Letters: Rename middle school after local Black educator
Letters: Religious leaders are calling in the school board to name the middle school after resident Shirley Satterfield.
Letters: Religious leaders are calling in the school board to name the middle school after resident Shirley Satterfield.
Letters: Two former council members call for a review of local government policies on automated license plate reader use.
The public hearing on the Prospect Avenue project will be continued tonight, July 8, at 7:30 p.m. via Zoom.
Letters: Princeton residents dismayed that council included license plate scanning technology in a bond ordinance last week.
Letters: A member of the trask force who lives near the high school weighs in on the controversial permit parking plan.
Letters: Princeton Coalition for Responsible Development statement regarding Prospect Avenue buildings and development trends in Princeton
The Princeton Planning Board is slated to review the university’s application June 17.
Letters: Political disagreements are used to mask anti-Semitism.
Letters: New permit system will simplify parking in Princeton, task force member says
Letters: All three components of the University’s proposed development on Prospect Avenue violate National Park Service policy for historic districts and buildings
Letters: Princeton University should reconsider plans for Prospect Avenue.
Letters: No one has discussed the environmental costs of the parking permit proposal.
Letters: Why should residents pay for on-street parking when their property taxes are already so high?
“Why anyone would think that it is a good idea to provide more student parking is beyond me. So the entitled little darlings can spend another 15 minutes in bed, before tearing down our neighborhood streets in their late model Audis and BMWs?” writes Carlos Rodrigues.
Letters: The Princeton Perks program raised $17,500.
A letter from the family of former Princeton Township Mayor Phyllis Marchand
The toddler playground on the Guyot Walk is extremely popular. It’s used daily, year-round. Although on…
The designation allows the town and the property owner to dispense with current zoning. Once the designation for a neighborhood is approved by Council, it isn’t going away.