Moorestown|News|
Moorestown Teachers Helping Sandy Victims
Several Moorestown teachers have decided to take advantage of their day off Thursday by helping those hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy—and you can too.

Rob has been a reporter for roughly six years. In 2003, he graduated from Lycoming College in Williamsport, Pa., with a bachelor's degree in communication with a focus in media writing. After college, he began working at The Danville News, a small daily newspaper in Central Pennsylvania. Later, he moved up to their larger sister paper, The Daily Item. Most recently, Rob worked as the political reporter at the Gloucester County Times. He just moved to New Jersey last fall and is still getting used to the quirks of the Garden State: full-service gas stations and being able to buy beer and wine in the same store. He's new to Moorestown and is eager to make Patch's presence here even stronger.
Our Beliefs
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 them to inject their beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that their beliefs are on the record will cause them 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.
Politics
How would you describe your political beliefs?
I suppose the easiest way to answer this question is I tend to be socially liberal and fiscally centrist. My view on politics - from watching it, reading it and covering it - is there seems to be a level of detachment between the people who govern and the governed. Not as much at the local level, but at the state and certainly the federal levels. That's why you see so many polls reflecting the populace's growing lack of faith in their representatives.
Religion
How religious would you consider yourself?
I was raised Roman Catholic, went to church every Sunday and attended Catholic school for seven years. But I now find that, while I appreciate the role organized religion plays in many people's lives, it's not for me. That's not to say I'm not religious. I believe in … something. But I see merit in every faith.
Local Hot-Button Issues
What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?
The liquor referendum. Everyone's talking about it and the debate seems to revolve around two ideas cast in opposition: The town's "character" vs. dollars and cents. What wins out?
Teacher contracts. It's only a couple weeks till school starts and still no resolution. When will it come? And what will the long-term implications of the new contract be?
The new municipal building/library/police department.
Several Moorestown teachers have decided to take advantage of their day off Thursday by helping those hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy—and you can too.

Find out everything you need to know before you vote today, including where and when to vote.
Also, Mount Laurel Police investigate the theft of a chainsaw on Halloween night (nothing scary about that).
The mayor and manager praise township workers for their response to Hurricane Sandy, council awards the fifth liquor license to East Gate for $1 million+, and more.
A resident asks for voters to support the Democratic council candidates and expresses her esteem for open space advocate, and candidate, Mark Hines.
Republican council candidate Pete Palko pitches his team and their plan for Moorestown ahead of the election.
Sitting Republican councilmembers Stacey Jordan and Chris Chiacchio throw their support behind GOP candidates Phil Garwood, Victoria Napolitano and Pete Palko.
Also, Mount Laurel Police make a slew of drug and DWI arrests.
Burris Construction CEO William Burris wrote a check for $5,000 so organizers could finish the stalled restoration project.
Members of Moorestown council went with Sambe Construction—despite the contractor's involvement in a messy project elsewhere in SJ. Construction is slated to begin soon.
Besides a Main Street manager, how else could the township use revenue from the sale of liquor licenses? Reinvest it, or save it for a rainy day? Find out what the Democratic candidates think.
A team of township workers have spent the last few days helping handicapped residents affected by Hurricane Sandy, and are collecting donations for those hit hardest by the storm.
Parents are encouraged to drive their children to school, as some bus routes are still blocked and wires still down around town.
The township will begin collecting brush this week and will stick to its second leaf collection schedule, beginning Nov. 26. Trash pickup also starts up again this week.
Information provided by Mount Laurel Police. An arrest does not indicate a conviction.
How would a Main Street manager help the Moorestown business community? And how would the township pay for it? Find out more about the Democratic candidates' plan here.
Moorestown resident Monique Begg writes that Sandy is further evidence of climate change—and proof that we need to change the way we treat the environment.
Should Moorestown have a permanent downtown police presence? What do the Democratic candidates think of the current town hall project plans? Find out here.
If the storm gets bad enough, emergency responders may be slowed down—so stay off the roads and out of harm's way if you can.
A Democratic supporter suggests the Republican council candidates turned down the Democrats' debate offer because they don't have much of a record to stand on.