Lawrenceville|News|
Miss Amy to Perform in Weeden Park on Saturday
Grammy-award winning artist Miss Amy will perform during Lawrenceville Main Street's inaugural Kids in the Park concert on Saturday, June 16.

Mike is the editor of Lawrenceville Patch. A lifelong New Jersey resident who was raised in Metuchen (Middlesex County), he is a graduate of St. Joseph High School in Metuchen. Mike came to Lawrence Township in 1991 to attend what was then known as Rider College. He spent the first semester of his junior year attending Queen Mary and Westfield College in London, England, as part of Rider's Study Abroad program. Although he graduated with a bachelor's degree in communications in 1995 (by which time Rider had become a university), Mike chose to remain in Lawrence Township, having built strong ties to the community.
Mike spent 15 years working as a reporter and photographer for The Times of Trenton, specializing in covering the crime and breaking news beats. During his career with The Times, Mike was honored for his writing and photography with seven awards from the New Jersey Press Association, Garden State Journalists, the New Jersey Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and the North Jersey Press Club. Mike has also worked as a freelance reporter and photographer for several other publications, and his work has appeared in The Trentonian, The Virginia-Pilot, The Tampa Tribune, Business Travel News and Firehouse Magazine.
In 1992, still in his freshman year at Rider, Mike joined Lawrence Road Fire Co., one of the three volunteer fire companies that protect Lawrence Township. Mike has been an active firefighter ever since and has held several fire-line and administrative positions over the years. Mike also served for a year as an emergency medical technician with Lawrence Township First Aid Squad, back when the township's ambulances were staffed by volunteers. Unable to commit the time necessary to remain active in both volunteer organizations, Mike gave up riding the ambulance.
Mike is a diehard New York Giants fan whose interests include photography, local history, and most British television shows. Mike and his wife Ann bought their home in Lawrence Township in 2003. Their son James was born in 2007.
<strong>Beliefs</strong>
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 because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.
<strong>Politics</strong>
How would you describe your political beliefs?
I understand the need for politics and political debate, and for political news coverage. But, truth be told, politics in not my favorite subject. I do vote, but I have no allegiance to any particular party.
<strong>Religion</strong>
How religious would you consider yourself? (casual, observant, devout, non religious)
I was raised Roman Catholic, but I have not been a regular church-goer in a very long time. I guess I would described myself as non-religious.
<strong>Local Hot-Button Issues</strong>
What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?
Property taxes are obviously one of the biggest issues facing Lawrence Township and the entire state of New Jersey. The amount in taxes that New Jersey residents pay is amazing in comparison to what those in other states pay. With the new 2 percent tax cap, Lawrence Township is going to have some difficult decisions to make in terms of what services are going to be cut. And everyone is going to have a different opinion of what should or can be cut.
Grammy-award winning artist Miss Amy will perform during Lawrenceville Main Street's inaugural Kids in the Park concert on Saturday, June 16.

Anyone wishing to have their tattered or worn flags disposed of in a dignified manner by the American Legion can placed them in a new drop-off box installed outside the Lawrenceville Fire Co. firehouse.
Lawrenceville Main Street's annual summer concert series will run from June 14 through Aug. 16. Run To Sandy, an indie/pop/rock band from Yardley, Pa., will perform this Thursday.
Students in Rider University's Multimedia Production III: Advanced Interactive Design class spent the past semester consulting with the NJDEP and providing website redesign recommendations.
“That sickening thump that you know is somebody’s life just ended” ~ NJ Transit Enginner Tom Haas says in one of two new powerful, no-nonsense public service announcements spotlighting the deadly consequences of trespassing along railroad tracks.
A superior court judge has reportedly rejected the Lawrence Township Zoning Board's June 2011 decision to deny a variance application from an inpatient drug and alcohol detoxification center that wanted to open on Federal City Road.
Here are highlights from some recent Lawrence Little League baseball games. If you have any photos from the games you'd like to share, upload them here!
"Wilma Rudolph," a poem by Slackwood Elementary School third-grader Jamie Slutzky, will appear later this month as part of a collection of poetry, prose and artwork published by the Arts Council of Princeton.
As part of a service trip in May, Rider students, graduates and faculty provided assistance in two villages outside of San Jose.
The concert on Sept. 29 will benefit The Foundation of Morris Hall/St. Lawrence Inc. and be used to provide charity care to the patients and residents at Morris Hall and St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center.
Here's a roundup of notable police activity in Lawrence Township from May 31 through June 6.
A certified technician will give your child’s car seat and booster seat a free inspection and examine for correct use and installation during the event to be held at St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on June 9.
Lawrence Township police said the robber showed a note in which he threatened he had a gun, however no weapon was ever seen. The crime took place minutes before 9 a.m. Thursday.
After easy victory, focus shifts to Kyrillos and challenge to unseat Menendez in U.S. Senate.
The suspect, a 42-year-old resident of Trenton, was allegedly found with a stolen bicycle, bolt cutters and drug paraphernalia after he was stopped by two Lawrence Township police officers who saw him "acting in a suspicious manner," police said.
Lawrence Township police said three Rider University students escaped with only minor injuries when the car in which they was riding struck a light pole and flipped onto its side on campus Wednesday.
Police said a teenage driver was trying to removing something from his shoe when his vehicle hit a utility pole. The northbound lanes of Business Route 1 were expected to be closed for several hours, possibly into Wednesday morning's commute.
Three men - two of whom were already locked up in a Pennsylvania jail after they were allegedly caught riding in a stolen car - were charged on Tuesday with burglary and theft in connection with a residential break-in that happened in Lawrence on May 24.
Thus far, $10,800 out of the targeted amount of $20,000 has been raised to pay for the concert and fireworks display that will take place on July 4th. The event, a Lawrence Township tradition, is again being funded this year entirely by donations.
Several Lawrence Hamnett Soccer Association teams took part in the West Windsor-Plainsboro Soccer Association’s Sunburst Tournament that was held this past weekend.