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A Glencourt Avenue resident asked the Edison Township Council on Thursday why he received a neighborhood notice about a traffic study and a possible one-way change for the Glencourt/Woodbridge intersection that township officials said they did not send.
Bernard Toscano of 35 Glencourt Avenue told the council, “Got something in the mail saying there was gonna be a discussion about the intersection of Glen Court and, Woodbridge Avenue tonight at 06:00. Am I in the wrong place?”
Council leaders said the mayor had discussed conducting a traffic study with police and public-safety and traffic professionals to consider making the block one-way for safety, but they denied issuing the letter with township letterhead. The clerk and administration said the notice did not bear official township letterhead and that the administration would trace its origin.
Why it matters: Residents in the neighborhood reported cut-through traffic and speeding that they say creates unsafe conditions for children. Council members acknowledged the concerns and promised to follow up while clarifying that no enforcement action or immediate changes would occur without further study.
Council members urged residents to report specific speeding or safety incidents and said the township would investigate. The business administrator said she would confirm where the notice originated and would report back to the council.
No formal action was taken; council members treated the matter as a public-safety inquiry and assigned staff follow-up.
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