It could have happened here

When I heard the news of yesterday’s bank robbery in Readington, my first thought obviously was for the family of the FBI agent who was killed. But I also wondered about the Dayton bank robbery on March 16 — when I read about bank heists, or anything really, I always wonder whether they may be related to things happening in the four towns my papers cover.

Then came word — first off the record and then later on the record — that the Readington heist was indeed related to the March 16 robbery of the Bank of America branch on Summerfield Boulevard.

That robbery also turned violent, though the injuries were rather minor. But watching the news late last night and reading the reports in the various New Jersey dailies and online, I can only marvel at how lucky we turned out to be.

Yesterday’s robbery was the fifth — and possibly the 10th — in a string of heists that had grown more and more violent. The Dayton heist was not the first in which shots were fired, but it was the first in which there were injuries.

And while it appears that the FBI agent was killed by friendly fire, the trajectory of this robbery string makes me believe that the escalating violence was destined to result in a death sooner or later.

The best we can say about this is that it’s over. The final suspect was nabbed late Friday, meaning four men are in jail, charged in connection with the robbery spree.

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Woo hoo!! We win!!

The South Brunswick Post has won this year’s General Excellence Award from the New Jersey Press Association, naming it the top weekly paper in the state with a circulation of fewer than 4,500 readers.

Woo hoo!!

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Woo hooo!!

The new mall is coming! The new mall is coming!

Heritage Center — which will be home to Target, Best Buy, Staples and PetSmart, among others — appears to be moving along with the first major store set for an April 28 opening.

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Low bid blues

The South Brunswick Township Council is suing two contractors because it believes work done on Ridge Road near the Monmouth Junction Post Office and at Rowland Park on Rowland Road. According to the township, JPC Group has failed to finish some paving on a $400,000 road reconstruction project on Ridge and Northstar Enterprises has failed to complete electrical work and landscaping at the park (part of a $6 million contract).

So they are suing with the intention of either getting money so the township can finish the project or to force the contractors back onto the sites.

Some on the council were unhappy with CME Associates for the company’s oversight of the projects — and it appears they may bear some of the blame. The council and Township Manager Matt Watkins also have to shoulder some blame. (Perhaps someone could have ordered the engineer to ride the contractors like a basketball coach rides a player with an attitude problem?)

But the bigger issue is that a law designed to protect the public from cronyism in the award of contracts — by requiring them to award contracts to the lowest bidder — may be forcing governments to hire subpar contractors and leaving them without much recourse should the work be shoddy or not up to standards.

“We have to pay them within 20 days,” Mr. Watkins said. “If you’re renovating your home and the contractor doesn’t finish the job, you don’t pay him. Then they come back and finish the job. We have to pay them.”

He said that, to get the work done, the township has to enter into litigation. He said the problem is not only happening in South Brunswick, but throughout the state.

If he’s correct — I’ve heard this sime complaint in other communities — then it would seem an easy problem to fix. First, we could allow towns to show specific cause so they can turn down low bids (perhaps a registry of complaints by towns filed with the state, a state rating system or some other mechanism can be created that would remove repeat offenders from the public-contracting pool). And we could allow towns to pay off contract work the way homeowners do, a portion at a time until the work is complete and OK’d by inspection.

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A game short, but nothing short of magical

The South Brunswick Vikings basketball team did something few have done in the history of the school this year — they battled their way to the state championship game, falling nine points short of their ultimate goal.

No shame in it, of course. It was a rather magical run, made possible by a team that took seriously the notion that it was a team — every doing his part, no one dominating the spotlight.

It was the kind of team that reminds me of why I like basketball, a team that moved the ball, shared the ball, played defense and hit the boards.

So congratulations to the South Brunswick High School Vikings basketball squad and thank you for a thrilling ride.

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