Home Palmyra News Palmyra re-ups with Burlington County for emergency call services

Palmyra re-ups with Burlington County for emergency call services

Borough hall closer to being reopened, with most improvements complete.

At its most recent public meeting, Palmyra’s borough council passed a series of resolutions regarding various business matters. 

During the Aug. 3 virtual session, the key legislation passed was the authorization of a shared-services agreement with Burlington County’s Board of Chosen Freeholders to supply a centralized communication post and to handle all 911 calls. The new, five-year term will expire on July 31, 2025.

“We have been central dispatched since 1981. I know this is the third such five-year agreement for this purpose,” said Palmyra Fire Chief Richard Dreby.

Per the county website, the Central Communications Office in Westampton  provides police dispatch services to all 33 municipal police agencies, as well as fire and emergency medical dispatch services for all intra-county municipalities. 

Council also unanimously authorized the appointment of both Kim M. Whelan and Jennifer G. Edwards of Acacia Financial Group as financial consultants for the borough. 

“We utilized them for our 2015 bond issue, and they’re top notch. They’re from Mt. Laurel, but they’re also a national firm,” noted Borough Administrator John Gural. 

“They said in their proposal they represent 40 different municipalities and they have a wealth of experience in PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes), which is our biggest issue when looking at the redevelopment plans (in the works for Route 73 South).”

Council President Tim Howard concurred, noting the municipality had previously worked with Acacia and there is concord between both sides.  

Gural once again provided an update on the pending reopening of borough hall for business, revealing that although no firm timetable can be established, “We have just about completed all the renovations in the building. We’ve installed plexiglas barriers to separate the public from the staff. At issue is that we’ve had our worst week yet as far as the number of COVID) cases that have occurred here.

“The governor’s office said they are declaring BurlCo as an emerging hot spot, and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) indicated that New Jersey is expected to have an increased number of deaths as our numbers are creeping up,” Gural added. “We’re doing what we can to beat this and be as prepared as possible when the time comes.”

Mayor Gina Ragomo Tait said the borough is now at 66 total COVID cases since the onset of the pandemic in mid-March.  

In other news

  • Recent Palmyra High School graduate Kaya Robinson, who served as class valedictorian and student representative to borough council — and who had a significant influence on the Black Lives Matter rally held in town in early June — sent a letter of thanks to council for her time and experience observing borough governance, and for the scholarship awarded her by the municipality. 
  • Gural said negotiations between the borough and the Palmyra Police Association are scheduled to begin sometime in mid-September.
  • Additional resolutions saw the appointment of Tanyika Johns as tax search officer for the Borough of Palmyra, and Doretha Jackson tabbed the Burlington County Joint Insurance Fund Alternate Fund commissioner. 
  • Council and code enforcement officer Michael Lunemann agreed that   in order to reacclimate residents to the borough’s operation as close to normal as possible, code enforcement and written violations would have to be stepped up across the board.
Exit mobile version