heights, Brakeley Park, Lows Hollow, Country Hills, Meadow View, Scott's Mountain, and Overlook.

Lopatcong and ).
Lopatcong Middle School ( 5-8, 433 students ).
Phillipsburg was incorporated as a town by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 8, 1861, from portions of Phillipsburg Township ( now Lopatcong Township ).

Township and Committee
The DMC is governed by a Board of Directors consisting of business owners and residents, which is appointed by the Township Committee.
Cranford is governed under the Township form of government with a five-member Township Committee.
The Township Committee is elected directly by the voters in partisan elections to serve three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or two seats coming up for election each year.
, members of the Cranford Township Committee are Mayor David W. Robinson, Deputy Mayor Andis Kalnins ( Commissioner of Finance ), Lisa Adubato ( Commissioner of Public Safety ), Kevin Campbell ( Commissioner of Engineering, Commissioner of Public Works ) and Edward O ' Malley ( Commissioner of Public Affairs ).
As of 2009, seven women have been elected to the Cranford Township Committee and three women have served as Mayor of Cranford.
Barbara Brande was the first woman elected to the Township Committee and the first woman mayor of the township.
Mayor Brande was elected to the Township Committee in 1974 and reelected in 1977, serving a total of six years.
Freeholder Kowalski was an unsuccessful candidate for Cranford Township Committee in 1999 and served as Union County Freeholder Chairwoman in 2007.
Rowley, Mildred I., The History of Kirkwood, Illinois and Tompkins Township, Warren County, Bicentennial Heritage Committee, 1976.
On April 26, 2004, the Buena Vista Township Committee voted to temporarily rename the community of Richland, a section of Buena Vista Township.
Buena Vista is governed under the Township form of government with a five-member Township Committee.
The Township Committee is elected directly by the voters to three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or two seats coming up for election each year.
At an annual reorganization meeting, the Township Committee selects one of its members to serve as Mayor and another to serve as Deputy Mayor.
, the members of the Buena Vista Township Committee are Mayor Peter Bylone, Deputy Mayor Richard Harlan, Sue Barber, Chuck Chiarello and Teresa Kelly.
The Township of Egg Harbor is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government by a five-member Township Committee.
The Mayor and Deputy Mayor are chosen by the Township Committee from among its members during the Reorganization meeting each January.
The members of Township Committee are part-time elected officials.
, members of the Egg Harbor Township Committee are Mayor James J. McCullough, Deputy Mayor John W. Risley, Jr., Joe Cafero, John Carman, Jr. and Paul Hodson.
The Township of Hamilton is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government by a five-member Township Committee.

0.449 seconds.