The biggest applause line on Tuesday, unsurprisingly, was when Camden Fire Department Chief Michael Harper recognized the men and women who fight fires and respond to all manner of calls in South Jersey’s busiest department.
Harper, inside the big bays at the Camden Fire Administration Building, was happy to receive word from Mayor Vic Carstarphen and U.S. Rep. Donald Norcross that an infusion of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) money would go to buy a crucial piece of apparatus: a new tower ladder truck.
But that wasn’t all the $62 million in ARPA funds will do in Camden, and the second-biggest round of applause from the officials, residents and city employees came when Carstarphen announced $5 million for the cleanup of a massive pile of illegally dumped, toxic dirt in South Camden. Funds will also be used for park improvements, clean drinking water efforts, infrastructure improvements to fight waste- and stormwater runoff and premium pay for essential city employees who kept working throughout the pandemic.
The goal, said Carstarphen, was to build “an effective and equitable plan which would provide resources to every neighborhood in the city to provide long-lasting and positive impacts” throughout Camden, representing “a bridge of hope to our city and our residents and our businesses who have been left out of other funding programs.”
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