Welcome back to the deep dive. We're here to take that pile of community updates, know, the stuff that lands in your mailbox or inbox and really make sense of it all.
Speaker 2:Exactly. Today, it's all about Lawrence Township. We've got this mix of sources, Some are deadlines, some are school news.
Speaker 1:It's quite a range.
Speaker 2:It really is. And our job is to pull it together so you get the full picture, not just the facts, but what they mean for the community.
Speaker 1:Right. We're talking about everything from paying your sewer bill on time to how the schools are using AI. It's practical stuff and forward looking strategy all bundled together.
Speaker 2:And it paints a picture, doesn't it? Yeah. Of civic priorities where the focus is. You see the admin side keeping things running, but also this real push for community building, especially in the K-twelve system.
Speaker 1:Absolutely. So let's start with the practical side, the things you just, well, need to know right now. The deadlines, the closures, that kind of thing. Okay. First up, key dates, closures, what's immediate?
Speaker 2:Alright. So Monday, October 13, that's Columbus Day. Municipal offices closed.
Speaker 1:Okay, offices closed. But what about services? Trash? Recycling?
Speaker 2:Good question. They keep rolling. Trash and recycling collection happen as scheduled. No interruption there.
Speaker 1:That's important continuity. Okay, shifting gears. Money. Sewer bills. What's the story?
Speaker 2:Right, sewer bills. They went out around mid September. The date you need to circle in your calendar is October 27.
Speaker 1:October 27, that's the deadline to avoid.
Speaker 2:Penalties. Exactly. Pay by the twenty seventh, you're good. After that, it costs you more. Yeah.
Speaker 2:So, don't put that one off.
Speaker 1:Got it. What else is on the sort of, must do admin list? I see something about cats.
Speaker 2:Yes. Cat licensing. It's the twenty twenty five, twenty twenty six licensing period. It actually started September 1, runs through next August.
Speaker 1:And this is required, right, for cats over a certain age?
Speaker 2:Yep. Required by law for all cats seven months or older. Here's But the interesting part, the policy insight really.
Speaker 1:Uh-oh, what's that?
Speaker 2:It's the cost. It's $11 if your cat is spayed or neutered. But it's $14 if they're not.
Speaker 1:Ah, so a little nudge there.
Speaker 2:$3 nudge, yeah. It's clearly designed to encourage spaying and neutering. Public health, population control, that sort of thing.
Speaker 1:Makes sense. And there's a deadline for this too.
Speaker 2:There is. Late fees kick in starting November 1. So another one to take care of soon.
Speaker 1:Okay. Bills paid, cats licensed. What about getting involved civically?
Speaker 2:Big need right now for election board workers. The general election is 11/04/2025.
Speaker 1:And they need specific skills.
Speaker 2:They're really emphasizing the need for bilingual workers. So if you speak more than one language and want to help out, this is a direct way to participate.
Speaker 1:And speaking of helping out or maybe getting help, property taxes.
Speaker 2:Yes, important one. There's a property tax relief program filing event. It's happening this Sunday, October 12.
Speaker 1:Where and when?
Speaker 2:At the Lawrence Library. From 1PM to four zero pm. If you need help with the forms or the process, this is the place to go. Hands on assistance.
Speaker 1:That sounds really useful. What about health updates?
Speaker 2:Two things jump out. First, Mercer County is providing free at home COVID-nineteen test kits. You You can pick them up from the health department, while supplies last.
Speaker 1:Okay, free tests. And the second thing
Speaker 2:Rabies Clinic for Pets. That's this Saturday, October 11.
Speaker 1:Location time.
Speaker 2:Municipal Building 12.3PM to 3.3PM. Important for pet health.
Speaker 1:Definitely. Okay, one more practical item. Winter is, well, coming. Leaves.
Speaker 2:Ah yes, the leaves. Yeah. Public Works has the schedule out. Collection starts November 3 and runs all the way through December 31.
Speaker 1:That's an eight week window. How reliable is the collection usually? Any specifics this year?
Speaker 2:They're promising predictability. They've assigned one crew per brush zone for that whole period.
Speaker 1:One crew per zone. Alright.
Speaker 2:And here's the key detail. They expect to make three collections per zone during those eight weeks.
Speaker 1:Three collections. That's helpful for planning when to put them out.
Speaker 2:Exactly. Helps you manage the pile at the curb, you know? Yeah. Make sure you don't miss a pickup.
Speaker 1:Alright. So that covers the nuts and bolts township life right now. Pay the bills, get the cat license, prep for leaves, but let's pivot. Let's talk about the future of the investments and that really means talking about the school's LTPS.
Speaker 2:Yeah, the sources show a lot of activity there. A really strong focus right now seems to be on character building, social emotional learning.
Speaker 1:More than just academics.
Speaker 2:Definitely. They just had their week of respect for National Bullying Prevention Month. And it wasn't just symbolic stuff. We're talking structured activities.
Speaker 1:Like the spirit days. I saw something about wearing PJs to put bullying to bed.
Speaker 2:Exactly. Fun stuff like that. But Lawrence Middle School went deeper with their be a Cardinal day. The whole theme was becoming the best version of yourself.
Speaker 1:Okay, tell me more about that. What did they actually do?
Speaker 2:It was pretty well designed actually. They had this activity called Build Yourself Up. Students literally created personal blueprints.
Speaker 1:Blueprints like mapping out their strengths and goals.
Speaker 2:Pretty much. Thinking about their skills, where they want to improve. It's quite a reflective exercise for middle schoolers.
Speaker 1:That's interesting. What else?
Speaker 2:Then they flip to something more hands on, competitive even. The Cardinal Tower challenge.
Speaker 1:Okay.
Speaker 2:The challenge was to build the tallest freestanding structure using only index cards.
Speaker 1:Just index cards? Wow, what's the lesson there do you think? Besides maybe frustration?
Speaker 2:Maybe some frustration, but it's really about, teamwork under pressure, right? Creative problem solving with limited resources. Think engineering principles, project management basics,
Speaker 1:practical skills, yeah,
Speaker 2:very practical. And then they balanced that competition with something collaborative and well, kind. The kindness chain.
Speaker 1:Kindness chain inspired by that video, kindness boomerang.
Speaker 2:That's the one. Students wrote down acts of kindness they've done or seen on paper strips. Then they linked them all together.
Speaker 1:And decorated the halls with it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it's visual, right? It makes the idea of kindness tangible, communal. Yeah. It's not just a poster saying, be kind.
Speaker 1:So it's about reinforcing that behavior, making it the norm.
Speaker 2:I think that's the goal, yeah. Making kindness visible, part of the school's fabric. Less about a single metric, more about shifting the culture.
Speaker 1:Okay. Shifting from character to careers. The high school job skills program seems to be expanding.
Speaker 2:It is connecting students with the local economy, giving them real world experience. That's crucial.
Speaker 1:And they have new partners.
Speaker 2:Two new ones mentioned. First, Final Boss Comics and Games.
Speaker 1:Cool. What are students doing there?
Speaker 2:Greeting customers, organizing merchandise, you know, frontline retail and customer service skills. Really valuable.
Speaker 1:And the other partner?
Speaker 2:Lawrenceville Main Street. Students are helping with beautification tasks, raking leaves, that kind of thing, and also some office assistants.
Speaker 1:So, civic engagement meets job skills.
Speaker 2:Right. It builds on other successful programs, like the voter registration drive they held. Got over 45 juniors and seniors registered. Foundational skills for work and life.
Speaker 1:These partnerships sound great, but looking bigger picture, the whole district structure is up for discussion, right? There's a big meeting coming up.
Speaker 2:Huge. It's the reconfiguration community conversation. This is really important for anyone interested in the long term plan for the school buildings.
Speaker 1:And this relates to the referendum that passed.
Speaker 2:Directly. It's all about the timeline for the projects that were approved in the spring referendum. You know, the bond projects, this is where taxpayers get to see how that money is being planned out.
Speaker 1:When and where is this crucial conversation?
Speaker 2:Wednesday, October 15. That's this coming Wednesday. 7PM at the Lawrence Middle School auditorium.
Speaker 1:Okay Wednesday 7PM LMS. And they're trying to make it accessible.
Speaker 2:Seems like it. They're providing childcare and refreshments, removing some common barriers so parents and community members can actually attend. Architects and leadership will be there.
Speaker 1:Good. Definitely worth attending if you have questions about the future shape of district. Now, something really cutting edge, AI in education.
Speaker 2:Yes. This caught my eye. The high school special education team presented at a summit at TC and J, the College of New Jersey.
Speaker 1:And the
Speaker 2:topic? Utilizing AI to support student executive functioning skills.
Speaker 1:Executive functioning. Okay, break that down. That's like planning, organizing.
Speaker 2:Exactly. It's the brains management system. Skills like planning, prioritizing tasks, managing time, staying organized, things that are crucial for academic success and life success frankly.
Speaker 1:And they're using AI to help students develop these skills. How does that even work?
Speaker 2:Well think of it as personalized support like a digital assistant. The AI can help a student break down a big overwhelming project into smaller manageable steps.
Speaker 1:Okay.
Speaker 2:It can help draft a timeline, set reminders, maybe even suggest organizational strategies based on the student's specific needs or workload. It provides scaffolding that a teacher with a full class might struggle to give individually 20 fourseven.
Speaker 1:It's not about the AI doing the work, but helping the student manage the work. Themselves.
Speaker 2:Precisely. It's about building the student's own capacity to manage their academic life. Integrating AI into these foundational sort of learning how to learn skills, that feels pretty significant.
Speaker 1:Wow. Okay. AI supporting executive function is some heavy future focused stuff. Let's shift gears a bit, lighten it up. October means Halloween.
Speaker 2:It certainly does in Lawrence Township. They've got a bunch of spooky fun planned.
Speaker 1:What's first on the list?
Speaker 2:The Halloween house decorating contest. If you're planning to deck out your house and want it judged, need to register pretty quickly.
Speaker 1:Deadline.
Speaker 2:Noon on October 16. So not much time left if you want in.
Speaker 1:Okay. Register by the sixteenth, and the judging happens.
Speaker 2:From October 17 right up until the thirtieth, they announce the winners on Halloween itself.
Speaker 1:Fun. What about events for kids? Trick or treating alternative?
Speaker 2:Two main ones. Right. First, Trunk or Treat. That's the police department and rec department teaming up.
Speaker 1:Where and when is that?
Speaker 2:Thursday, October 23, six point me m to eight zero zero p. M. Over at the Lawrence High School parking lot always popular.
Speaker 1:And the second one?
Speaker 2:LHT Trail and Treat this one's geared toward the younger kids ages two to 12.
Speaker 1:Trail and Treat sounds outdoorsy.
Speaker 2:It is it's at Lawrence Village Park on Sunday October 26 from 3PM to five zero zero PM.
Speaker 1:Okay. Plenty of Halloween options. But October isn't just about spooky stuff. Right? What else is happening?
Speaker 2:Absolutely not. Culture and commerce are definitely active. This Saturday, actually, October 11 is the big fall arts fest.
Speaker 1:Oh, yeah. Where's that?
Speaker 2:On Lawrenceville Main Street from noon to 4PM. The sources say they expect over a 150 artists, crafters, vendors.
Speaker 1:A 150. Wow. That's a huge turnout. Great for supporting local creators.
Speaker 2:Definitely a big event. And then for the local business owners, there's a networking opportunity.
Speaker 1:Tell me about that.
Speaker 2:It's hosted by the Growth and Redevelopment Committee. A small business networking event.
Speaker 1:When? Where?
Speaker 2:Wednesday, October 15. Same night as the reconfiguration meeting, actually, but earlier. Mhmm. This is five zero zero PM to seven fills PM at the senior center.
Speaker 1:Good mix there. Arts, business networking. Anything more, intellectual on the calendar?
Speaker 2:Yes. One more dimension. The Lawrence Historical Society has its Mary Tanner lecture coming up.
Speaker 1:And the topic sounds intriguing.
Speaker 2:It does. Aaron Burr and the Hamilton musical. It's exploring Burr's legacy, his connection as a Mercer County resident, and how that relates to the whole Hamilton phenomenon.
Speaker 1:Connecting local history to this massive cultural hit. That's a smart angle.
Speaker 2:Yeah. It sounds like a great opportunity for anyone interested in local history or, you know, the musical. Hashtag Dag Outro.
Speaker 1:Okay. So we've covered a lot from, making sure your cat has the right paperwork to planning for a leaf pickup to these really deep dives into educational strategy and massive referendum projects.
Speaker 2:It really is the full spectrum of community life, isn't it?
Speaker 1:It is. And what strikes me pulling all these threads together, is this dual focus.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:You see the township rigorously handling the present, the finances, the services, the deadlines. Gotta keep the lights on. Gotta keep things running smoothly.
Speaker 2:Right. The foundational maintenance.
Speaker 1:But at the same time, there's this clear, very deliberate investment in the future, especially in the schools. It's not just about buildings. It's about skills, character, job readiness, even using AI for learning support.
Speaker 2:That's the connection I see too. The sources show a community that's not just managing today, it's actively building tomorrow. The kindness chains, the job partnerships, the AI for executive function. Yeah. But these are just nice add ons.
Speaker 2:They seem core to their strategy.
Speaker 1:It suggests a belief that success requires more than just knowledge. It requires these little softer skills. Adaptability.
Speaker 2:Career. Adaptable transferable skills. Dealing with the present through structure while building future capacity through character and technology, that seems to be the Lawrence Township approach right now.
Speaker 1:So let's leave our listeners with something to think about building on that AI point. We heard how the special ed team is using AI to support executive functioning planning, organizing, time management, these core skills for, well, getting things done.
Speaker 2:Foundational skills.
Speaker 1:Right. So if AI can be woven into helping high schoolers build these fundamental competencies, what does that imply for the future of learning? Not just facts, but the skills of learning and doing, and maybe bring it closer to home? What tasks in your own life, professional or personal, could benefit from that same kind of focused, maybe even AI assisted approach to planning an organization?
Speaker 2:That's a fascinating thought. Where else can optimizing those core executive functions make a real difference? Something to definitely ponder.