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Home » County News » Page 2

Camden County College commemorates Memorial Day with opening of Veterans Office

Camden County College commemorates Memorial Day with opening of Veterans Office

The Camden County Freeholder Board will hold its annual Memorial Day Ceremony on May 25 at 10 a.m. honoring the memory of those who have made the ultimate sacrifice in service to their country. This year, the observance will feature the grand opening of the new Veterans Affairs Office on Camden County College’s Blackwood Campus.

“This observance is usually held at the Camden County Veterans Cemetery at Harleigh, but renovations at that site present us with an opportunity to announce that the Camden County Veterans Affairs Office has been relocated from Lakeland to Camden County College,” said Freeholder Melinda Kane, liaison to the Camden County Veteran’s Affairs Office. “The Memorial Day observance will take place in the college’s Presidential Courtyard. After the ceremony, please join us for an open house in the new Veterans Affairs Office in the college’s Wolverton Center. A light lunch will be served.”

Camden County College is located at 200 College Drive in the Blackwood section of Gloucester Township. The Camden County Office of Veterans Affairs is located on the third floor of the Wolverton Center. The building, which also houses the library, is fully accessible with ramps and an elevator.
“To honor our heroes this Memorial Day weekend, join us in remembering that this holiday has been designated by this grateful nation to honor our veterans that have fought and died for our country,” Kane said.

For more information on services available to veterans, please contact the Camden County Veterans Affairs Office at 1-800-464-VETS.
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Officials tour Joint Health Sciences Center in Camden

Joint Health Science Center

JHSC expected to drive job growth and economic development in the city.

(Camden, NJ) – Federal, state, and local elected officials gathered today with leaders from Camden’s higher education institutions on their first tour of the Joint Health Sciences Center (JHSC). Once complete, the 100,000 square-foot building will be used by Rowan University, Rutgers University–Camden, Camden County College, and Cooper Medical School of Rowan University (CMSRU) for research, education and training.

Chief Executive Officer, Dana Redd, previously talked about the newest addition to the Eds and Meds corridor in the city.

“We’re going to see some of the region’s best and brightest scientific minds flocking to the City of Camden when this project is completed,” Redd said. “The city will soon be synonymous with scientific and medical innovation. We expect this to make Camden one of the most sought-after research destinations in the state of New Jersey.”

Chairman of the Joint Board, Jack Collins spoke about the economic impact of the JHSC and what its completion will mean for the City of Camden.

“Education and medicine is the fastest growing job sector in New Jersey, and is among the top sectors nationwide. By 2020, estimates suggest that as many as 1 in 6 New Jersey jobs will be in eds and meds,” Collins said. “The JHSC represents the promise of economic sustainability in Camden long after this building is opened. Because of the unprecedented collaboration taking place here, Camden will see accelerated job growth, increased investment in businesses and start-ups, and an influx of professionals and students who will actively participate in the local economy.”

Standing in the lobby of the new building after the tour Congressman Donald Norcross talked about the unprecedented collaboration between the higher education institutions and the long-term vision for the corridor.

“We’re seeing the future of science, the future of medicine and the future of education in Camden,” Norcross said. “I am impressed with the work accomplished so far – and I know, when completed, this center will bring world-class research and jobs to our area. Thanks to the collaborations between our South Jersey institutions, Camden is both attracting and retaining great students and educators. I look forward to continuing to see the growth of our ‘Eds and Meds’ Corridor.”

The $70 million, four-story building will include research laboratory space for Rowan University and Rutgers University-Camden, a simulation rooms for medical students at Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, instructional space and simulation labs for Camden County College, office space for the Board of Governors, a first-floor café, a rooftop terrace, and general-use multipurpose spaces. Construction began in the fall of 2017, and the JHSC is expected to open later this fall.

“This is the first facility of its kind, where multiple universities and institutions share one facility, ever to be built in New Jersey,” Redd continued. “By bringing together partners from across higher education, and leveraging available resources, we were able to bring Camden a state-of-the-art facility that’s going to provide new jobs to the city, additional job training and educational opportunities, and significant economic growth to the Eds and Meds corridor and all of the city.”

The JHSC is based on the MESH Economy Model, which co-locates faculty and students from different academic disciplines in order to share facilities and equipment. By bringing these various institutions together, resources can be utilized with maximum efficiency to make this a definitive research footprint in South Jersey. Approximately two-thirds of the space will be dedicated to research, multi-purpose rooms and offices for biomedical research.

“We are setting an example for the rest of the country with respect to how institutions can collaborate efficiently and positively impact the economy of an entire region,” said Ali Houshmand, President of Rowan University. “We are supporting the number one driver of economic growth in the region, and investing in the long-term viability of Camden’s resurgence in South Jersey. Our message is that our universities plan to rise together with the City of Camden right alongside us.”

The construction of the 100,000 square-foot building will generate approximately $72 million in economic impact in the City of Camden alone and $122 million statewide by the time the project is completed. Even more importantly, the education and training that will take place in the Center will prepare generations of area residents for meaningful careers in health care and biomedical research.

Rutgers University-Camden Chancellor, Phoebe Haddon, spoke about the future of biosciences in the city.

“The research that Rutgers–Camden scientists will conduct in the Joint Health Sciences Center will be nothing short of transformational. Our innovation in the biosciences will chart new medical treatments, define scientific processes, and create applications that advance New Jersey’s health care providers and other businesses. Better still, the nature of this building will promote meaningful collaborations among researchers and educators from Rutgers, Rowan, and Camden County College. The Joint Health Sciences Center places New Jersey at the forefront of maximizing public investment in research and Rutgers University–Camden is proud to play a leading role in this endeavor.”

Camden County College President Donald Borden also talked about the benefit for students and professionals who are located at the new site.

“These are the premiere public research universities in New Jersey coming together, putting our students’ side-by-side and providing them with the same resources,” Borden said. “This is going to create an environment you cannot find on any one campus. Our students will have greater access to their peers, research opportunities, and an incredibly far-reaching professional network. All of this access is going to help people build careers in Camden, and that’s going to push growth in the city to levels we haven’t seen in decades.”

2nd Annual Men’s Health Fair

Sponsored by CAMcan & Kappa Alpha Psi Burlington-Camden Chapter
Saturday, May 11, 2019
9AM – 2PM

Join us for a day in celebration of Men’s Health and Wellness!
CAMcare Health Corporation & Kappa Alpha Psi are teaming up once again to bring you:

  • Health Screenings
  • Fitness Classes
  • Local Businesses
  • Community Vendors
  • Giveaways
  • Healthy Cookout

More activities TBA

The Salvation Army Kroc Cemter
1865 Harrison Ave
Camden, NJ 08105

Camden County College marks National Child Abuse Prevention and Awareness Month

(Gloucester Township, NJ) – April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. To help raise awareness of children’s vulnerability to abuse and also our ability to prevent it, the NJ Child Assault Prevention (CAP) Headquarters at Camden County College created a Pinwheel for Prevention Garden on the Blackwood Campus.

On April 3, children and students helped decorate the base of the flagpole in Veteran’s Circle in front of the Taft Building with pinwheels to spread the message that all children deserve a happy childhood and have the right to be safe, strong and free.

The blue pinwheel symbolizes the happiness of childhood and has been used as the national symbol for child abuse prevention since 2008. Pinwheels signify youthful innocence and serve as the physical embodiment of the circumstances we want for all children.

With a motto “All Children Deserve to be Safe, Strong and Free”, the NJ CAP program seeks to reduce children’s vulnerability to abuse, neglect and bullying by providing comprehensive prevention workshops in local schools for children, parents/guardians and school staff. Since its inception, NJ CAP has trained over 3 million children and adults in its life saving strategies. NJ CAP programs are available to every community in our State and have offices in the 21 counties.

To learn more about NJ CAP, or to find out how you can make a difference in a child’s life, please visit NJ CAP or ICAP

Camden 28 revisit court where they were tried for ’71 break-in to protest Vietnam War

By Kyrie Greenberg on whyy.org
December 6, 2018

Nearly 50 years after breaking into the Camden draft board and destroying records to protest the war in Vietnam, members of the Camden 28 took to the stand in the federal courtroom where they were tried.

This time, it was to tell their story for future generations.

Joan Reilly read the names of those who didn’t live long enough to return to the courtroom that was packed Thursday with high school and Camden County College students.

A lifelong Catholic, Reilly said her faith led her and her sister Rosemary to oppose the Vietnam war, and move from Long Island to join the resistance in Camden.

“It was ordinary people who said ‘not in our name, not on our watch.’ We took great risk and worked in collective action, and I very much believe that’s what helped to end this war,” said Reilly, who was in her early 20s at the time.

“My parents have both died, and they kept the letters I sent to them. Now I can see the fire that burned within me about the injustices I saw happening,” she said.

In the weeks before the 1971 raid, rioting was regular in Camden.

Keith Forsyth, who moved from Ohio to be a part of the anti-war movement, said demonstrators knew the risks. “It was like the Boy Scout motto, ‘Always be prepared.’ We were ready to go to jail,” he said.

In Camden, they met the Rev. Michael Doyle, one of four priests and one Presbyterian pastor charged with felonies related to the raid. Now Monsignor Doyle and pastor of Sacred Heart Church in South Camden, he said he wouldn’t change a thing, though at the time his politics meant few churches would employ him to celebrate Sunday Mass.

“No congressman’s son died in Vietnam because they never got sent to the front. But the poor kids of Camden, they were sent to the front,” said Doyle. “It’s outrageous. And then you say, ‘There’s no point in writing a letter to those [politicians],’” he continued.

As casualties mounted, several draft board raids occurred throughout the country. But the Camden 28 case was the only one where all defendants were acquitted.

Despite evidence that the FBI aided the raid through a paid informant, attorney David Kairys didn’t try to prove entrapment. Instead, the 28 defendants represented themselves as co-counsel, giving each a chance to address the jury directly.

Eugene Dixon said the idea was to appeal to the people, not the law.

“I was just an ordinary working stiff, but, of course, the politics of the war were always in front. And the idea of massive violence being perpetrated on people was one that struck home with me,” said Dixon.

“I loved being on trial,” said Doyle to laughter from the room. “We talked a lot and Judge Fisher, he had a great sense of humor. I was a felon, but he was so nice to me. And to be able to cross-examine FBI agents — imagine that! I was a peasant from Ireland doing that, and I loved it.”

Complementing the event was a screening of a documentary by Anthony Giacchino, which is available online. Giacchino grew up attending church at Sacred Heart and his parents are active in the parish.

2018 Camden County Freedom Medal winner shares her story

By holding her family, God and her community as the foundation for everything Muqaddas Ejaz does, her story has inspired others to live with the same compassion and care she possesses.
 

Life is a delicate, finite and uncertain gift, leaving the average person wondering how their time on earth has influenced their community. Camden County residents have already answered that question for Muqaddas Ejaz, solidifying their views by nominating her for the 2018 Camden County Freedom Medal, which she was awarded last Wednesday.

Ejaz is heavily involved with her community as a member of the Cherry Hill Democratic Committee, a sergeant at the Camden County College Public Safety Department and co-leader of the Southern New Jersey chapter of the Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom since September 2016. She was recognized by Rep. Donald Norcross as a Woman of Honor in Education in May, among many other accomplishments.

By holding her family, God and her community as the foundation for everything she does, her story has inspired others to live with the same compassion and care she possesses. Although her involvement with her community has been recognized, it is important to note where it all began — the capital city of the Pakistani province of Punjab, Lahore, where Ejaz was born.

Growing up in Pakistan with her mother and siblings, Ejaz’s father would be gone for four months at a time attending to his marble export and import business in the U.S. After waiting years to get approved for a U.S. visa, Ejaz was finally able to come to the states to be closer with her father.

“That was a whole excitement, now we can live as a family together,” Ejaz said.

Recalling the exact date, Dec. 28, 2002, Ejaz arrived in the U.S. As a 17-year-old, Ejaz and her family made the move to Atlanta where her father also owned a pizza business. Ejaz attended high school in Atlanta for her senior year and moved to Houston shorty after graduating to work as an insurance agent where she discovered she has a passion for understanding other cultures and customs.

“People don’t learn about other people, the reality of it, you know? Whether it’s a Spanish community, a Pakistani community, Indian community or whether it’s a Vietnamese community, every community has issues within the communities and then there are sub-issues, and there are subcultures and all these traditions,” Ejaz explained.

It is important to be able to understand these issues and learn about other cultures to make a difference in the community, according to Ejaz.

Ejaz moved to Bellmawr to be closer to her family and father’s scrap yard business where she would face one of the largest “opportunities” of her life. From 2008 through 2010, the family felt the effects of the recession and eventually moved to a two-bedroom apartment in Stratford.

All six members of her family crowded in a small apartment, but that didn’t stop her from accomplishing big things.

During this time, Ejaz worked two jobs to pay her way through school and help support her family, working at Dunkin’ Donuts and the advisement office at Camden County College, where she attended school. Ejaz eventually graduated with an associate’s degree in political science. During her time there, she was awarded a certificate of “most promising student of the year” from the politics, philosophy and history department. Ejaz ultimately went to Rowan University where she graduated with her bachelor’s degree in history and concentration in international studies.

Steve Hetherington, director of the public safety department at Camden County College, has seen firsthand her work ethic through the years.

“To talk about Mookie (her nickname), doesn’t make for a short conversation,’’ Hetherington said. “Her work ethic is phenomenal … she has a positive effect on every organization she works with and everyone she meets, just a living, breathing, walking ambassador of positivity.’’

Leading by example, Ejaz hopes to inspire her daughter, Anaya, by continuing to help others and create change in her community. Ejaz still visits the same Dunkin’ Donuts she worked at while attending school and other establishments throughout South Jersey to get to know other immigrants living in the U.S.

“When I take my last breath, I want God to be happy with me,” Ejaz said. “If I want to see a change, I have to be the change.”

Article Source: The Cherry Hill Sun

Norcross Improves Career, Technical Training Programs

In Committee-Passed Bill, Norcross-Added Provision Expands Opportunities, Improves Efficiencies for Career-Building Programs

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, H.R. 2353, the Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act, passed the House Education and Workforce Committee unanimously and Congressman Donald Norcross (NJ-01), a member of the Committee, included a provision that extends the allowable use of funding for career-building programs.

 

Rep. Norcross’ provision specifically allows for better alignment between college and high school programs, for more information about educational options to be provided to students and for data-driven market information to be used as curriculum is created to ensure students are trained for high-skill, high-wage jobs.

 

“Technical training shaped my life – taking me from Community College to Congress,” said Congressman Norcross. “The four-year college experience is critical for many, but it’s not for everyone, including me, and we need to make Career and Technical Education programs work as efficiently as possible. We need electricians and computer programmers, just like we need doctors and judges, and this bill allows more students to learn about more options.”

 

“I am pleased we all worked together on the Committee to pass this bill and ensure that our career and technical education system will adapt to the needs of emerging industries,” said House Education and Workforce Committee Ranking Member Bobby Scott. “Rep. Norcross is the only former electrician on the Committee and was able to work on an important section of this bill by bringing his unique personal perspective as someone who received technical training and attended community college. With this bill passing, we are one step closer to helping more Americans enter the workforce with the skills they need to compete for high-skilled, high-wage jobs.”

 

“All one needs to do is examine the changing job market to understand the importance of career and technical training programs that will lead to meaningful employment for an ever-increasing number of our citizens,” said Don Borden, President, Camden County College. “This provision added by Congressman Norcross, as well as his overall support of the bill, illustrates his understanding of the types of educational programs we need to provide for our students.”

 

Click here to read full text of H.R. 2353. Rep. Norcross’ provision (section 135) can be found starting on page 83.

 

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Camden County College does not discriminate in admissions or access to, or treatment or employment on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, ancestry, nationality, age, sex, sexual orientation, marital status or domestic partnership or civil union status, gender identity or expression, or persons with a mental or physical disability, or any other legally protected characteristic, in its programs and activities. The following persons have been designated to handle inquiries/complaints regarding non-discrimination policies:

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