Search
Close this search box.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Search

Cape May Dissolves Parking Committee Despite Requests to Keep It

Cape May Logo
Cape May Logo

By Vince Conti

CAPE MAY – Cape May City Council passed a resolution Jan. 17 that had the effect of dissolving its Municipal Parking Advisory Committee (MPAC).
The resolution represents an attempt by the city to structure its citizen advisory committees for each year depending on city priorities. The form of the resolution states which committees will continue in the coming year. The effect is to dissolve those committees that are not continued.
Several members of the parking committee used public comment to urge the council to keep the parking committee working. Committee member James Testa said his reaction was “bordering on shock” when he saw that the MPAC would not be continued.
The committee had been reconstituted in 2022 after a period of inactivity. The members were charged with the development of a comprehensive transportation plan for the city, a charge many of them said they were close to fulfilling.
Stacy Sheehan, who decided to step down from her position as council member and deputy mayor, was the committee champion on the council. She took to the podium at the Jan. 17 meeting to join those who urged that it not be dissolved.
Mayor Zack Mullock said the council wanted more time to reevaluate the committee’s focus.
“We want to be sure the focus is where it should be,” Mullock said.
Council member Shaine Meier voted against the resolution after failing to gain a second for his motion to amend it and continue the MPAC for 2023. The resolution passed 4-to-1.
Three advisory committees were continued for 2023. They are the committees on beach safety, bicycles and pedestrians, and taxation and revenue.

Spout Off

Dennis Township – Sorry Democrats, who was it that fought Trump’s immigration policy tooth and nail? Oh right, that was you! So you don’t get to blame Trump for illegal immigrants murdering Americans. I don’t think…

Read More

Del Haven – Imagine that at a rose garden ceremony where a president is about to sign legislation into law, a group opposed to the legislation, breaks onto the White House grounds. They attack security and…

Read More

Wildwood Crest – The UAW’s successful unionization effort at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee — the first successful unionization effort at a car factory in the South since the 1940s — is breaking the…

Read More

Most Read

Print Edition

Recommended Articles

Skip to content