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Your Local Wildlife Removal in Camden County
Our Raccoon Removal Process
Prevention: After removal, we seal entry points and provide guidance on how to keep raccoons from returning.
Professional Raccoon Exterminators
Raccoons are more than just a nuisance-they can damage your property and pose serious health risks. That’s why professional raccoon control is essential for maintaining a safe home in Mount Ephraim, NJ. At 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal, we offer fast and effective raccoon removal services, using humane methods to protect your property and loved ones. Serving all of Camden County, our expert team is ready to help. Call 609-350-3158 today for reliable raccoon control and peace of mind.
Mount Ephraim was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 23, 1926, from portions of the now-defunct Centre Township. The boroughs of Bellmawr, Runnemede and Lawnside were simultaneously created during the same two-day period. The borough was named for Ephraim Albertson, who owned a tavern in the area in the early 1800s.
In a 1981 decision in Schad v. Mount Ephraim, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a decision authored for the majority by Associate Justice Byron White, the court decided by a 7-2 margin to overturn the convictions of the two owners of a bookstore where there was nude dancing, despite a prohibition against all forms of live entertainment in the borough’s zoning ordinance. The decision cited the First Amendment rights of the storeowners.
In January 2014, New Jersey State Senate President Stephen M. Sweeney put forward a proposal which was intended to lower real estate taxes in the state and cut state expenses by merging many of the states 566 municipalities. Mount Ephraim was then the 29th largest town in Camden County, so it is very likely that the town would have been merged with neighboring municipalities to cut costs, share expenses, reduce bureaucracy, share resources, and reduce the burden in the taxpayers and the state itself. Mount Ephraim was formerly part of Centre Township, which included all of the neighboring communities, and it is possible that the name may be used again in the future if the merger proposal goes forward.
Learn more about Mount Ephraim.