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DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017

Looking back on the happenings of Shamong


The Sun

s the New Year comes and we look toward what 2017 may have in store, it is
important to take a look back at the
year that was.
Last year was a busy one for Shamong.
From the action-packed school year to
the numerous significant events handled by township committee, there is
plenty on which to reflect.

Shamong Township talks cemetery plans


The township purchased land for $223,000 on Willow Grove Road between the municipal building and
the Indian Mills Volunteer Fire Station to become
the site of a cemetery the township is looking to install as a new means of income. The 7.5 acres was acquired solely with the townships funds, so there are
no restrictions on it.
If for any reason the cemetery option doesnt
work out, it will just be a piece of property that the

township owns as an asset and can be put to other


use, held for future committees to decide or even
sold back on the market if need be, Township solicitor Douglas Heinold said.
Addison Bradley gave an update on the cemetery
initiative in July. A subcommittee had been created;
it has reviewed a certificate of authority; and it was
working on submitting one to the state board for review.
Bradley said the proposed name would be
Pinelands Memorial Park, a Country Cemetery.
The committee unanimously approved to submit
applications required to apply for a cemetery in September.

Township, school districts increase taxes


In April, township committee anticipated a twocent increase in the local purpose tax, meaning Shamong residents living in the average assessed home
of just less than $308,000 will pay an extra $61.60 in
please see MUNICIPAL, page 3

CLOCKWISE, FROM BOTTOM LEFT: Seneca's Brad Jankowski beats his defender off the
dribble and takes it to the hole. Camp counselor Jessica Lenzo, camper Johnelyi Contreras,
counselor Nicole Fahs and camper Christina Ruggia sit together during pottery making
time at Camp No Worries. Seneca High School students Maddie Graff and Krysten
Emenecker thank Lily Davis for her donation at Seneca's Indoor Safe Trick or Treat.
Township solicitor Douglas Heinold swears in Timothy Gimbel as mayor while his wife
Nancy holds the Bible. Seneca High School girls varsity lacrosse player Erin Kerstetter gets
control of the ball against Northern Burlington County Regional High School. Mark Oddo
and Danielle Pernice hit the runway at Seneca High Schools Once Upon a Time fashion

show. Kaylee Richardson shows off her bunny ears at Medford Sunrise Rotary's annual
Easter Egg Hunt. Seneca High School's JJ Scarpello carries the football in the game
against the Moorestown Quakers. The Seneca girls soccer team won its second-ever South
Jersey Group 3 title. Seneca High Schools Drew Gallagher, front left, and Eric Pierre, Carley
Samuel, back left, Cole Zinc and Emily Briscoe help to load the toys collected during the
schools annual toy drive. Seneca High School's Moenasha Kinlaw slams the volleyball in a
game against Cherokee High School. Tabernacles Adam Cunard asks the LRHSD board to
reconsider its policy on not allowing homeschool students to participate in extracurricular
activities.

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DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017 THE SHAMONG SUN 3

Municipal taxes rise


MUNICIPAL
Continued from page 1
annual municipal taxes. In
total,Township
Administrator
Susan Onorato said the average
Shamong homeowner would pay
about $250 more in property taxes
this year, when considering municipal and school tax increases.
The K-8 school districts budget
included a $120.95 average increase, while the Lenape Regional
High School Districts budget included a $62.94 average increase.
While the committee was not
thrilled about the increase, members were happy to keep it to
about half of last years $510 increase.
The township did provide some
good news at the meeting, notifying residents it had received a
$220,000 grant from the state Department of Transportation to repair Oak Shade Road and a
$150,000 Burlington County Mu-

nicipal Park Grant, which the


committee plans to put toward
the repaving of the tennis courts
at Dingletown and also the tennis
and basketball courts at Stony
Creek.
The increase from the K-8 district was in large part due to the
unauthorized early retirement
plan from more than a decade
ago, according to Business Administrator/Board
Secretary
Marie Goodwin. This issue surfaced about a year ago when the
state Division of Pensions and
Benefits, which oversees all pensions and benefits for public employees, argued that Shamongs
early retirement benefits program was never properly approved by the state, and therefore
the district now owes the state
money. Without this penalty, the
tax rate increase would have been
less than 1 percent for this year,
officials said.
The K-8 budget continues all
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WINTER
Continued from page 3
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Winter storm Jonas was a


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was responsible for 60 deaths nationwide.
At least 14 states received more
than a foot of snow. It was the single biggest snowstorm on record
for at least six locations in four
states New Jersey, New York,
Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Shamong recorded about two
feet of snowfall.
Luckily, John Lyons, the
Pinelands Community Emergency Response Team management leader, put together an impromptu emergency operations
center with various radio communications to keep in touch

with the county, public works, the


fire company and neighboring
town Tabernacle for the entire
weekend.
As far as Shamong, there were
no power outages or damage reported.
Lyons also started the Shamong Township Office of Emergency Management Facebook
page in January, just in time for
the storm.
There were more than 300 people following the page in the first
few days. The page reached more
than 2,700 people through the
posts put out during the storm.
One thing Lyons plans to push
to residents is the Swift 911 Alert
System that went live in mid-January. The system replaced Code
Red and is used by Burlington
County and towns throughout the
county to create voice calls,
emails and text messages for
emergency notifications.
All residents who havent already registered with Swift 911
please see FIRES, page 6

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THE SHAMONG SUN DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017

in our opinion

Lets resolve to give back in 2017


For the New Year, we could all give some of our time to lend a helping hand
ost of us are lucky enough to
spend the holidays with our
loved ones. Most of us are
lucky enough to be able to give and receive presents, to put a home-cooked
meal on the table and to sit back, relax
and enjoy whats important in life.
There are many, though, living right
here in our state who are not as lucky
as we are. And these are the people
who need our help the most.
So as we are about to put 2016 behind
us and enter a New Year, lets all resolve to give back more in 2017.
We like to think of ourselves as giving people, but compared to the rest
of the country, thats just not the
case.

Share your thoughts


Do you volunteer, or do you plan to
volunteer in the New Year? Share your
thoughts through a letter to the editor.

A study released recently by the Corporation for National and Community


Service and the National Conference
on Citizenship found that 21.84 percent
of New Jersey residents volunteered
their time over the last three years.
That ranked us near the bottom,
46th, in the nation. Utah topped the list
at 43.23 percent.
The study found that 1.58 million
residents volunteered a total of more
than 215.7 million hours of service last
year. The stats counted only non-paid

work as volunteering.
The good news is it doesnt take
much to change this trend. Volunteering doesnt have to take up all of ones
free time, and it doesnt have to include
big monetary donations.
Volunteering can be as simple as
pitching in at a soup kitchen, coaching
a Little League team or collecting trash
at a public park. Doing a little can go a
long way. What may seem as not much
to most of us can have a huge impact
to someone else.
So while youre compiling your list
of To Dos for 2017, add giving back to
the community by volunteering. Youll
be surprised at the impact you can
have.

Fires burn acres in Wharton State Forest


are encouraged to follow the instructions
listed on the township webpage regarding
how to register for Shamong alerts. Those
without Internet access will be able to sign
up via telephone by calling the township
office at (609) 268-2377.

Fire Department and the State Park Police,


worked to contain the fire. The fire was
under control by Nov. 23.
There were no injuries, and no structures or roadways affected by the fire.
The Pine Barrens is specifically susceptible to fast-growing forest fires because of
vegetation growing underneath the pine
trees. The Pinelands contain shrubs that
can catch fire and spread the blaze faster
than it typically grows in most areas.

Forest fires affect Wharton State Forest

Shamong Township general happenings

Wildfire season kicked off early this


year in the Pine Barrens when a blaze
broke out in Wharton State Forest on April
17.
According to the New Jersey Forest Fire
Service, the Phillips Bridge wildfire consumed 113 acres by nightfall.
Firefighters spent the day trying to control the blaze as helicopters took water
from Atsion Lake to douse the flames.
On Nov. 22, a fire at Wharton State Forest burned more than 200 acres on the
southwest side of Route 206. The State Forest Fire Service, along with the Waterford

At the first township committee meeting of the year, the group experienced a
changing of the guard.
Timothy Gimbel was appointed by his
fellow committee members as the townships new mayor, taking over for Kenneth
Long. Michael Di Croce was also nominated by the committee to become the new
deputy mayor.
Sean Gray and Michael Cooney were
then sworn in as committee members for a
three-year term ending on Dec. 31, 2018.
Gray and Cooney will team with Committeeman Martin Mozitis to round out the

FIRES
Continued from page 4

new group.
The township put into action a 10-year
plan that prioritizes the roadway repairs
and resurfacing needed while not breaking
the bank and placing unrealistic tax burdens on Shamong residents.
Beginning around July 5, crews were
out repaving and doing cement work on
many of the townships roads including
Silver Lake Drive, Princeton Drive, Concord Drive, Lamplighter Drive, Cobblestone Lane and Candle Court. Despite already planning to repair more roads than
last year, the township also has a running
list of other roads that could use immediate maintenance.
The road program was amended to include repairs of damaged stormwater inlets.
The committee expects that this 10 Year
Roadway Repair and Resurfacing Plan will
help set the township on the right path.
At the Pine Barrens Festival, an individual or group from each town is identified for outstanding volunteer service and
please see PINE, page 7

2 Executive Campus, Suite 400


Cherry Hill, NJ 08002
856-427-0933
Richard Donnelly
CEO Of NEwSpApER mEDIA GROup

Tim Ronaldson

Arlene Reyes

ExECuTIVE EDITOR

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR

mANAGING EDITOR

Kristen Dowd
Mike Monostra
ShAmONG EDITOR Brigit Bauma
CIRCulATION DIRECTOR Pearl Harta

SENIOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR

The Sun is published weekly by


Newspaper Media Group, 2 Executive
Campus, Suite 400, Cherry Hill, NJ
08002. It is mailed weekly to select
addresses in the 08088 ZIP code. If you
are not on the mailing list, six-month
subscriptions are available for $39.99.
PDFs of the publication are online, free
of charge. For information, please call
856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@shamongsun.com.
For advertising information, call 856427-0933 or email advertising@shamongsun.com.
The Sun welcomes suggestions and
comments from readers including any
information about errors that may call
for a correction to be printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers.
Brief and to the point is best, so we look
for letters that are 300 words or fewer.
Include your name, address and phone
number. We do not print anonymous
letters. Send letters to news@shamongsun.com, via fax at 856-427-0934, or
via the mail. You can drop them off at
our office, too.
The Shamong Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium
including electronically.

DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017 THE SHAMONG SUN 7

Pine Barrens Fest returns


PINE
Continued from page 6
presented with the Pine Barrens
Festival Service Award. This year
in Shamong, Kim Albertson and
Marni Mitchell were chosen for
the award.
Township committee had a
contested election with incumbents and Republicans Mayor
Timothy L. Gimbel and Deputy
Mayor Michael DiCroce running
for the two open seats against the
two write-in Democratic candidates Robert Rinaldi and Jeannette Amodeo. The two incumbents won with DiCroce receiving
35.26 percent of the votes, and
Gimbel receiving 35.21 percent.
Rinaldi and Amodeo received
14.31 percent and 15.15 percent of
the votes, respectively.

School district welcomes new


board secretary/administrator
On April 13, the Shamong
Township Schools Board Admin-

istrator/Board Secretary, Marie


Goodwin, accepted a board secretary position with Medford Township Public Schools.
Goodwin was thoroughly enjoying her time in Shamong and
had nothing but great things to
say about the district, but acknowledged the opportunity she
was presented with as a perfect fit
for her at this point in her accomplished career.
Goodwin would assume her
new position on June 13.
After job postings and interviews, Laura Archer was unanimously approved for the position
of business administrator/ board
secretary for STS. She started
July 1.
Working in schools since 1999,
Archer held various positions in
schools such as accounts payable
manager, health benefits manager, accountant, controller and
eventually assistant business administrator.
Archer comes from the
please see MCAVEETY, page 9

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CALENDAR
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Ages 6 to 12. 3 p.m. at the
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DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017 THE SHAMONG SUN 9

McAveety wins NJEA essay contest


MCAVEETY
Continued from page 7
Hopewell Valley Regional School
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secretary
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STS looks into bond referendum


Shamong Township Schools
announced over the summer it
was going out for a bond referendum.
Archer said now is the best
time to go out for bond, as the
state will pay up to 40 percent of
allowable costs associated with
improvements for buildings and
grounds; interest rates are historically low, and there are indications that interest rates may increase moving forward; a large
chunk of the schools debt will be
paid off by May 2018; and construction costs are projected to increase.
The debt paid off by May 2018
would reduce the overall K-8
school taxes for residents starting
in 2019.
The bond referendum projects
are estimated to cost $5.39 million. If the bond referendum is
passed, the average Shamong
homeowner, with a home valued
at $308,080, would pay an additional $156.47 per year in K-8
school taxes.
The numbers approved are
based on a 15-year bond at a 3.2
percent target interest rate.
The projects include classroom, gym and cafetorium airconditioning for Indian Mills Memorial School; telephone, messaging, clock, PA and mass notification system upgrades for both
schools; generator installation
and related standby power work
for both schools; parking lot, walk
and curb restoration at IMMS;
well pit upgrades for IMMS; upgrades and replacements of the
electrical mains on the roof at Indian Mills School; and ATC upgrades to digital controls at both
schools.

Archer said $4.3 million of the


projects are eligible for state aid;
projected state aid would be $1.7
million.
The vote on the bond referendum will take place at the Indian
Mills Memorial School on March
14.
The new district website that
launched Dec. 13 features a section of additional information on
the bond referendum. How to register to vote, all PowerPoints, frequently asked questions and
more on the bond referendum can
be found by visiting Shamongschools.org.

Shamong Township Schools


general happenings
Indian Mills Elementary student Jonathan McAveety won the
statewide New Jersey Education
Association essay contest to induct a New Jersey resident into
the New Jersey Hall of Fame.
McAveetys essay detailing why
Dr. James Still should be inducted
into the New Jersey Hall of Fame
was selected from all of the essays sent in statewide.
Still was born in Shamong to a
mother who was an escaped slave
and a father who was a former
slave who had purchased his freedom.
Still taught himself medicine
by reading books and learning
from elders and Native Americans in the area.
He went on to put his skills to
use and became known as the
black doctor of the pines and
one of the wealthiest men in
Burlington County.
Due to McAveetys win, the district got a visit from the New Jersey Hall of Fame Mobile Museum.
Indian Mills Memorial School
held its annual winter sports banquet in February. This years banquet was a special celebration because both the boys and girls basketball teams won the Eastern
Burlington County Basketball
League Championships. The girls
team finished with an undefeated
record. The cheerleading team
also made headlines as it competed in its members first competition and finished second out of 31
schools. This is the first time the
cheer team has competed since

2001.
Superintendent Christine
Vespe announced the school district calendar for 2016-2017 would
be completely in line with the
Lenape Regional High School District calendar for the first time
ever upon ratification from the
STEA.
The board of education approved three-year contracts with
the Shamong Township Education Association and the Shamong Township Administrators
Association.
For the new contract, there is a
3.25 percent increase to the
money paid toward staff, allowing
for raises for each step in the
guide. There were health insurance changes as well, increasing
co-pays from $10 to $15, but the
board offered to pay for long-term
disability insurance for full-time
employees.
In the salary guide, a teacher
entering the district with a bachelor's degree makes just more than
$50,000. On the higher end of the
bachelor's scale, which includes
multiple years of experience, a
teacher can make about $84,500. A
teacher toward the top end of the
master's degree scale would make
about $88,500.
The STAA contract is similar
to the STEA contract, as it received the changes made to
health benefits, including the
long-term disability for full-time
employees. The only difference is
the STAA has a 2.75 percent increase over the next three years.
The contracts will run through
June 30, 2019.
Vespe was named the president of the Burlington County
Association of School Administrators for 2016-2017.
The BOE will see Jeffrey S.
Warner and Jeffrey Siedlecki filling the two open seats on the
board, as they both ran uncontested in the November election.
Eighth grader Shane Dunn
came in first place, not only at the
South Jersey Meet of Champions,
but for every race he participated
in this season. It was also the first
time at Indian Mills Memorial
School a student came in first
place at the Meet of Champions.
please see JROTC, page 11

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DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017 THE SHAMONG SUN 11

JROTC program earns recognition Be social.


JROTC
Continued from page 9

LRHSD upholds policy barring


homeschool students from
extracurricular activities
In April of 2015, Tabernacle
resident Adam Cunard and his
family requested the district to
allow him to try out for the
Seneca High School football team,
despite a policy that makes him
ineligible since he does not attend
a district school. Cunard and his
family had reached out to the district for several months in an effort to get the policy changed not
only for himself, but other homeschooled children, and when they
heard nothing, they turned to
friends, the community and the
media to get the word out to come
to the October LRHSD BOE meeting.
Cunard and his mother Marni
gave a multitude of reasons they
believe homeschool students
should be allowed to play for the
local school district, including
paying taxes and social benefits.
Marni said she could provide references of character and equivalent education, and how other
surrounding school districts
allow homeschool students to
play.
Despite their request and
strong showing at the meeting,
the district stood behind its policy, saying it is not meant to be discriminatory, but ensure equality
for its students.
LRHSD Board Policy No. 2630
states, Students who are educated elsewhere than at school are
not eligible to participate in
LRHSD curricular (e.g. field

trips), extra-curricular (e.g. clubs,


band) or athletic programs or activities.
The Cundards came to the November BOE meeting to once
again plead their case.
Undeterred, board member
Joseph Borucki of Evesham motioned for a vote to not change the
policy. He said this is not an educational issue, but an extracurricular one, as extracurricular participation is not a right, but a
privilege for LRHSD students. He
said the policy is designed specifically for students to ensure a level
playing field.
The board unanimously voted
in favor of upholding the policy.

Seneca High Schools JROTC


program earns recognition
Through its curriculum and
leadership training, the Junior
Reserve Officer Training Corps
program prepares students for a

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three- or four-year ROTC scholarship at more than 1,000 colleges


and universities.
Fortunately for Seneca High
School students, their school is
the only one in the Lenape regional district that offers the Air
Force program.
Before participating in the
JROTC Physical Fitness program, all cadets are required to
complete the AFJROTC Physical
Fitness Program Cadet Participation Consent Form and health
screening questionnaire.
All cadets are required and expected to wear the uniform, meet
grooming standards and participate in the scheduled PT activities each week. This is all in addition to the prerequisite aviation
science, leadership education,
and health and wellness classes.
The goal of the JROTC program is to develop citizens of
character dedicated to serving
their nation and community.
please see SENECA, page 12

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12 THE SHAMONG SUN DEC. 28, 2016JAN. 3, 2017

Seneca athletics achieve milestones in 2016


SENECA
Continued from page 11
It was confirmed that Seneca
High Schools chapter is doing a
remarkable job of just that. Because of this, Senecas JROTC
Unit NJ-20101 earned an overall
unit assessment score of exceeds standards, the highest rating attainable during its rated
unit evaluation on March 14.
Program leaders Maj. (Ret.)
Sean P. Hoggs and Master Sgt.
(Ret.) John Brooks were recognized for creating a dynamic and
supportive learning environment
coupled with an excellent community outreach.

LRHSD general happenings


Up for re-election for the
Lenape Regional High School District Board of Education were
Medford Lakes representative
Steve Lee, Mt. Laurel representative John Jeffers and Shamong
representative Ted Shinske.
All three members ran unopposed and won their respective
elections.
During its annual reorganization meeting, the board also nominated and approved the appointment of Southampton representative Linda Eckenhoff to the position of board president. Eckenhoff previously served as vice
president for the past two years
and will take over for Medford
representative David Stow, who
held the position for 2014 and
2015.
The board then nominated and
approved the appointment of Mt.
Laurel representative Paula Lee
to vice president.

At the January LRHSD BOE


meeting, it was announced
Niche.com named LRHSD as No.
9 in the nation with the best administration for 2016. Niche.com
provides K-12 and college rankings based on statistics, student
and parent reviews, expert insights, state test scores, college
readiness, graduation rates, SAT
and ACT scores and the quality of
administration and teachers.
Students in the Lenape Regional High School District now
are able to use several 3-D printers and other technologically advanced systems, in a district-wide
Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math program, thanks in
part to a generous grant from
BAE Systems, Inc, located in Mt.
Laurel.
A $7,500 grant from BAE Systems in 2015 provided the necessary funds for the printers, which
students in all four schools in the
LRHSD Lenape, Shawnee,
Cherokee and Seneca are using
as part of Project Lead The Way.
BAE Systems donated another
$7,500 to the district for the program again this year.
The Pathway to Engineering
program is a highly competitive
program designed to attract and
retain students interested in pursuing a STEM-related post-secondary education and, ultimately,
career. The Pathway to Engineering program is a four-year sequence of courses that allows students to gain STEM knowledge
and learn how to solve problems.
The first year is an introduction
to engineering design, the third
year is principles of engineering,
and the fourth year is engineering design and development.
Seneca High School was in its
second full year of the program.
PLTW, a non-profit organization, is the leading provider of
STEM education curriculum programs in schools across the United States. PLTW works to prepare
students for the global economy,
one increasingly focused on highgrowth and technology-driven occupations.
In March, the ShawneeSeneca Iron Devils won the prestigious FIRST Robotics Competition Chairmans Award for the

second year in a row. The


Shawnee, Lenape and Seneca
high schools DECA chapters won
their state and regional competitions.
Seneca High Schools Gabriella Magasic received the student
volunteer service award for her
school at the May LRHSD BOE
meeting. Spreading the idea of
volunteering throughout the community was a goal in the work of
Magasic, who volunteered at the
Animal Welfare Association in
Voorhees in addition to work
shes done at Virtua Hospital, National Honor Society and preparing food for the homeless.
At the beginning of the 20152016 school year, the Lenape Regional High School District implemented what Superintendent
Carol Birnbohm described as one
of the biggest changes the district
had ever seen outside of new construction a new bell schedule.
The former 42-minute-long
class periods grew to 57 minutes,
days were broken into six periods, and lunch was drastically redesigned to one common community lunch and learn period
in the middle of the day.
Students now only attend each
of their classes three times within a four-day rotation, meeting
with different classes at different
times depending on what day it is
within the rotation.
According to Birnbohm, the
proposed benefits of the schedule
have been playing out very close
to the districts projections, with
increases and improvements to
instructional time, staff collaboration and overall efficiency.
Birnbohm said the district has
observed a reduction in lateness
and an improvement to overall
daily attendance.
Birnbohm said overall disruptions to classes have also decreased a trend she said
stemmed from the longer period
for community lunch and learn
in the middle of the school day.
The New Jersey Association
of School Business Officials honored LRHSD business administrator/board secretary James
Jim Hager with a 2016 Distinguished Service Award.
Director of programs and

planning Matthew Webb said the


2015-2016 school year saw students score an average score of
1589 on their SAT exams. The districts average score was greater
than the state average by 81
points and greater than the average of the entire United States by
99 points.
Webb said the 1589 score was
also noteworthy as data released
by the College Board shows students who earn a score of 1550 or
more on their SAT exams have a
65 percent likelihood of getting a
B- or better GPA during their
freshman year of college.
Another area of note Webb
pointed out was that 85 percent of
district students who took AP
exams last school year earned
passing scores of three, four or
five, and 95.5 percent of students
in the district graduated last year.
Principal Tony Cattani of
Lenape High School said more
than $60,000 was donated just last
year by students, staff and the
community in a variety of ways.
Seneca High School mathematics teacher and department
coordinator Amy Mosser earned
the nationally recognized Presidential Award for Excellence in
Mathematics and Science Teaching, given to outstanding K-12 science and mathematics teachers
from across the country, and
$10,000.

Seneca High School athletics


achieve great things this year
Seneca High School created
its first dance team in late 2015,
and it had its first performance at
the Student Council Charity Dinner.
Last winter, pole vault was a
completely foreign concept to
Seneca High School junior Brittney Raffo. She had never competed in pole vault before, instead focusing on gymnastics for most of
her childhood.
Raffo ended up jumping her
way up the state performance
lists and into the record books.
Entering the 2015-16 indoor season, Raffo set a new personal best
and broke the Seneca school
record at the NJSIAA Group III
Relay Championships on Jan. 17

with an 11-foot vault. Raffo


reached 11 feet again at the
Morris County Coaches Invitational in Staten Island, N.Y., on
Jan. 27.
Raffo entered the NJSIAA
South Jersey Group III meet with
a legitimate chance of breaking
the meet record of 10-feet, 7-inches set in 2012 by Moorestowns
Alexandra Elder. Raffo eclipsed
the mark on her final attempt of
the meet with a 10-foot, 8-inch
vault.
Raffo had a 10-foot vault two
weeks later in the NJSIAA Group
III Championships, qualifying
her for the Meet of Champions
less than a year after she picked
up the sport. At the Meet of
Champions, Raffo tied her personal best with an 11-foot vault.
Her attempt was good enough to
finish in fourth place.
For the indoor season, Raffo
won the girls pole vault at the
NJSIAA Meet of Champions on
June 8, making a 12-foot high
vault on her first attempt to
clinch the win. The victory was a
high point in a season where
Raffo established herself as one
of the best vaulters in the state.
Earlier this year, the Seneca
High School girls soccer team
made it a their goal to win the sectional finals, after a heartbreaking loss last season against Toms
River South, 3-2.
The team achieved that goal,
winning its second-ever South
Jersey Group 3 title when the
girls came out on top over Highland Regional High School. Highland and Seneca game went to
penalty kicks with an outcome of
4-2.
Seneca senior Mackenzie
Hoffman broke the soccer season
goals record in the game against
Bishop Eustace Prep School and
Hoffman broke the record for career goals against Winslow Township. Hoffman had 19 goals for the
season and 30 career goals.
Senecas girls volleyball team
broke the record for the most
wins in a season, 20, coming off a
record of 19 last year. It also defeated the girls teams for Cherokee High School and the Eastern
High School for the first time in
Seneca High School history.

THE SHAMONG SUN


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