Summit|News|
Letter to the Editor: Our Children / Our Schools Against Vouchers
In opposition to the “Opportunity Scholarship Act”.

Born and raised in Union County, N.J. and editor of Summit Patch. Camilo H. Smith has over 10 years of journalism experience in print and online publications. He spent seven years as a copy editor and contributing writer at the Los Angeles Times. His work has appeared in Paid Content, MSNBC.com, The Newark Star-Ledger, latimes.com, Reader's Digest, Latina magazine and various music publications. He's a graduate of Brandeis University and most recently Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, where he studied digital journalism.
Camilo was a freelancer for New Brunswick Patch, where he covered local businesses.
Before working full-time for Patch, he was a student at Columbia Graduate School of Journalism where he concentrated in digital journalism and focused on hyper-local reporting and immigration issues. He began his journalism career as a reporting intern at the Newark Star-Ledger. He followed that experience by working as a copy editor at Long Island Newsday and ventured west to work at the Los Angeles Times as a copy editor for several years.
His favorite things about N.J. in no particular order: Wildwoods, the mall and South Mountain Reservation.
<br><b>Beliefs</b>
<i>At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible and human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal certain key beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.</i>
<i><br>This disclosure is not a license for our editors to inject these beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that our beliefs are on the record will force us to be ever mindful to write, report, and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you think you we failed in this mission, let us know.</i>
<b>Politics</b>
I don't hold any particular party affiliation. I find truths on both the conservative and liberal sides of the coin.
<b>Religion</b>
<i>How religious would you say you are? Casual, observant, devout, non-religious?</i>
I'm casually spiritual. I was raised Catholic and attended a Catholic high school in Newark, N.J. I earned my bachelor's degree from a predominantly Jewish university.
<b>Local Hot Button Issues</b>
<i>What do you think are the two or three most important issues facing the community?</i>
County taxes, parking and downtown businesses.
<i>•	Where do you stand on each of these issues?</i>
I work to report fairly on these issues and continue to look and read what the community and city officials have to say about them.
In opposition to the “Opportunity Scholarship Act”.

A weekly column that looks at the events you need to know about in Summit.
City youth show they're the team to beat at a holiday tournament.
The yearly Summit High School alumni event celebrates its 10th anniversary with game time at noon, today.
Sharon Wells leads women's support groups at Fountain Baptist Church on Thursday evenings from 7:30pm-9:00pm, on 116 Glenside Avenue.
A turkey sandwich is just so lame. Try these ideas from around the state.
Performer Sarah Mason,13, makes her Macy's Thanksgiving Parade debut.
Here's a small list for anyone with a Turkey emergency in and near Summit, or for those in need of a last-minute pie pick-up.
Chef Fabian Quiros, Executive Chef at the Salt Creek Grille, offers a way to use leftover turkey and cranberry sauce.
Summit was able to launch three new programs using grant funding this year.
Summit students learned about power of community, and the impact people have through giving.
Resident Ann Romanovsky wrote the following email to Patch regarding tonight's blackout:
Student create metaphorical quilt interwoven with historical ancestry, artists, music, food and heirlooms.
New Jersey ranks # 1 in median property taxes of $6,384 and Summit's average of $15,500 is more than twice this amount.
The second installment of the "Planning for the Future" series drew another crowd of about 50 people who brainstormed ways to improve the local school system.
Common Council members and city officials workshopped some ideas for the future of Summit.
A look inside the world of those who help the community.
Over 250 frozen turkeys were collected for Thanksgiving charity.