Douglas County landowners say County Ditch 6 is a dud, don t want to pay for it
Property owners in Alexandria Township claim they are not benefitting from it as their land doesn t drain into it. 5:20 pm, May 19, 2021 ×
Douglas County Commissioners – (from left) Charlie Meyer, Heather Larson, Jerry Rapp, Tim Kalina and Keith Englund – listen to concerns from landowners wanting to remove their property from Douglas County Ditch 6. Speaking on behalf of the county, and seated at the table in front of the commissioners, were Kurt Deter, attorney (left) and Tom Anderson, Drainage and Ag inspector. (Celeste Edenloff / Echo Press)
Property owners who say they aren t getting any benefit from a county ditch for which they are assessed will have to wait until the next Douglas County Board meeting for any sort of resolution
Facebook tribute. “I couldn’t be more proud of him.”
It pains me to write this, but the last year feels like it has been filled with nothing but bad news.
On Monday,.Posted by Mark Grace on Tuesday, May 11, 2021
I was sorry to hear about our local friend Gregory Crance , owner of Delaware River Tubing & River Hot Dog Man, died.I enjoyed talking with this guy and his family, he will be missed.Posted by Sande Vajda Neske on Tuesday, May 11, 2021
Crance’s funeral will be held 2 p.m. Sunday at the Decker-Givnish Funeral Home in Warminster. It will also be live-streamed on Facebook.
He loved to talk and had a huge heart. Locals share stories of N.J.’s Famous River Hot Dog Man.
Updated May 13, 2021;
Posted May 12, 2021
Greg Crance, who, since 1987, operated a hotdog stand on a platform stationed in the middle of the Delaware River. Crance died Monday of complications related to COVID.
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He had a heart that was as big as anything.
That’s how a close friend of Greg Crance, ubiquitous for his role as the Famous River Hot Dog Man, described him in the wake of his death on Monday from COVID-related complications.
“He was very passionate about his business and did everything he could as far as the (Delaware) River goes to clean it,” said Wes Siegel, a resident of Delaware Township. “I know him and his boys and his employees once a year would go up and down the river and clean all of the garbage that they would find.
N.J.’s famous Delaware River hot dog man, Greg Crance, dead at 56 from COVID
Updated May 12, 2021;
Posted May 11, 2021
Greg Crance, who, since 1987, operated a hotdog stand on a platform stationed in the middle of the Delaware River. Crance died Monday of complications related to COVID.
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Greg Crance, 56, owner of Delaware River Tubing and widely known as the Famous River Hot Dog Man, died Monday of complications related to COVID.
Delaware River Tubing, Inc. is a tubing, rafting, canoeing and kayaking business located in Alexandria Township that has been offering summer excursions on the river since 2002. Crance began operating a hotdog stand on a platform stationed in the middle of the Delaware River in 1987.
Del val alumna receives Penn President s Engagement Prize nj.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nj.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.