
The form also is available on the District website ( and can be accessed online through the QR code that is included on the order form. Hoagie sale order forms are being emailed home to all Washington Township families. All proceeds from the event will continue to benefit Washington Township families who are facing medical setbacks. Following several years of pandemic-induced pivots to keep the tradition alive, the 2023 campaign will be a throwback to the sales of the past, where student and staff volunteers team at Washington Township High School to build and sell hearty, one-foot hoagies in support of the District’s signature fundraiser. Many families are anxiously awaiting the return of in-person classes.Members of the Washington Township Public Schools’ Helping Hands Hoagie Sale Committee and the Washington Township Education Foundation will go retro and return to the Sale’s roots when they host the District’s 29th Annual Helping Hands Hoagie Sale on Super Bowl Sunday- February 12, 2023. "The district has worked very hard to be able to be in a position to open our schools safely, but trying to maintain that is significantly challenging," he said. He says the decision was not meant to vilify the organizers or students who attended. "Our immediate concern was to make sure that none of the students that we knew were in fact positive were in attendance," said Superintendent Joseph Bollendorf. Once word of the gathering spread on social media, school officials decided to delay the start of in-person classes at the high school as part of a hybrid schedule from Monday to Thursday to conduct contact tracing with the county health department, saying several student-athletes have recently tested positive for COVID-19. "We all just kind of came together and we kind of just all forgot that we all didn't have masks on. "I really just went for that purpose and I know a lot of people went just for that, too," she said. Senior Jordan Farr says while she was nervous about attending, she wanted to remember her friend.
