LD-8
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Wed Feb 07, 2007 at 10:32:43 AM EST
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My State Senator, Martha "no-show" Bark can't leave her seat soon enough for me and apparently she couldn't wait to leave her seat in Trenton yesterday as well..."I just thought, well, here we are, it's going to happen, why shouldn't it be me so we can get out of here?" -- Retiring State Sen. Martha Bark, 76, explaining why she voted for A-1, the property tax relief plan. (Star-Ledger, 01/07/07) Way to stand by your principles. What a profile in courage she is.
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Thu Feb 01, 2007 at 08:17:39 PM EST
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For the first time in years, the 8th legislative District looks like it actually may be exciting. First I'll give the background and story on the district, then talk about the upcoming race.
New Jersey's 8th Legislative District encompasses 16 towns in Burlington County including Easthampton, Evesham, Hainesport, Lumberton, Mansfield, Medford Lakes, Medford, Moorestown, Mount Laurel, Pemberton, Shamong, Southampton, Springfield, Tabernacle, Woodland and Wrightstown.
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Thu Nov 09, 2006 at 10:28:36 AM EST
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Residents of the 8th District can rejoice because according to PoliticsNJ...Martha Bark will not seek re-election to the State Senate. The 75-year-old Burlington County Republican will announce early next year that 2007 will be her last year in office. The Philadelphia Inquirer is reporting today that an ethics probe into allegedly no-show jobs held by Bark has been expaned to include a $5 million Delaware River Port Authority grant for a project that "employed Bark as a consultant." The GOP is anxious to avoid placing the heavily Republican 8th district into play. And more on the Inquirer story from today...A state probe into part-time jobs held by GOP State Sen. Martha Bark has expanded to the Delaware River Port Authority, which gave $5 million in toll proceeds to a Burlington County nature park project that employed Bark as a consultant, according to officials familiar with the investigation.
In recent months, state investigators and a grand jury have interviewed DRPA officials and demanded records related to grants its board awarded in October 1999 and September 2001 to the Palmyra Cove Nature Park.
During that time, Bark was a paid consultant to the park project. So it looks like the Burlington County Republicans are giving Bark the same treatment their leader gave Rumsfeld yesterday. I guess they're hoping the stink from Bark is gone by the time the election rolls around.
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