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Stone Harbor to allow paths through bird sanctuary
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STONE HARBOR- Borough Council passed a law Tuesday reversing a longstanding policy and allowing four foot paths through its 21-acre Bird Sanctuary.
Borough officials said the paths would be used for educational purposes, closed during the nesting season and regulated to prevent traversing through other areas of the preserve.
People have been banned for years from the Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary, which includes maritime forests, tidal wetlands and freshwater marshes reminiscen...
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Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary is looking for a few good birds
Press of Atlantic City
; From Press staff reports STONE HARBOR - The effort to make the Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary more hospitable to birds continues. In the past two years, Stone Harbor has spent nearly $250,000 for improvements at its 21-acre wooden preserve. About $200,000 more was set aside in Stone Harbor's 2007
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Stone Harbor may allow walking trails inside bird sanctuary
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - For years, only birds and authorized personnel could move along the maritime forests, freshwater marshes and tidal wetlands of the Stone Harbor Bird Sanctuary. But that may change as the borough's consultant presented plans Tuesday for four walking paths through portions of the
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Stone Harbor to allow paths through its bird sanctuary
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - Borough Council passed a law Tuesday reversing a longstanding policy and allowing four footpaths through its 21-acre bird sanctuary. Borough officials said the paths would be used for educational purposes, closed during the nesting season and regulated to prevent traffic through
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Stone Harbor businesses now free to fly their flags, even in summer
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - Repealing one of its rather odd laws, Stone Harbor on Tuesday allowed "open" flags to hang in front of downtown businesses during the summer. Shops in the central business district could only use flags to indicate they were open from September through May. The law, which Borough
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For some in Stone Harbor, Peter Max's art is not bliss.
Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, PA)
; Byline: Amy S. Rosenberg Jul. 9--STONE HARBOR, N.J. -- Bob Stitzinger, 24 years in the U.S. Army and 44 summers in Stone Harbor -- a toss-up as to which demanded more allegiance to his basic notions of propriety -- is just this side of rolling his eyes. Stitzinger is standing on 96th Street, gazing
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Stone Harbor surveys aim at shaping plan for future
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - The borough is preparing a long-range Master Plan to guide development and shape the look of the seashore resort. Among other issues, officials want to know whether this town of 1,039 full-time residents will see more second homeowners retiring here. Planning Board member Bob Ashman
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Stone Harbor signs deal for $4.5M. library
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - The borough signed a lease with the Cape May County Library Commission this week, giving approval for a $4.5 million beachfront library branch on 96th Street. Stone Harbor entered the 15-year lease for the county library system to construct the building on borough land. The county
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New Jersey Shore Town Stone Harbor Faces Lawsuit over Dredging Deal.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
; ... Philadelphia Inquirer Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Jan. 9--CAMDEN, N.J.--The U.S. Attorney's ... S. Attorney Christopher Christie said at a news conference. The Shore town has accommodated ... Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.
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Stone Harbor to charge for skateboard park
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR -The skateboard park, with its assortment of quarter-pipe ramps and rails, will be supervised by the borough this summer to see that all children wear helmets. Stone Harbor will also charge a small fee for skateboarders to use the skateboard park to help offset the expense of having it
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Stipends help Stone Harbor find firefighters
Press of Atlantic City
; STONE HARBOR - Matt Lattouf joined the Stone Harbor Volunteer Fire Company one year ago. He was what the department and the borough were looking for: fairly young - in his 40s - living year-round in the area, and willing to respond to fires and attend drills and training regularly. Lattouf didn't
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