Wardlow, the longtime mayor of the borough, has been ensuring that seniors are cared for since moving to Lawnside five decades ago.
“I have spent more than half my life supporting my town and the community around me,” said Wardlow, adding she got involved because she knew at some point she would become a senior. She created a congregate site in her town at the Wayne Bryant Community Center.
“It’s a very hard feeling when you have nobody — nobody — that comes and checks on you,” she said. “That the only thing you can do is try and get to church. You may get over to the store; that’s a hard life to live.”
Wardlow said the center, which will bear her name, will have a significant impact on the people it serves.
Currently, the county’s meal delivery program serves more than 2,000 people — that’s in addition to three congregate nutrition sites in Lawnside, Blackwood, and Pine Hill, which are all at capacity.
The center, which is expected to open in the Fall of 2024, will support the county’s growing need for home-delivered meals to residents. It will also house distribution services for the home delivery program, food storage, and meal assembly. It’s estimated to serve 300,000 meals per year by 2025.
The project is being funded by a combination of grants from U.S. Rep. Donald Norcross and Community Development Block Grants, in addition to money from the American Rescue Plan.
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