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DUFFY'S CULTURAL COUTURE
Saturday, 8 October 2016
Hunterdon Art Museum Hosts Halloween Dance Party Fundraiser
Topic: ART NEWS

 


 

 

 Hunterdon Art Museum Hosts Halloween Dance Party Fundraiser

 

Get your scare on at the Hunterdon Art Museum Saturday, October 29 when it hosts a “Ghouls! Goblins! Gremlins! Halloween Dance Party.”


The party kicks off at 8 p.m. and features food from 15 Landsdowne Catering and a wild array of fabulous beverages supplied by Hunterdon Brewing Co. and featuring River Horse Brewing Co., Sixpoint Brewery and Ironbound Hard Cider. There will also be an assortment of wines and several “Monster Cocktails.”


Come in costume for a chance to win a hideously horrifying costume contest, or become a whirling dervish with devilish dancing music by DJ Treatz capped with a “Thriller” mix dance contest.


The evening will also offer more raffles than you can shake a witch’s wand at. Proceeds benefit the nonprofit Museum’s education program and exhibitions of contemporary art, craft and design.


Tickets are $45 in advance or $55 at the door, and guests will receive one ticket for one free beer or glass of wine. A cash bar is also available. You can order your tickets online at www.hunterdonartmuseum.org or by calling us at 908-735-8415.


This is a 21 and older event.


HAM’s Halloween Dance Party lead sponsor is 15 Landsdowne Catering. This event is also being sponsored by Unity Bank, ShopRite of Hunterdon County, Starr’s Party and Tent Rentals, Hunterdon Brewing Co.  Metropolitan Seafood. Co. Beer sponsored by featuring River Horse Brewing Co., Sixpoint Brewery and Ironbound Hard Cider.


GENERAL INFORMATION FOR THE PUBLIC
The Museum is at 7 Lower Center St. in Clinton, New Jersey, 08809. Our website is www.hunterdonartmuseum.org and our telephone number is 908-735-8415. Hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 11 am – 5 pm and suggested admission is $5.


ABOUT THE HUNTERDON ART MUSEUM
The Hunterdon Art Museum presents changing exhibitions of contemporary art, craft and design in a 19th century stone mill that is on the National Register of Historic Places.  Founded in 1952, the Museum is a landmark regional art center showcasing works by established and emerging contemporary artists. It also offers a dynamic schedule of art classes and workshops for children and adults.
Programs are made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, and by funds from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, New Jersey Cultural Trust, Hunterdon County Cultural & Heritage Commission, The Wolf Kahn and Emily Mason Foundation, Investors Bank, The Large Foundation, The Bunbury Company, and corporations, foundations, and individuals. The Hunterdon Art Museum is a wheelchair accessible space. Publications are available in large print. Patrons who are deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired may contact the Museum through the New Jersey  Relay Service at (TTY) 1 (800) 852-7899


Posted by tammyduffy at 3:01 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 8 October 2016 3:06 PM EDT
Hunterdon Art Museum Hosts Halloween Dance Party Fundraiser
Topic: ART NEWS

 

 



 Hunterdon Art Museum Hosts Halloween

Dance Party Fundraiser

 

 

Get your scare on at the Hunterdon Art Museum Saturday, October 29 when it hosts a “Ghouls! Goblins! Gremlins! Halloween Dance Party.”
The party kicks off at 8 p.m. and features food from 15 Landsdowne Catering and a wild array of fabulous beverages supplied by Hunterdon Brewing Co. and featuring River Horse Brewing Co., Sixpoint Brewery and Ironbound Hard Cider. There will also be an assortment of wines and several “Monster Cocktails.”


Come in costume for a chance to win a hideously horrifying costume contest, or become a whirling dervish with devilish dancing music by DJ Treatz capped with a “Thriller” mix dance contest. The evening will also offer more raffles than you can shake a witch’s wand at.


Proceeds benefit the nonprofit Museum’s education program and exhibitions of contemporary art, craft and design.
Tickets are $45 in advance or $55 at the door, and guests will receive one ticket for one free beer or glass of wine. A cash bar is also available. You can order your tickets online at www.hunterdonartmuseum.org or by calling us at 908-735-8415.


This is a 21 and older event.


HAM’s Halloween Dance Party lead sponsor is 15 Landsdowne Catering. This event is also being sponsored by Unity Bank, ShopRite of Hunterdon County, Starr’s Party and Tent Rentals, Hunterdon Brewing Co.  Metropolitan Seafood. Co. Beer sponsored by featuring River Horse Brewing Co., Sixpoint Brewery and Ironbound Hard Cider.


GENERAL INFORMATION FOR THE PUBLIC
The Museum is at 7 Lower Center St. in Clinton, New Jersey, 08809. Our website is www.hunterdonartmuseum.org and our telephone number is 908-735-8415. Hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 11 am – 5 pm and suggested admission is $5.


ABOUT THE HUNTERDON ART MUSEUM
The Hunterdon Art Museum presents changing exhibitions of contemporary art, craft and design in a 19th century stone mill that is on the National Register of Historic Places.  Founded in 1952, the Museum is a landmark regional art center showcasing works by established and emerging contemporary artists. It also offers a dynamic schedule of art classes and workshops for children and adults.
Programs are made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, and by funds from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, New Jersey Cultural Trust, Hunterdon County Cultural & Heritage Commission, The Wolf Kahn and Emily Mason Foundation, Investors Bank, The Large Foundation, The Bunbury Company, and corporations, foundations, and individuals. The Hunterdon Art Museum is a wheelchair accessible space. Publications are available in large print. Patrons who are deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired may contact the Museum through the New Jersey  Relay Service at (TTY) 1 (800) 852-7899


Posted by tammyduffy at 3:00 PM EDT
Blurred Lines between Past and Present: Zimmerli Examines Artwork Created Circa 1966, Themes Remain Relevant Half a Century Later
Topic: ART NEWS

 

 



 

Blurred Lines between Past and Present: Zimmerli Examines Artwork Created Circa 1966,

 

Themes Remain Relevant Half a Century Later

 

When the Zimmerli’s curators first devised two complementary exhibitions of American art titled Circa 1966 – one focusing on prints, the other on paintings and sculpture – the intention was to commemorate the museum’s golden anniversary by spotlighting key works created around the time of its founding. But in addition to spotlighting revolutionary movements that now have an established presence in art history, the subjects of many of the works focus on social and political discussions from the era that have prominently re-emerged across the United States. Both American Prints from the Collection and Paintings and Sculpture from the Collection, on view through January 2017, invite visitors to gain insight into the present by examining the past through the eyes of artists whose works are as relevant now as they were at the time of their genesis.

 

In 1966, Rutgers established the University Art Gallery – occupying a modest two-room space in Voorhees Library – as part of a major effort to integrate and promote arts at the university. It was a visionary move: only an hour from campus, New York City was the established center of the global art world after World War II and attracted artists who formed influential communities and led movements that have had lasting impact. Since then, the institution – renamed the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum after a major expansion in 1983 – has developed in size and scope to become one of the most prominent university art museums in the nation. In addition, the Zimmerli continues to develop an impressive collection of mid-century American art.

 

“The era generated renewed interest in printmaking in the United States: artists and printers collaboratively experimented with both traditional and innovative techniques, which invigorated the field,” notes Christine Giviskos, the museum’s Curator of Prints, Drawings, and European Art.  “As far as subject matter, many of these printmakers were influenced by social upheavals that occurred during the late 1960s and early 1970s, focusing on widespread concerns not unfamiliar today: ongoing wars abroad, contentious political contests, and violence against protestors standing up for civil and equal rights.”

 

The year 1968 was especially turbulent, with artists documenting historical events that resonate with today’s audiences as the 2016 election season gains momentum. Robert Rauschenberg incorporated imagery directly from newspapers and magazines to create Guardian that year. Viewers can sense the political chaos and social unrest through his multi-layered images that compound the experiences of everyday life. The New Jersey Volunteers for McCarthy took a more active role in the American democratic process. The group recruited 14 artists – all living or working in the state – to contribute to a portfolio that was sold to raise funds to support the campaign of Eugene McCarthy (against incumbent Lyndon B. Johnson) during the 1968 Democratic primaries. Lithographs by James Kearns, Jacob Landau, and Pat Pickering chronicle the discontent of the era and Senator McCarthy’s efforts to disrupt the political establishment.

 

Two iconic portraits reflect the impact that both well-known and anonymous figures, as well as the contributions of artists, had during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. Two years after the 1963 March on Washington, Ben Shahn’s ink portrait of Martin Luther King, Jr., delivering his “I Have a Dream” speech, was on the cover of Time Magazine. In 1968, Stefan Martin translated that recognized image into a wood engraving that was published in two editions, with proceeds from the sale benefitting the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which Dr. King had helped establish. Calvin Burnett, an African American artist born and raised in the Boston area, also contributed his talent to raise funds and awareness. His 1969 lithograph Freedom Fighter, portraying a young African American, was published to generate support for private funding for Operation Exodus, a school busing program in Boston. While the city’s public schools were desegregated to comply with the law, public funds to transport students from their largely segregated neighborhoods were not provided. However, through Operation Exodus, more than 2,000 African American children were able to travel out of their home districts and obtain a better education.

 

Reflecting the changing trends in transportation, two prints address the conflicted feelings many Americans have regarding car travel: freedom versus frustration. Richard Fiscus’s screenprint Route 1, No.1 (1969) depicts the open road of the iconic Pacific Coast Highway (Route 1) in Northern California. The influence of Pop art is present in the bold colors and simplified forms of this landscape view along the ocean, implying a laid back attitude often associated with the west coast. The three-dimensional lithograph AARRRRRRHH (1971), from the portfolio No Gas, by Red Grooms represents the other side of driving: being stuck in traffic. While the amusing title pokes fun at the chaos of New York City’s streets, the scene is now an all too familiar experience for many commuters. (Grooms also plays a role in the Zimmerli’s history. In 1973, the Rutgers University Art Gallery hosted the blockbuster exhibition The Ruckus World of Red Grooms, which was the artist’s earliest retrospective.)

 

“The wide range of art produced and collected in the years around 1966 also indicates the global energies of the art market and the efforts of artists to explore new materials, techniques, and ideas, pushing audiences toward new experiences,” adds Donna Gustafson, Curator of American Art and Mellon Director for Academic Programs. With the assistance of Mellon 2016 Summer Interns Kaitlin Booher and Todd Caissie, Gustafson organized Circa 1966: Paintings and Sculpture from the Collection. “Artists from around the world came to New York City not only to study with contemporary masters of these movements, but also to explore their own innovations.”

 

Marion Greenstone and Ray Parker were among the American artists influenced by broader cultural themes. Greenstone, a native New Yorker, combined oil and acrylic paints with newsprint and paper collage to create 1964’s Spoonk, which meanders across six canvases. This assemblage captures the spirit of the decade’s consumer culture, combining disembodied images of women with advertisements for food, cars, and sports. But she also prominently placed a white rabbit, suggesting a reference to the era’s influential counterculture. Originally from South Dakota, Parker was a trumpet player who incorporated his love of jazz improvisation into his practice. After moving to the city in 1951, he joined the circle of artists around the abstract expressionists, becoming close to Mark Rothko and Willem de Kooning. But his work ultimately resulted in a refined format of intense colored forms floating on a pale surface, as seen in his untitled painting from 1965 featured in the exhibition. It secured Parker’s reputation as an artist who had moved beyond abstract expressionism.

 

Established artists from around the world also arrived in New York City to take their careers in new directions. Friedel Dzubas had studied with Paul Klee in Berlin before escaping Nazi Germany in 1939. Though friends with abstract expressionists Jackson Pollack and Willem de Kooning, he also experimented with what we now term color field painting. Following the revolutionary practice of his studio-mate Helen Frankenthaler, Dzubas soaked diluted acrylic paint directly into unprimed canvas. His mastery of color and textural effects is apparent in his 1966 painting Deep Noon, which – expanding the length of a gallery wall – evokes a muted, southwestern landscape. Born and raised in Kyoto, Japan, Shingo Kusuda came to the United States in 1964 as part of the Japanese American Cultural Research program sponsored by the American collector and publishing executive John Powers. Along with three other artists from Kyoto, he spent six months working with contemporary American artists. Kusuda also developed an appreciation of unconventional materials; his mixed media Work #19 (one of four works by the artist in the Zimmerli’s collection) incorporates cement, wood, and collage, demonstrating his contributions during this dynamic era of exploring surface effects in painting.

 

Circa 1966: American Prints from the Collection was organized by Christina Weyl, Ph.D. (Rutgers 2015), with assistance from Nicole Simpson, Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings, and is on view September 3, 2016, to January 29, 2017. Donna Gustafson, Curator of American Art and Mellon Director for Academic Programs, with the assistance of Mellon 2016 Summer Interns Kaitlin Booher and Todd Caissie, organized Circa 1966: Paintings and Sculpture from the Collection, which is on view September 3, 2016, to January 8, 2017.

Posted by tammyduffy at 2:50 PM EDT
Friday, 30 September 2016
MCCC’s Kelsey Review Now Available as Quarterly Online Publication
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 


 

MCCCs Kelsey Review Now Available as Quarterly Online Publication

 

Kelsey Review, the literary journal that has been published annually by Mercer County Community College (MCCC) for 35 years, still features contributors who live, work and/or study in Mercer County. But the publication has adopted a new format and, starting with its recently released Fall 2016 issue, will be posted as a quarterly online publication. Additional issues will be released in December, March, and June.
Kelsey Review’s Fall 2016 issue features fiction by Ed Carmien, Mark Galarrita, Annabelle Kim and Daniel Picker; poetry by Lois Marie Harrod, Donald Lasko, Carolina Morales, and Patrick Walsh; nonfiction by Luz Horta and Dorothy Kohrherr; and photography by Jessie Liang.

Says Kelsey Review Editor Jacky Vogtman, MCCC Assistant Professor of English, “Our Fall issue, like the season itself, is full of color, of darkness and light, of the past colliding with the present and transforming into the future.”  Several contributors have been featured multiple times over the years, while others are new to the fold. Links to the current and past issues of Kelsey Review can be found at www.mccc.edu/kelseyreview.

Vogtman says she is gratified to be at the helm of the publication as it transitions into a quarterly online journal.  “The Review has a long history at MCCC and in the community.  It is exciting to be a part of the journal's metamorphosis into something that continues the tradition of bringing together the talented voices of our region while also embracing the changes that are taking place in the literary landscape.”
 
The editorial board also includes fiction editor Roberta Clipper, Professor of English at Rider University; poetry editor Luray Gross, a poet and storyteller who works as an Artist in Residence in New Jersey and Pennsylvania; and poetry editor Ellen Jacko, a retired English teacher from Allentown High School.

Kelsey Review welcomes new friends on its Facebook page.  The editors invite the community to “like” the page and add their comments about the material in the journal and the arts in general.
Submissions for all quarterly issues are accepted online between January 1 and May 31 in the following categories: fiction, non-fiction, poetry, art, photography and reviews. For more information, email Kelsey.review@mccc.edu or visit www.mccc.edu/kelseyreview.


Funding for Kelsey Review has been made possible in part by the Mercer County Cultural and Heritage Commission through funding from the Mercer County Board of Chosen Freeholders, and the New Jersey State Council for the Arts/Department of State, a partner agency of the National Endowment of the Arts.


Posted by tammyduffy at 5:34 PM EDT
Sunday, 25 September 2016
MaJOR CONFLICT with Hamilton Township Electricity Meeting September 29th
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

 

MaJOR CONFLICT with Hamilton Township Electricity Meeting September 29th

 

 


Two months after Hamilton Council killed a resolution that would have reduced homeowner electricity bills, the Mayor of Hamilton has announced the township will host a public information session next week to educate the public about the potential benefits of being enrolled into a third-party energy aggregation program.

 

 The public information session on Energy will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.


She states she wants the residents to fully understand how this program works, so they can be comfortable in participating and will enjoy the savings that the bulk-purchasing of electricity can provide.


Yet, she deliberately scheduled this meeting so the vast majority of Hamilton residents cannot attend. This is being held the same night of the well in advance previously announced Hamilton School District Back to School Night.


Why would the Township schedule this important event that conflicts with a School District-wide parent student event? This will clearly impact the attendance at one of the events and it is doubtful that is will be the back-to-school night. This was done on purpose. Why? They need to immediately reschedule this event to ensure the entire community is made aware and can attend.

 


The Township's 9/22 Announcement

 
The School District Calendar
http://www.hamilton.k12.nj.us/ calendar_events.cfm?master= 34518&cfm=end&school=0


The mayor states the reason she is proposing this initiative for the community is so residents can reduce electricity costs.


 

 

The public information session will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.



 

 

During the public information session, Hamilton’s energy aggregation consultant, Gabel Associates, will give a formal presentation explaining the program. Attendees will then be encouraged to engage in an interactive question-and-answer period. 


On July 19, Hamilton Council heard negative feedback from residents and then voted 3-2 to reject a resolution that would have automatically entered homeowners into a third-party program that would have reduced their electric bills by 7 percent for at least nine months.


Unfortunately, the state of NJ has no laws against cramming. The leadership of Hamilton is taking advantage of this. Cramming involves unexpected or unauthorized charges on a bill for power. Cramming also allows government entities to change your power without your permission.

 

  The public information session on Engery will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.

 


For all the countless types of goods and services consumers can buy, they basically fall into one of two different payment categories: those where you know (or can find out) your total cost before you agree to buy it, and those where you can't know the full cost until after you've taken on responsibility to pay for it. During a Hamilton school board meeting in 2015, it was stated by one of the school board members," We did not understand the lease we had and the balloon payment we had at the end, we were not prepared for." This "surprise" (aka. leaders without a clue) cost the township millions of dollars. The likelihood that the leadership understands this power proposal is highly unlikely.


The leadership in the township has not demonstrated that they have the ability to understand any program they initiate. Residents saw this with the reassessments that recently occurred with their properties. On the township page right now, they are sending residents directly to Gabel Associates with their questions, not to anyone in the township. This is another cluster in the making with this Energy plan, no doubt. 

 

The bill comes later

Electricity is another bill-after-the-fact service: first you use the power and then you're charged for it, and if the bill proves higher than you can afford, there's no option to return or give back the extra wattage (though you can definitely take steps to reduce your power usage henceforth).

Even determining the price-per-kilowatt hour in advance doesn't always work. This is partly because the energy market is always in flux, largely due to reasons beyond sellers' or buyers' control: anything from cold winters to hot summers to political instability in any of a hundred different energy-producing regions can lead to a price rise. In documents on the township website it states they are going to purchase a "bulk of power" upfront to ensure a "cheap rate".


But customers of third-party energy providers (as opposed to the single regulated utility in a given area) frequently complain of enormous price rises far higher than normal energy-market economics would indicate.


A sampling of reader complaints we'd collected about a 3rd party Energy company, the majority of which boiled down to, “They promised low rates but then my bills skyrocketed, and canceling the contract proved difficult and expensive, too.”


Electric deregulation fails to live up to promises as bills soar. Deregulated energy consumers often end up paying far higher rates than do customers of the local regulated utility. T


There are five big red flags in the electric market: exorbitantly high rates; low introductory or “teaser” rates that suddenly disappear; unexpected extra fees; punishing exit fees; and high-pressure sales tactics.


Third-party electric customers in Connecticut have long reported similar problems to their utility boards, to the point where the state House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill that would set certain limits on third-party residential energy providers.


Right now, it’s a buyer-beware electric market.  States are getting complaints from power shoppers who thought they were signing up for one deal but then got slammed with some of the highest electric rates we’ve ever seen from alternative suppliers. What is the cost per KWH that Hamilton's leadership is proposing? What is the Bulk rate price they are signing up to? Is that based on a certain amount of power used? What is someone uses more power, less power, new homes get built and add to the power consumption, etc.

Consumers have reported paying even higher prices from these changes in the state. From January through April, some have seen a 115 percent increase in complaints and inquiries about alternative electricity suppliers over the same period a year ago. These contacts ranged from simple questions about electric offers to something more serious:

•An man who signed up said he was told the chance of the rate going up was not likely—until it jumped from about a nickel per kWh to 21 cents per kWh.
•Another man signed for a rate that stayed at 5.2 cents per kWh for six months, but then changed to a rate that reached as high as 16 cents per kWh.
•A woman said her rate jumped from an average of 7 cents per kWh to as high as 35 cents per kWh.

Low introductory rates that disappear: Suppliers may try to lure customers into contracts with low introductory rates that shoot up after a short period. Always ask if the rate being offered is an introductory rate, how long it lasts, and what happens to the rate after the initial period.

Extra Fees: Ask if there is a monthly fee, and factor that into the per kWh price. Many suppliers charge exit fees of up to $175 if a customer leaves a plan before the contract is up. Under the law, customers are allowed to leave a contract without paying an exit fee within 10 days after the date of the first bill from a supplier.


Below is a link to an independent company reviewing ConEd



http://callmepower.com/suppliers/conedison-solutions/reviews#fixed-rates


MC Squared Smart Value Power Program: MC Squared Energy Services is the first alternative supplier to offer a 12-month “time of use” plan, which charges customers a lower rate if they are willing and able to put off heavy appliance usage until an "off-peak" period of the day (7 p.m. to 7 a.m.), when electricity demand is low. This plan is only for ConEd customers with new digital electric meters.

Peak Time Savings: This program, which will begin in the summer of 2015, gives ConEd customers an opportunity to save money without risk. By signing up, consumers are credited on their electric bill when they reduce power usage during designated periods when electricity is most in demand.

 

 

Gabel Associates has helped 12 other towns across New Jersey enter into third-party energy programs, including Toms River, which has a population slightly larger than Hamilton’s with about 90,000 residents. Homeowners enrolled into third-party programs in the municipalities of Plumsted, Monroe, Montgomery, West Orange, Lambertville, West Amwell, Colts Neck, Raritan, Flemington, Eatontown, Old Bridge and Toms River have realized energy cost savings ranging from 8.5 percent to 19 percent in the supply portion of their energy bills, according to the press release issued by Yaede’s office.


 

 

Hamilton Councilmen Dennis Pone and Dave Kenny supported the energy cost-savings resolution at the July 19 council meeting, but the measure failed to pass when Council President Ileana Schirmer and Councilmen Ed Gore and Ralph Mastrangelo voted it down.


 

 

Pone suggested it was his duty as an elected official to vote in favor of the 14-month, third-party energy program that would have retained identical power and identical service but would have resulted in at least nine months of reduced energy bills for his constituents over the 14-month contract period. “If I could save people $78 a year, I’d think I was elected to tell them what to do,” Pone said at the meeting. He also said, “I have never as a councilman never made a decision where saving money is guaranteed and I am not going to vote for it.”


 

 

Mastrangelo suggested $78 in estimated annual savings was insignificant; Schirmer said government should not tell homeowners what to do and should not automatically enter people into a program without a homeowner’s prior consent; and Gore said he did not like how the energy cost-savings resolution was added to the council’s July 19 agenda at the last minute. Again, to limit the residents on hearing about the program. It was not on the published agenda prior to the meeting on July 19th. There is a resident on video who attended the meeting on July 19th,  with the printed agenda from the townships website, stating, "Why is this not on the agenda?" 


How much money has been spend paying Gabel Associates to do this analysis? What did that cost taxpayers? What will it cost to initiate this type of program? Residents bet its higher than the $78 dollars in savings by changing.


 

 

If council had passed the resolution, all of Hamilton’s residential homeowners — the ones who do not have solar panels installed on their properties — would have been automatically enrolled into a program by third-party power supplier ConEdison Solutions that would have reduced homeowner electric bills by 7 percent for at least nine out of 14 months from October 2016 through December 2017. If residents do not see a 7% decrease they will have the right to sue the township due to all the collateral they have launched that guarantee at minimum a 7% decrease. This will also cost residents more than the promised $78 savings per year.


How to Opt-Out?

Residential customers who are automatically included (See Below on who is automatically included) in the program have the right to “opt-out.”

However, it is advantageous for all residents to join and remain in the program, as this gives the community the “strength in numbers” to negotiate the best price for consumers.  All residents will receive information about the program and be given the opportunity to opt-out. 

How to Opt-Out?

  • Call Gabel Associates toll-free at: 855.365.0770
  • E-mail to: HCEA-info@gabelassociates.com
  • Sign and mail back the postage-paid "opt-out" card during 30-day "Opt-out Period" (to be mailed in late December 2016)
  • Remember:  Even after an electric account is enrolled, residents are free to opt-out of the program at any time during the contract!  Participation in the HCEA Program is 100% optional! There are no fees or penalties if you decide to opt-out.

Who is Automatically Included

If the Township Administration receives a bid that provides savings and the Council makes the decision to award a contract, residents will be automatically included in the HCEA program and sent a notice in the mail shortly after a successful bidder is selected. This notice, known as the Opt-Out Notice, provides all the details of the program as well as the various ways to opt-out of the program, including the awarded TPS’s toll free telephone number, email address, and a postage-paid opt-out card.

Customers will have 30 days to review the Opt-Out Notice and decide whether they wish to opt-out of the program. After that 30 day opt-out period, those residents who do not opt-out of the program will be enrolled by the winning supplier.

Even after an electric account is enrolled, residents are free to opt-out of the program at any time during the contract! Participation in the HCEA Program is 100% optional! There are no any fees or penalties if you decide to opt-out.

Customers that have their own, independent TPS contracts, or that have a solar power system installed on their property are not included initially but are given the option to join the HCEA program.

Why is Program Set Up as Opt-Out?

The program rules, which have been established by the State of New Jersey, have been set up this way to ensure that a sufficient number of households will participate to obtain a meaningful bid, and to avoid the costly and time-consuming process of having everyone affirmatively sign up for the program. 

The aggregation rules incorporate consumer protections, and recognize the logistical challenges of a residential procurement program, while at the same time providing a structure that will attract bidders.   

When the retail choice program was originally enacted in NJ in 1999, the rules required that government aggregators be required to obtain a so-called “wet signature” from each residential customer demonstrating the customer’s affirmative consent to join.  After a number of years, it was recognized that this “opt in” approach put such a burden on the programs that none got off the ground, and the model was changed by the State to “opt-out” for residential customers.  Unlike business customers, residential customers represent large numbers and (relatively) small usage/margins for each account.  In order for an aggregation of residential customers to work, it is necessary to get large volumes with as low transaction costs as possible.  This results in the opt-out approach, which gives suppliers a firmer basis for the load they are bidding on, but still provides residential customers with the ability to opt out. 

The State regulations also require that an aggregation program show savings versus the utility-provided rates.  Each residential customer will receive a written notification after the bid, informing them of the price, the comparison to the utility price, and their right to opt out.  As such, each resident will be fully apprised of all pertinent information necessary to make an informed decision. 


Questions or More Information


In 2013, Plumsted Township, known for its farms, horse ranches and sprawling military base, is now also a trailblazer in the energy market.  The Ocean County community of 8,400 became the first municipality in New Jersey to contract its electric power supply with a third-party provider, switching from Jersey Central Power & Light to Con Edison Solutions.


The subtle but significant change means Plumsted residents have been saving a few extra dollars on their electric bills each month, at no cost to the township, said Mayor Dave Leutwyler. Falling energy prices enabled Plumsted to take advantage of a decade-old state law allowing municipalities to handle bulk purchases of power supply for their customers.


Much has remained the same about a homeowner’s monthly bill, which is still sent from JCP&L, the state’s second largest electric company. JCP&L still delivers the power, maintains the infrastructure and responds to outages and emergencies. Residents are not seeing a significant savings, so why bother? LEt residents make their own choices. To have the Hamilton leadership dictate what is to be done, has neverworked in the best interest of the residents. 


The only difference in the bill that residnets will see,is the section labeled Supply Charge, which will fall under "Con Edison Solutions," and appears as a separate bill for kilowatt hours used.


Con Ed can charge less because it isn’t bound by the same regulations New Jersey imposes on its four utilities, including JCP&L.


Plumsted’s move affects only the township’s residential electric customers, who was slated to save about 15 percent compared to JCP&L’s supply charges. That works out to an average savings of about $165 a year per customer, Leutwyler said. Why are other townships seeing a higher savings than what Hamilton is proposing?


A dramatic drop in energy prices — caused in part by increased natural gas supply — created an opening for unregulated third-party suppliers, said Stefanie Brand, director of the New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel. Those suppliers purchase energy on more volatile short-term markets, which have fallen faster than the longer-term guarantees that constrain utilities like JCP&L.


"That made it look good to municipalities," said Brand, the state’s utility watchdog. Rate Counsel supports the switch as long as ratepayers save money, she said. "We look at whether consumer protections are in place, make sure there are no hidden costs and that rates don’t go up during the course of the contract."


Individual residents can also seek third-party providers, but the discount will generally be much lower. Switching to a third-party provider remains a complicated process, one that took Plumsted, which has just 2,500 homes, several months to complete. A public hearing was held and plans were submitted to the state Board of Public Utilities and Rate Counsel for review. Any of New Jersey’s 110 licensed third-party suppliers were then allowed to bid on the contract and in October, the township council approved the measure.


Customers who switch will be asked to sign a contract with their new energy supplier. ConEd is saying that there won't be a cancellation fee. Some other 3rd parties say customers who sign an 18-month contract should save about 10 percent over their current bill, or about 12 percent on a 30-month contract. An early cancellation fee of $150 would apply.

Posted by tammyduffy at 1:03 PM EDT
MaJOR CONFLICT with Hamilton Township Electricity Meeting September 29th
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 

 

MaJOR CONFLICT with Hamilton Township Electricity Meeting September 29th

 

 


Two months after Hamilton Council killed a resolution that would have reduced homeowner electricity bills, the Mayor of Hamilton has announced the township will host a public information session next week to educate the public about the potential benefits of being enrolled into a third-party energy aggregation program.

 

 The public information session on Energy will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.


She states she wants the residents to fully understand how this program works, so they can be comfortable in participating and will enjoy the savings that the bulk-purchasing of electricity can provide.


Yet, she deliberately scheduled this meeting so the vast majority of Hamilton residents cannot attend. This is being held the same night of the well in advance previously announced Hamilton School District Back to School Night.


Why would the Township schedule this important event that conflicts with a School District-wide parent student event? This will clearly impact the attendance at one of the events and it is doubtful that is will be the back-to-school night. This was done on purpose. Why? They need to immediately reschedule this event to ensure the entire community is made aware and can attend.

 


The Township's 9/22 Announcement

 
The School District Calendar
http://www.hamilton.k12.nj.us/ calendar_events.cfm?master= 34518&cfm=end&school=0


The mayor states the reason she is proposing this initiative for the community is so residents can reduce electricity costs.


 

 

The public information session will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.



 

 

During the public information session, Hamilton’s energy aggregation consultant, Gabel Associates, will give a formal presentation explaining the program. Attendees will then be encouraged to engage in an interactive question-and-answer period. 


On July 19, Hamilton Council heard negative feedback from residents and then voted 3-2 to reject a resolution that would have automatically entered homeowners into a third-party program that would have reduced their electric bills by 7 percent for at least nine months.


Unfortunately, the state of NJ has no laws against cramming. The leadership of Hamilton is taking advantage of this. Cramming involves unexpected or unauthorized charges on a bill for power. Cramming also allows government entities to change your power without your permission.

 

  The public information session on Engery will be held 6:30 p.m. Sept. 29 at the lower-level meeting room of the Hamilton Free Public Library.

 


For all the countless types of goods and services consumers can buy, they basically fall into one of two different payment categories: those where you know (or can find out) your total cost before you agree to buy it, and those where you can't know the full cost until after you've taken on responsibility to pay for it. During a Hamilton school board meeting in 2015, it was stated by one of the school board members," We did not understand the lease we had and the balloon payment we had at the end, we were not prepared for." This "surprise" (aka. leaders without a clue) cost the township millions of dollars. The likelihood that the leadership understands this power proposal is highly unlikely.


The leadership in the township has not demonstrated that they have the ability to understand any program they initiate. Residents saw this with the reassessments that recently occurred with their properties. On the township page right now, they are sending residents directly to Gabel Associates with their questions, not to anyone in the township. This is another cluster in the making with this Energy plan, no doubt. 

 

The bill comes later

Electricity is another bill-after-the-fact service: first you use the power and then you're charged for it, and if the bill proves higher than you can afford, there's no option to return or give back the extra wattage (though you can definitely take steps to reduce your power usage henceforth).

Even determining the price-per-kilowatt hour in advance doesn't always work. This is partly because the energy market is always in flux, largely due to reasons beyond sellers' or buyers' control: anything from cold winters to hot summers to political instability in any of a hundred different energy-producing regions can lead to a price rise. In documents on the township website it states they are going to purchase a "bulk of power" upfront to ensure a "cheap rate".


But customers of third-party energy providers (as opposed to the single regulated utility in a given area) frequently complain of enormous price rises far higher than normal energy-market economics would indicate.


A sampling of reader complaints we'd collected about a 3rd party Energy company, the majority of which boiled down to, “They promised low rates but then my bills skyrocketed, and canceling the contract proved difficult and expensive, too.”


Electric deregulation fails to live up to promises as bills soar. Deregulated energy consumers often end up paying far higher rates than do customers of the local regulated utility. T


There are five big red flags in the electric market: exorbitantly high rates; low introductory or “teaser” rates that suddenly disappear; unexpected extra fees; punishing exit fees; and high-pressure sales tactics.


Third-party electric customers in Connecticut have long reported similar problems to their utility boards, to the point where the state House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill that would set certain limits on third-party residential energy providers.


Right now, it’s a buyer-beware electric market.  States are getting complaints from power shoppers who thought they were signing up for one deal but then got slammed with some of the highest electric rates we’ve ever seen from alternative suppliers. What is the cost per KWH that Hamilton's leadership is proposing? What is the Bulk rate price they are signing up to? Is that based on a certain amount of power used? What is someone uses more power, less power, new homes get built and add to the power consumption, etc.

Consumers have reported paying even higher prices from these changes in the state. From January through April, some have seen a 115 percent increase in complaints and inquiries about alternative electricity suppliers over the same period a year ago. These contacts ranged from simple questions about electric offers to something more serious:

•An man who signed up said he was told the chance of the rate going up was not likely—until it jumped from about a nickel per kWh to 21 cents per kWh.
•Another man signed for a rate that stayed at 5.2 cents per kWh for six months, but then changed to a rate that reached as high as 16 cents per kWh.
•A woman said her rate jumped from an average of 7 cents per kWh to as high as 35 cents per kWh.

Low introductory rates that disappear: Suppliers may try to lure customers into contracts with low introductory rates that shoot up after a short period. Always ask if the rate being offered is an introductory rate, how long it lasts, and what happens to the rate after the initial period.

Extra Fees: Ask if there is a monthly fee, and factor that into the per kWh price. Many suppliers charge exit fees of up to $175 if a customer leaves a plan before the contract is up. Under the law, customers are allowed to leave a contract without paying an exit fee within 10 days after the date of the first bill from a supplier.


Below is a link to an independent company reviewing ConEd



http://callmepower.com/suppliers/conedison-solutions/reviews#fixed-rates


MC Squared Smart Value Power Program: MC Squared Energy Services is the first alternative supplier to offer a 12-month “time of use” plan, which charges customers a lower rate if they are willing and able to put off heavy appliance usage until an "off-peak" period of the day (7 p.m. to 7 a.m.), when electricity demand is low. This plan is only for ConEd customers with new digital electric meters.

Peak Time Savings: This program, which will begin in the summer of 2015, gives ConEd customers an opportunity to save money without risk. By signing up, consumers are credited on their electric bill when they reduce power usage during designated periods when electricity is most in demand.

 

 

Gabel Associates has helped 12 other towns across New Jersey enter into third-party energy programs, including Toms River, which has a population slightly larger than Hamilton’s with about 90,000 residents. Homeowners enrolled into third-party programs in the municipalities of Plumsted, Monroe, Montgomery, West Orange, Lambertville, West Amwell, Colts Neck, Raritan, Flemington, Eatontown, Old Bridge and Toms River have realized energy cost savings ranging from 8.5 percent to 19 percent in the supply portion of their energy bills, according to the press release issued by Yaede’s office.


 

 

Hamilton Councilmen Dennis Pone and Dave Kenny supported the energy cost-savings resolution at the July 19 council meeting, but the measure failed to pass when Council President Ileana Schirmer and Councilmen Ed Gore and Ralph Mastrangelo voted it down.


 

 

Pone suggested it was his duty as an elected official to vote in favor of the 14-month, third-party energy program that would have retained identical power and identical service but would have resulted in at least nine months of reduced energy bills for his constituents over the 14-month contract period. “If I could save people $78 a year, I’d think I was elected to tell them what to do,” Pone said at the meeting. He also said, “I have never as a councilman never made a decision where saving money is guaranteed and I am not going to vote for it.”


 

 

Mastrangelo suggested $78 in estimated annual savings was insignificant; Schirmer said government should not tell homeowners what to do and should not automatically enter people into a program without a homeowner’s prior consent; and Gore said he did not like how the energy cost-savings resolution was added to the council’s July 19 agenda at the last minute. Again, to limit the residents on hearing about the program. It was not on the published agenda prior to the meeting on July 19th. There is a resident on video who attended the meeting on July 19th,  with the printed agenda from the townships website, stating, "Why is this not on the agenda?" 


How much money has been spend paying Gabel Associates to do this analysis? What did that cost taxpayers? What will it cost to initiate this type of program? Residents bet its higher than the $78 dollars in savings by changing.


 

 

If council had passed the resolution, all of Hamilton’s residential homeowners — the ones who do not have solar panels installed on their properties — would have been automatically enrolled into a program by third-party power supplier ConEdison Solutions that would have reduced homeowner electric bills by 7 percent for at least nine out of 14 months from October 2016 through December 2017. If residents do not see a 7% decrease they will have the right to sue the township due to all the collateral they have launched that guarantee at minimum a 7% decrease. This will also cost residents more than the promised $78 savings per year.


How to Opt-Out?

Residential customers who are automatically included (See Below on who is automatically included) in the program have the right to “opt-out.”

However, it is advantageous for all residents to join and remain in the program, as this gives the community the “strength in numbers” to negotiate the best price for consumers.  All residents will receive information about the program and be given the opportunity to opt-out. 

How to Opt-Out?

  • Call Gabel Associates toll-free at: 855.365.0770
  • E-mail to: HCEA-info@gabelassociates.com
  • Sign and mail back the postage-paid "opt-out" card during 30-day "Opt-out Period" (to be mailed in late December 2016)
  • Remember:  Even after an electric account is enrolled, residents are free to opt-out of the program at any time during the contract!  Participation in the HCEA Program is 100% optional! There are no fees or penalties if you decide to opt-out.

Who is Automatically Included

If the Township Administration receives a bid that provides savings and the Council makes the decision to award a contract, residents will be automatically included in the HCEA program and sent a notice in the mail shortly after a successful bidder is selected. This notice, known as the Opt-Out Notice, provides all the details of the program as well as the various ways to opt-out of the program, including the awarded TPS’s toll free telephone number, email address, and a postage-paid opt-out card.

Customers will have 30 days to review the Opt-Out Notice and decide whether they wish to opt-out of the program. After that 30 day opt-out period, those residents who do not opt-out of the program will be enrolled by the winning supplier.

Even after an electric account is enrolled, residents are free to opt-out of the program at any time during the contract! Participation in the HCEA Program is 100% optional! There are no any fees or penalties if you decide to opt-out.

Customers that have their own, independent TPS contracts, or that have a solar power system installed on their property are not included initially but are given the option to join the HCEA program.

Why is Program Set Up as Opt-Out?

The program rules, which have been established by the State of New Jersey, have been set up this way to ensure that a sufficient number of households will participate to obtain a meaningful bid, and to avoid the costly and time-consuming process of having everyone affirmatively sign up for the program. 

The aggregation rules incorporate consumer protections, and recognize the logistical challenges of a residential procurement program, while at the same time providing a structure that will attract bidders.   

When the retail choice program was originally enacted in NJ in 1999, the rules required that government aggregators be required to obtain a so-called “wet signature” from each residential customer demonstrating the customer’s affirmative consent to join.  After a number of years, it was recognized that this “opt in” approach put such a burden on the programs that none got off the ground, and the model was changed by the State to “opt-out” for residential customers.  Unlike business customers, residential customers represent large numbers and (relatively) small usage/margins for each account.  In order for an aggregation of residential customers to work, it is necessary to get large volumes with as low transaction costs as possible.  This results in the opt-out approach, which gives suppliers a firmer basis for the load they are bidding on, but still provides residential customers with the ability to opt out. 

The State regulations also require that an aggregation program show savings versus the utility-provided rates.  Each residential customer will receive a written notification after the bid, informing them of the price, the comparison to the utility price, and their right to opt out.  As such, each resident will be fully apprised of all pertinent information necessary to make an informed decision. 


Questions or More Information


In 2013, Plumsted Township, known for its farms, horse ranches and sprawling military base, is now also a trailblazer in the energy market.  The Ocean County community of 8,400 became the first municipality in New Jersey to contract its electric power supply with a third-party provider, switching from Jersey Central Power & Light to Con Edison Solutions.


The subtle but significant change means Plumsted residents have been saving a few extra dollars on their electric bills each month, at no cost to the township, said Mayor Dave Leutwyler. Falling energy prices enabled Plumsted to take advantage of a decade-old state law allowing municipalities to handle bulk purchases of power supply for their customers.


Much has remained the same about a homeowner’s monthly bill, which is still sent from JCP&L, the state’s second largest electric company. JCP&L still delivers the power, maintains the infrastructure and responds to outages and emergencies. Residents are not seeing a significant savings, so why bother? LEt residents make their own choices. To have the Hamilton leadership dictate what is to be done, has neverworked in the best interest of the residents. 


The only difference in the bill that residnets will see,is the section labeled Supply Charge, which will fall under "Con Edison Solutions," and appears as a separate bill for kilowatt hours used.


Con Ed can charge less because it isn’t bound by the same regulations New Jersey imposes on its four utilities, including JCP&L.


Plumsted’s move affects only the township’s residential electric customers, who was slated to save about 15 percent compared to JCP&L’s supply charges. That works out to an average savings of about $165 a year per customer, Leutwyler said. Why are other townships seeing a higher savings than what Hamilton is proposing?


A dramatic drop in energy prices — caused in part by increased natural gas supply — created an opening for unregulated third-party suppliers, said Stefanie Brand, director of the New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel. Those suppliers purchase energy on more volatile short-term markets, which have fallen faster than the longer-term guarantees that constrain utilities like JCP&L.


"That made it look good to municipalities," said Brand, the state’s utility watchdog. Rate Counsel supports the switch as long as ratepayers save money, she said. "We look at whether consumer protections are in place, make sure there are no hidden costs and that rates don’t go up during the course of the contract."


Individual residents can also seek third-party providers, but the discount will generally be much lower. Switching to a third-party provider remains a complicated process, one that took Plumsted, which has just 2,500 homes, several months to complete. A public hearing was held and plans were submitted to the state Board of Public Utilities and Rate Counsel for review. Any of New Jersey’s 110 licensed third-party suppliers were then allowed to bid on the contract and in October, the township council approved the measure.


Customers who switch will be asked to sign a contract with their new energy supplier. ConEd is saying that there won't be a cancellation fee. Some other 3rd parties say customers who sign an 18-month contract should save about 10 percent over their current bill, or about 12 percent on a 30-month contract. An early cancellation fee of $150 would apply.

Posted by tammyduffy at 1:01 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 25 September 2016 1:02 PM EDT
Saturday, 24 September 2016
Hamilton Township Gives Gets FREE LAWN SERVICE, Courtesy of Residents Tax Dollars
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST


 

 

Hamilton Township Gives FREE LAWN SERVICE, Courtesy of Residents Tax Dollars


 

photos in this article were taken 9/24/2016 at approx 1:30pm
 
 

You can tell your colleagues, coworkers and employees how much you value them and their contribution any day of the year. Trust me. No occasion is necessary. In fact, small surprises and tokens of your appreciation spread throughout the year help the people in your work life feel valued by you all year long.


Looking for ideas about how to praise and thank coworkers and employees? The opportunities are endless and limited only by your imagination.


Today, Saturday, September 24, 2016, in the early afternoon, there were seven Hamilton township employees with 3 Municipal vehicles fine tuning the lawn at 833 South Olden Ave in Hamilton, NJ, Mercer County. They were cutting down trees, cutting the lawn, edging, and using a blower for clean up.

 

According to the County tax records this property is owned by Marc and Jill Fass. (http://njtaxrecords.com/1103-833-S-Olden-Ave-Hamilton-NJ-08610)


Mrs. Jill Fass is appears to be employed/involved in some way at the the township of Hamilton (Yardville Elementary School), ironically enough as the person in charge of Staff Appreciation.  

( http://www.hamiltonpta.com/pta/Yardville%20Elementary%20School%20PTA/Newsletter/2015-2016%20Newsletters/Yardville%20School%20Newsletter%20Fall%202015.pdf).

It also appears according to additional searches, that Mr. Marc Fass is an optician at Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton. Could it be another coincidence that a member of the Hamilton Township council is also an optician?

 


What did this personal lawn cut cost taxpayers this weekend at the Fass's home? How does the Mayor of Hamilton justify this level of government waste and fraud?  Does anyone audit the overtime paid to employees in the township of Hamilton? Who orchestrated this 7 man, 3 government vehicle lawn service for a Hamilton employee this weekend?


Residents want to know. 


Posted by tammyduffy at 3:39 PM EDT
Updated: Monday, 26 September 2016 6:04 PM EDT
3A Foundation Changing The Lives of Youth in NJ
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST


3A Foundation Changing The Lives of Youth in NJ

 

 Your contribution to this project will help improve the lives of inner city youth and communities throughout New Jersey and promote awareness for the need of strong academics, an influence of all areas of the arts and athletics.

 


 

 


Posted by tammyduffy at 9:22 AM EDT
Sunday, 18 September 2016

 

 



The Museum of Modern Art announces the release of an extensive digital archive accessible to historians, students, artists, and anyone concerned with modern and contemporary art: a comprehensive account of the Museum’s exhibitions from its founding, in 1929, to today. This new digital archive, which will continue to grow as materials become available, is now accessible on MoMA’s website, at moma.org/history.

 

Providing an unparalleled history of the Museum’s presentation of modern and contemporary art on a widely available platform, the project features over 3,500 exhibitions, illustrated by primary documents such as installation photographs, press releases, checklists, and catalogues, as well as lists of included artists. By making these unique resources available at no charge, the exhibition history digital archive directly aligns with the Museum’s mission of encouraging an ever-deeper understanding of modern and contemporary art and fostering scholarship.


Posted by tammyduffy at 10:12 AM EDT
Saturday, 10 September 2016
“The Princess and the Pea” Retold with Music and Mirth at MCCC’s Kelsey Theatre Oct. 1
Topic: COMMUNITY INTEREST

 


 

 

 “The Princess and the Pea” Retold with Music and Mirth at MCCC’s Kelsey Theatre Oct. 1

 

Love will always find a way. It’s never been more true than in “The Princess and The Pea,” to be presented by Virginia Repertory Theatre at Mercer County Community College’s (MCCC’s) Kelsey Theatre on Saturday, Oct. 1 at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Kelsey Theatre is located on the college’s West Windsor Campus at 1200 Old Trenton Road.


This beloved Hans Christian Andersen tale comes to life in a fun and funny musical adaptation. It stars the Princess and her darling Prince Noodle, who is working to foil Queen Demean’s evil scheme to marry him off to another princess he simply doesn’t love.  And while our heroine is not an actual princess, she nonetheless manages to pass an improbable - and impossible - test put forth by the Queen. Young theater goers will cheer her on as she outdoes her adversary on the way to true love.
Virginia Repertory Theatre (formerly Theatre IV) is an award-winning nonprofit professional theater company that has been producing high quality children’s shows since 1975. Based in Richmond, Va., the traveling company tours from Wisconsin to Florida and Texas to Maine, while also presenting major productions in its home city.  The company performs live for more than half a million children, teens, parents and teachers across America every year.


Tickets for “The Princess and the Pea” are $12 for adults and $10 for seniors, students and children.  Tickets may be purchased online at www.kelseytheatre.net or by calling the Kelsey Box Office at 609-570-3333.  Kelsey Theatre is wheelchair accessible, with free parking available next to the theater.


Posted by tammyduffy at 6:21 PM EDT

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