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The following transactions of $10,000 or more were filed with Cumberland County in
the month of August 2013 (transactions may have occurred in an earlier month).
Names listed may, in some cases, be those of buyers or sellers representatives.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BRIDGETON
157 Atlantic St., Barnard LLC to Matthew
Hemighaus on 8/6/13 for $18,000
28-30 Harrison St., Carl C Brown to RCT
Realty LLC on 8/6/13 for $50,000
29 Eagle St., Lakewood Realty Holdings
Beis LLC to Tri-County Community Action
Agency Inc. on 8/6/13 for $58,500
197 W Lincoln St., Jack Harker Robbins
to Jose Perez on 8/6/13 for $80,000
COMMERCIAL TWP
2506 Temperance St., Erik J Arnesen (by
Atty.) to Christine F Mammi on 8/5/13 for
$105,000
1736 E Main St., Sun National Bank to
City Hall Properties LLC on 8/7/13 for
$24,200
DEERFIELD TWP
549 Morton Ave. & C., Carol A Olszewski
to Frank Spatola on 8/1/13 for $200,000
61 Oakland Dr., Jean A Benskin to Linda
Bradway on 8/2/13 for $149,900
DOWNE TWP
631 Station Rd., Gonzales Baker, Sr. (by
Atty.) to Richard Bermingham on 8/2/13
for $12,000
802-806 Main St., Mary J Murphy to
Juan Rodrigue, Jr. on 8/5/13 for $85,000
122 Garrison Ave., Mary Louise Fiorillo to
Thomas Piernikoski on 8/6/13 for $20,000
HOPEWELL TWP
434 Route 540, Duane A Cruzan, Jr. to
Nicholas J Kuhar, Jr. on 8/6/13 for
$12,000
10 Dutch Neck Rd., Sec. of Housing &
Urban Development to Austin E Headrick
on 8/6/13 for $62,000
258 Sheppards Mill Rd., Paula Merle to
Elwood F Sickler, Jr. on 8/6/13 for
$75,000
MAURICE RIVER TWP
154 High St., Bayview Loan Servicing
LLC to Roger Forss on 8/6/13 for
$34,000
MILLVILLE
2011 S Second St., SLM Financial Corp.
to Heritage Hill Estates LLC on 8/1/13 for
$30,000
1020 Archer St., Mark Lynch to Wilfredo
Dehoyos on 8/1/13 for $30,000
2003 S Second St., SLM Financial Corp.
to Heritage Hill Estates LLC on 8/1/13 for
$30,000
805 N 8th St., Ackerman Investment Co.
LLC to Mildred Reyes on 8/1/13 for
$144,000
700 E Main St., Flagstar Bank (by Atty.)
to Krystal Ruiz-Mesa on 8/5/13 for
$35,283
423 Broad St., Anne Mae Jeffers to Kevin
Ragsdale on 8/5/13 for $50,000
2 E Broad St., New Jersey Motorsports
Park LLC to Rise Community
Development Inc.on 8/6/13 for $62,500
1308 E Main St., Light House Homes
Investments LLC to William B Smith on
8/6/13 for $90,000
515 N 10th St., Joann Price to James
Adams, Jr. on 8/6/13 for $115,000
SHILOH
23 West Ave., Geraldine Hummel (Ind.
Exec.) to Julio Contreras Rodriguez on
8/1/13 for $113,000
STOW CREEK TWP
366 Roadstown Rd. & C., Valerie A Ewing
to Joshua S Richie on 8/1/13 for
$158,750
UPPER DEERFIELD
121 Silver Lake Rd., Salvatore M
Cozzubbo to James J Patitucci, Jr. on
8/1/13 for $168,000
44 Centerton Rd., Lisa Dauk to Salvatore
Cozzubbo on 8/5/13 for $90,000
VINELAND
582 N 4th St., Gilbert Bermudez (by
Atty.) to Carlos Andujar, Jr. on 8/1/13 for
$50,000
2533 Allegheny Ave., Landmark
Development No. 4 LLC to Robert J
Varesio on 8/1/13 for $204,248
606 E Elmer Rd., Robert Gullo to Travis
Garton on 8/2/13 for $155,000
3806 Brookhaven Dr., Melissa B
Genereux to Human Services Housing Co
LLC on 8/2/13 for $165,000
3810 Maple Ave., Rose Andaloro to
Dennis Sabella on 8/2/13 for $235,000
1905 Edgewood Ave., Ralph J Gerard
(Atty.) to Dorothy E Guy on 8/5/13 for
$74,000
463 W Forest Grove., Diane Johnson to
Bota Investments LLC on 8/5/13 for
$105,000
2490 Venzia Ave., Stephen E Portas
(Exec.) to Christopher A Hillegass on
8/6/13 for $151,000
1318 S Main Rd., Venture Commercial
Group LLC to RKB Real Estate Holdings
LLC on 8/6/13 for $225,000
1215 Holmes Ave., Roxanne Burrell Tosto
to John Allen on 8/7/13 for $305,000
Grapevine 20-24 100213:Layout 1 9/30/13 5:58 PM Page 21
Cohen Building & U.S. Courthouse in
Camden, a private area with laptops and
Internet access for lawyers to meet with
clients. The Judge has received many hon-
ors in his career as a small town lawyer in
Vineland and in 38 years on the federal
bench. I think, if he had to note one as the
highest, he would select this room.
As with many of the paths that opened in
a life The Judge called fortunate and won-
derful, the creation of this area came as a
surprise, neither desired nor sought. (As
happened, in 1975, with the judgeship itself.)
Already relaxed during my interview, he
seemed to take leave of his residual stern-
ness altogether in the haven created in his
name.
It doesn't take a Supreme Court justice
to see inevitable ambivalence in leaving a
lifelong body of work and a significant
place in the judicial hierarchy. The Judge
acknowledged reticence, but was neither
frustrated nor regretful.
I'm like a contented cow, he comment-
ed as his mouth formed the closest resem-
blance to a broad smile I saw. I'm thrilled
to reach this day, my wife is still with me,
I'm happy.
His place in the judicial hierarchy is
reflected best in two of his appointments,
both in addition to his duties in Camden.
He was designated to serve on the District
Court of the Virgin Islands (V.I.) from 1989
until 2005. At the time he took office, the
VI court system was in its infancy and The
Judge's decisions are labeled by some as a
foundation of civil law in the territory.
During his tenure, he supervised the build-
ing of a new courthouse on St. Thomas and
reformed what he called an unconstitu-
tional jail system partly by holding four
V.I. governors in contempt.
He kept authority over the jail cases, and
at The Judge's final hearing in Augustby
video linking Camden, Washington, St.
Croix, and St. Thomashe approved a set-
tlement in the 18-year legal proceeding.
Then, court staffers in St. Croix used the
link for an unanticipated testimonial.
From 1997 until 2004, The Judge
served on the Federal Intelligence
Surveillance Court, known as FISA (FEE'-
za). Some decisions of the powerful, secret
court have recently been revealed through
leaks by former intelligence contractor
Edward Snowden, currently a fugitive liv-
ing in Russia. The Court's oversight of the
clandestine surveillance of U.S. citizens
through telephone and Internet intercepts
by the National Security Agency (N.S.A.)
has also come out in government briefin-
gs, as the Obama administration tries to
extricate the intelligence community
trapped under a mountain of criticism
from Congress and the public.
So, what is the Judge willing to talk about
and what does he think? The revelations are
indirect at best, although the thinking is
clearer. Defensiveness is non-existent
This is now, he said. I served back
then. I took an oath. He repeatedly refused
to discuss substantive details of his time on
FISA, despite my relentless efforts and
back-door strategies. He did linger occa-
sionally and look away (was there tempta-
tion there?) before measuring his words.
Speaking to the conventional wisdom
that the court approved more than 99 per-
cent of the N.S.A. requests for warrants, he
ventured that a judge, rather than rejecting
it, could send an application back for cor-
rection if it unlawfully infringed upon civil
liberties.
There had to be sufficient information
in the warrant applications to comply with
the Constitutional process or I sent them
back, he revealed. (The FISA court did not
meet as a body; applications and motions
were heard by a rotation of single judges.)
Only when I was satisfied it was in
compliance with the law would a warrant
issue, he cautiously expounded. We must
protect ourselves, but there is a balance.
I feel I was following the statute and
fulfilling my role as a judge on that court.
We were dealing with the security of our
nation and every one of us on the court rec-
ognized the importance of our workit was
very, very important, and continues to be,
he concluded.
It is impossible for a legal scholar, and
certainly for me, to categorize the most
important of The Judge's decades of opin-
ions in civil and criminal cases.
In 1978,The Judged upheld the right of
psychiatric patients at Ancora Psychiatric
Hospital in Winslow Township (as it was
then known) to refuse medication unless
the hospital could prove to an independent
psychiatrist that forced administration was
justified. A later decision compelled
staffing changes at that hospital and these
decisions became precedent in state mental
treatment facilities.
In what media reports have said were
The Judge's most famous decisions involved
criminal charges against corrupt federal
Housing and Urban Development adminis-
trators, real estate professionals, specula-
tors, and contractors who defrauded the
government of tens of millions of dollars by
selling substandard housing to low-income
owners in the early 1980s Presaging the
similar scandals of the mid-2000s, the
unqualified owners defaulted and HUD
paid off the properties with public funds.
While today some feel the responsible
parties in the recent scandals have gone
free, that time The Judge sentenced 38
defendants from the housing industry to
jail terms, some of significant length.
According to the Philadelphia Inquirer,
he was the first federal judge to rule that
randomdrug testing was legal, and the first
to sentence mob boss Nicky Scarfo to jail. He
lowered the tolls on the Ben Franklin Bridge
and stripped a heavyweight fighter of his
championship for not meeting an opponent.
He sentenced Leo Volpe, the leader of the
Restored Israel of Yahweh cult of Buena, to
jail, which unleashed a year of protests by
church members, some at his home.
And, he was likely the only judge ever to
clear roads with a macheteafter Hurricane
Hugo hit the Virgin Islands in 1989.
The Judge said he always faced Friday
sentencing dayafter a sleepless night spent
reviewing pre-sentence reports and cogitat-
ing. Finding north on the moral compass as
the fairest path to justice is clouded by
many factors in any criminal case.
I don't treat the deprivation of liberty
lightly, he said. Perhaps one is dealing
with heinous crimes, but every defendant is
entitled to have his record reviewed and
given the benefit of the doubt.
Testimonials from prosecutors, defense
attorneys, court staffers, and observers
throughout his career show that The
Judge's sense of direction was deemed
accurate and fair.
Not surprisingly, The Judge's daughter,
Alison Braem, 54, is in the law. She's a
retired lawyer, now vice president and gen-
eral counsel for Verizon Wireless.
His son, Richard Brotman, 58, makes
documentary films. While in graduate
school at Temple, he produced a touching
one on the family roots during the centen-
nial celebration in the village of
Brotmanville in nearby Pittsgrove Twp.
About he and his wife Suzanne, The
Judge said, This sounds corny, but I've
been blessed with 62 years of marital bliss.
What will he do now was the next
question.
I have 38 boxes of photos to go
through, was the answer.
As he walked me out down the broad
marble steps to Cooper Street, I asked The
Judge if he felt famous.
No, why should I? he replied with his
reproachful stare. I'm proud of my accom-
plishments, but I'm just a guy from a little
town in New Jersey.
He went back up to read a final brief for
In Re Postrema Transitus. I
Comment:
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THE JUDGE
(Continued from cover)
Grapevine 20-24 100213:Layout 1 9/30/13 5:58 PM Page 22
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Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m.
To order your classified call, 856-457-7815 or visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds
Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m. To order your classified, call 856-457-7815 or
visit www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds. See box below for additional ordering information.
Only $10 per ad, per week, up to 20 words; over 20 words,
$0.50 per word. $0.30 for boldper word/per issue, $3 for a
Border/per issue. Add a photo for $15. Mail Ad & payment or go
online to www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds.
Not responsible for typographical errors. Once an ad is placed, it cannot be cancelled or changed. The Grapevine does not in any way
imply approval or endorsement. Those interested in goods or services always use good judgment and take appropriate precautions.
Acct. No. ___________________________________Exp. Date________ 3 Digit # on back
of card__________
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The Grapevine
907 N. Main Rd., Suite 205
Vineland, NJ 08360
www.grapevinenewspaper.com
Mail Ad
Form with
Payment TO:
Classifieds
Call for more information
856-457-7815
Check if needed.
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CLASSIFIEDS
Credit Cards
Accepted:
Micro Electric LLC.
Residential repair, addi-
tions, and services.
Bonded and insured.
no job is too small.
NJ LIC #14256.
Call 609-501-7777.
Help Wanted: Conte's
Pasta Company needs an
experienced driver, load-
ing dock and retail story.
PT and FT. Apply within,
310 Wheat Rd., Vineland
08360. 856-697-3400.
Need to make extra
money? Join my AVON
team for only $10. Call for
details. 856-332-6446
Jasmine Avon ISR.
Fall Community Yard Sale:
October 5th and 6th. 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Berrymans
Branch. 1616 Pennsylvania
Ave., Vineland.
YARD SALE: Saturday,
October 5, 8 to 2. 893
Elty Avenue, Vineland.
MOVING. 35 years of
stuff. Collectibles,
CocaCola items,
Christmas, Books,
Kitchen and more.
House to share in
Vineland: Near stores,
cable TV, shared bathroom
and kitchen. $450/mo.
Prefer a Christian.
References required. Call
856-982-5890
1989 Corvette Elect. Blue
Greenwood Pkg. All power.
Must sell, moving. Runs
good. Looks great. Make a
good offer. 856-507-1168.
Cedarville, NJ: 2 story
country home for sale -
$145,000. 3 bedroom, 2
bath, appliances included.
Call 856-785-2697.
Drywall 2 Wall LLC. No job
too big or too small. We
take pride in a job well
done. 856-462-9540.
15-year experienced
women looking to care for
the elderly as a compan-
ion overnight, available
weekends. Vineland area
only great references.
201-257-7613.
Saxophone and clarinet
lessons in my home. Ages
8 and up. Specializing in
all styles. Beginner to
advanced. If interested,
call 856-238-3059.
Steelman's Drywall.
Drywall installation and
repairing nailpops, cracks,
water damage, unfinished
drywall. Big or small! Call
Joe for a free estimate at
609-381-3814.
Turk's Pressure Clean.
Powerwashing of vinyl and
aluminum siding.
Concrete, brick, roof stain
removal. Gutter cleanouts.
Over 25 years in business.
Insured. Call 856-692-7470
Smart Clean Residential
CleaningHusband and
Wife teamFREE in-home
estimates. Mention this ad
$15 off first clean
call/text (267)254-7483
smart.clean@live.com.
FT/PT CHILDCARE offered.
M-F, 7 a.m. - 4 p.m. in my
Vineland home. Five+
years experience, $25 per
week. Call 856-691-3456
(No employment offered!)
Advanced Cabinetry &
Storage Systems. Shop at
homeover 30 years expe-
rience: kitchens, vanities,
closets, garage systems.
For all your storage needs
factory direct purchase
power. Call (609) 805-6277
for an at-home consulta-
tion. Save thousands.
Electrical
Contractor
Pete Construction
Specializing in decks,
roofs and home
remodeling. State
licensed and insured.
Call for a free esti-
mate. 856-507-1456.
First United Methodist
Women of the First
United Methodist
Church at 700 Landis
Ave. Vineland, NJ are
having a huge indoor
Yard Sale, on October
5, 2013 from 8:00 am
to 2:00 pm in the
church gym. Also,
there will be home-
made baked goods on
sale Enter from 7th
street. Proceeds go to
the UMW Missions
Ministry.
Piano Lessons in my
home. Ages 4.5 and
up! Music and move-
ment birthday par-
ties. Ages 2 to 4.5
If interested, call
856-794-8977.
2.5 acres of farmland
in Rosenhayn avail. for
use. Maint. of grounds
req. in lieu of rental
fee. 856-982-0300.
Pekingese Pups.
Pedigree, nine weeks,
shots, male/female,
rare colors, small,
fluffy, sweet, loveable
little bears. Call or
text, 856-553-3158.
Krystal Clear, LLC Home
and Office Cleaners.
Exceptional Service,
Senior discounts,
Spring cleaning spe-
cials, Free Estimates.
(856) 982-3310
Help Wanted
Home
Improvement
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Farmland Avail.
For Sale
For Rent
Yard Sale
While youre away or at work, leave your
home & your pet in the capable care of
Buds Pet
Home Care, LLC
Bud Sulzman
Care For Your Pets
Check Our Your
House Daily
Take In Your Mail
Water Your Plants
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794-8896.
Cooks and servers
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email desired salary
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Call 856-696-2491.
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Grapevine 20-24 100213:Layout 1 9/30/13 5:58 PM Page 24
A
t the Chambers most recent
General Membership Luncheon,
held on Thursday, September 19 at
Greenview Inn at Eastlyn Golf Course,
guest speaker David Brogan, of the NJBIA
gave GVCC members an Update on the
Election Climate in New Jersey.
Brogan, who is First Vice President of
Economic Development and Taxation for
the New Jersey Business and Industry
Association (NJBIA), has worked for the
Association since 2005. NJBIA is the
largest employer representative associa-
tion in the nation, with over 21,000 mem-
bers, representing 1.5 million employees.
Brogan is responsible for representing the
business community on legislation and
regulations that impact corporate and
individual taxation, economic develop-
ment and the states programs that stimu-
late job creation, development, redevelop-
ment, and site remediation.
Brogan spent most of his time at the
podium discussing the Economic
Opportunity Act of 2013 (EO13). This leg-
islation represents the most significant
changes in the States incentive programs
for development and job creation in the
past 20 years.
He described it as a nine-month
ordeal to revamp tax credits and incen-
tives that combines five previously used
incentive programs into just two with
lower thresholds and added incentives for
businesses in certain areas, including
those in the eight counties in southern
New Jersey.
Brogan concluded that EO13 is an 82-
page bill that will enable New Jersey to
better compete with other states when it
comes to starting up and retaining business-
eseven if some of those businesses shift
to other areas of the state. Its better than
losing them to North Carolina, he said.
Brogan also volunteers his time as exec-
utive director of New Jersey Organization
for a Better State (NEW JOBS), the
Business PAC of New Jersey. NEW JOBS
is the states largest ideological business
PAC and is a nonpartisan organization that
promotes a pro-business climate in New
Jersey by supporting legislative candidates
who actively support economic growth,
the creation of private-sector jobs, and the
lowering of business costs.
Brogan prefaced his presentation about
EO13 with a summary of major pro-busi-
ness changes that have occurred during the
first term of the Christie Administration.
He later provided his political insight
into this years legislative and gubernatorial
elections, including specific information on
the targeted districts throughout the state
(including our first legislative district). He
also touched upon the ballot question asking
voters if the states minimumwage should
be increased from$7.25 to $8.25. Brogan
predicted that the ballot question will pass
and that Gov. Christie will be re-elected.
GVCC thanks Comcast and Inspira
Healthcare Network for sponsoring the
luncheon.
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SOUTHERN NEW JERSEYS BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS NEWSLETTER Serving Cumberland, Salem, Atlantic, Cape May and Gloucester Counties
News
&
Views
At General Membership Luncheon, speaker David Brogan discusses EO13, upcoming elections, how they mesh.
David Brogan discussed the NJBIAs efforts
to bring about pro-business reforms as well
as predictions for the November election.
Business Opportunity, Elections Outlined
MEMBERSHIP & COMMUNITY GUIDE
The GVCC is proud to announce the publication of our new Membership & Community Guide! This guide
is full of valuable information about Vineland, our chamber members and resources for reference. We pub-
lish this piece every two years, but this is the first time we partnered with The Grapevine Newspaper and
we are extremely pleased with the result. We sincerely thank every member who advertised in this directory.
Over the next two years, 6,000 copies will be distributed throughout the Vineland area. It is a one-of-a-
kind publication that citizens and visitors are always looking for and its free! If you are interested in
obtaining copies (for yourself or for placement in your business for your customers), please contact our
chamber office (856-691-7400) or The Grapevine Newspaper (856-457-7815).
OCTOBER 8TUESDAY
POWER HOUR MEET AND GREET.
The Greenview Inn at Eastlyn. 5:307
p.m. Hosted by Thomas Heist Insurance.
Members Only. Cash bar. Remember
your business cards!
OCTOBER 15TUESDAY
VINELAND BOARD OF EDUCATION
CANDIDATES FORUM.
Wallace School Auditorium, 6 p.m.
OCTOBER 15TUESDAY
ASKYOUR OFFICIALS DAY.
GVCC Office, 11 a.m. Talk One-on-One
with Freeholder Director Derella and
Vineland Mayor Bermudez.
By appointment only.
OCTOBER 24THURSDAY
NJ SENATORIAL CANDIDATE
DEBATE. 5:30 p.m. Levoy Theatre. Find
out where incumbent Senator Van Drew
and candidate Susan Adelizzi-Schmidt
stand on the issues. Hosted in partner-
ship with the Millville Chamber of
Commerce and the Cape May County
Chamber of Commerce.
OCTOBER 25FRIDAY
CUMBERLAND COUNTY/TRI CHAM-
BER BREAKFAST EVENT. CCC
Luciano Conference Center, 7:4510
a.m. FREE to attend but registration is
required. Featured guest speaker, Chris
Gheysens/CEO of WAWA Inc.
NOVEMBER 1-FRIDAY
FIRST RESPONDERS RECOGNITION
EVENT. 5:30 p.m. at Merighis Savoy
Inn. Join us to honor and appreciate our
EMS, Fire and Police personnel of
Vineland. Reservations are $10 for
EMS, FIRE or POLICE PERSONNEL.
$30 for all other attendees. Reservation
deadline is Oct. 23. Sponsorships avail.
CHAMBER EVENTS:
Registration required for all GVCC
meetings/events. Call 691-7400.
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Welcome Message
The fall always seems to be a very busy
time of the year. Schools are back in ses-
sion and calendars seem to fill up quickly.
This month we are preparing for many
events. Be sure to check our website event
calendar frequently and also see the events
listed in this newsletter.
With the November 5 elections
approaching quickly, we are hosting a
School Board Forum for those candidates
on October 15 and a Senatorial Candidate
Debate on October 24. Its important for
every citizen to be informed about the can-
didates so they can make an informed
selection when they head to the polls. We
also welcome any input from the public
regarding possible topics for questions.
If you are not
a member and
would like to be
added to our
electronic data-
base, please let
us know. Some
of our programs
are offered to
non-members as well.
If you are a member, be sure to let your
employees know about our events and
programs. All member employees are wel-
come to attend them.
Give us a call if you have any
questions.
Get Involved, Get Connected and
Come Grow With Us!
Dawn Hunter, Executive Director
THE PEOPLEWHO MAKE
THE CHAMBER A DYNAMIC
BUSINESS ADVOCACY GROUP Who
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR:
DAWN HUNTER
OFFICERS
PRESIDENT:
KATHY FARINACCIO
COMCAST
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT:
VICTOR LATORRE
LATORRE HARDWARE
SECOND VICE PRESIDENT:
JEFF GEORGE
MERRILL LYNCH
THIRD VICE PRESIDENT:
BOB MCCORMICK
TOYOTA-SCION OF VINELAND
IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT:
WAYNE TRIANTOS
TRIANTOS & DELP, CPAS, LLC.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
LOUISE BERTACCHI
CUMBERLAND COUNTY WOMENS HALL OF FAME
PETE CAPIZOLA
NEWFIELD NATIONAL BANK
GINGER CHASE
SIR SPEEDY OF VINELAND
ANN FAGOTTI
BOLLINGER INSURANCE SOLUTIONS
JOSEPH ISABELLA
VINELAND MUNICIPAL UTILITIES
BARBARA JONES
SERVPRO OF CUMBERLAND COUNTY
LESLIE JONES
HEALTHSOUTH REHABILITATION HOSPITAL OF
VINELAND
STACEY LILLISTON
LILLISTON FORD
RICH PATTI
COMTEK SOLUTIONS, INC.
RON ROSSI
ROSSI HONDA
DIANE SACCO
SUN NATIONAL BANK
CLARE SAPIENZA-ECK
INSPIRA HEALTH NETWORK
NICHOLAS SCARDINO
SUSQUEHANNA BANK
JOE STERNBERG
VINELAND CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
DAVE SURDAM
CHEMGLASS LIFE SCIENCES, LLC
SCOTT ZUCCA
L.J. ZUCCA DISTRIBUTORS, INC
TREASURER:
STEVE TESTA
ROMANO, HEARING, TESTA &KNORR, CPAS, P.A.
SOLICITOR:
MICHAEL BENSON
BUONADONNA & BENSON, P.C.
PUBLISHER:
GRAPEVINE NEWS CORP. / THE GRAPEVINE
GREATER VINELAND
CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
Suasion Communications Group
Classification:
Marketing/Public Relations
235 Shore Rd. Suite B
Somers Point, NJ 08244
609-653-0400 Ext. 103
Susan Adelizzi-Schmidt
New Member
2115 S. DELSEA DR., VINELAND, NJ 08360
PHONE (856) 691-7400 FAX (856) 691-2113
WWW.VINELANDCHAMBER.ORG
E-MAIL: INFO@VINELANDCHAMBER.ORG
Appliances Plus Video
Barretta Plumbing, Inc.
Chapman Manufactured Housing
CK Mesa Mainline Realty
Cumberland County Government
Ed Costante Tires, Inc.
Egery Nelson, Inc. / ENI, Inc.
First Choice Freezer & Cold
Storage
Glassworks-Millville Investment
Group LLC
Glenn Insurance Inc.
Kapital M. Realty, LLC
Lattimer
Marketing American
Businesses, Inc.
NJ CC Hospice
Professional Liability Insurance
Group of SJ
Running Deer Golf Club
Rustys Driving School
South Jersey Gas
Turf Construction Co., Inc.
Member Renewals
Fall SATs and ACTs are almost here
and Grade A Tutoring can help you pre-
pare for them. Over the past five years,
Vince Farinaccios 35 years of education-
al experience has guided students to suc-
cessful results in these tests through one-
on-one sessions that
focus on the specific
needs of each student,
unlike those offered in
classes or as a group.
In that time, Grade A
Tutoring students have
averaged an increase
of 50 points to their
prior SAT scores.
Sessions are conve-
niently arranged to
accommodate the students schedule
and conferences are conducted regularly
with parents.
Enter the new season prepared and
confident. Call Grade A Tutoring today.
MEMBER HIGHLIGHT:
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JOIN THE BUNCH MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
FOR SEPTEMBER 2013
Victor LaTorre of LaTorre Hardware recruited new member
Commercial Development Co.
News&Views_100213:Layout 1 9/30/13 6:12 PM Page 2
Landis Insurance is an independent
insurance agency, representing many
insurance carriers. Having a large
selection of carriers helps us select the
insurance program personalized just for
you. Insurance for your business, com-
mercial auto, workers compensation as
well as homeowners, personal auto,
umbrella, life and health are all available.
Visit our website:
www.landisinsuranceservices.com
Linda Foster, President, has been
with Landis Insurance since June, 2011
and has enjoyed being part of the
Vineland Chamber of Commerce. She is
a life-long resident of Vineland and an
active member of the Rotary Club of
Vineland where she has served as
President and is the current Club
Secretary.
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Why Settle for Less
When You Can Have THE BEST?
HealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital of Vineland
At HealthSouth, we continually strive for excellence in all that we do, partnering with all
patients, perscnalizing treatment plans tc help them reach their specifc gcals.
At HealthSouth of Vineland, patients receive a
higher level of care through:
/cvancec technclcgies
Experiencec rehabilitaticn physicians*
Specializec registerec nurses, many with certifcaticn
in rehabilitaticn
Were NOT a Skilled Nursing Facility.
HealthSouth of Vineland is a licensed hospital helping
patients rehabilitate after lifealtering events such as
strcke, brain injur\, hip fracture, amputaticns, anc
ccnciticns such as Parkinscn's cisease anc multiple sclercsis.
The Joint Commission
Disease-Specific Care Certification
for Brain Injury Rehabilitation
and Stroke Rehabilitation
2013:HealthSouth Corporation:601478-02
1237 es| S/e//a/ $.e/oe, 9//e|a/J, N! 08350 855 5957100
healthsouthvineland.com
A Higher Level of Care