Author: ECCYC

A Permanent Montclair Skate Park Slides Slightly Closer to Reality – Baristanet

Montclair Skate Park

Remember when Montclair’s township council passed a resolution for a permanent Montclair skate park back in July> Then, Skate Essex, a non-profit established to help local communities create safe skateboarding spaces and programs for children, raised funds at the Party 4 the Park in December to be used toward the first phase of the Montclair Skate Park at Rand Park.

On Tuesday, a permanent skate park in Montclair took another small step forward. Councilors Peter Yacobellis and Robin Schlager put up a Resolution to take the next steps for a permanent Skate Park at Rand Park that was ultimately tabled until the next council meeting. The resolution includes:

  • Initiate an analysis of insurance costs and implications for the Township with Garden State Municipal Joint Insurance Fund for the proposed skate park site.
  • Direct the Township to include construction and maintenance of a skate park at Rand Park in the plans for development of new or repurposed recreational facilities in town and in capital budget planning.
  • Direct the Township Manager and such staff as he chooses to collaborate with Skate Essex and/or other to be determined third parties to begin to work through financing, development, operation and maintenance planning for a permanent skate park at Rand Park.
  • Contingent on a favorable outcome from the insurance review, close the remaining two tennis courts at Rand Park and then allow Skate Essex and U.S. Olympian Alexis Sablone to construct professional skate fixtures to be placed on those two courts while the other park remains open for skating.

“Skate Essex has raised all the funds necessary for this work and the engineers are available to do the work beginning in March,” said Yacobellis Tuesday.

Yacobellis also stated that while the funding model, design and work plan are being developed, the plan could include taking down the fence between the two sets of tennis courts to make it one large temporary space and/or allow construction to start on one side while keeping the other open for use.

Yacobellis addressed that by closing the two remaining tennis courts at Rand, Montclair would be left with 14 Township courts and 10 County courts within the Town limits.

“This is a chance to reimagine that whole area. It’s not just about a skatepark,” added Schlager, who has been involved with effort to bring a skate park to Montclair for more than 20 years. Schlager mentioned the possibilities for the area that would include the skate park: enhancing basketball; creating pickleball courts; and adding bathroom facilities. Schlager voted yes for the resolution as did Councilor at Large Robert Russo.

Fourth Ward Councilor David Cummings and First Ward Councilor Bill Hurlock wanted time to review the resolution and voted no at this time. Third Ward Councilor Lori Price Abrams said she would endorse the resolution tonight, but out of a respect for process, would vote no.

Before the vote was finalized, Yacobellis asked to table the resolution until the next council meeting to give the other council members the time they expressed needing. Schlager seconded and the resolution will be on the January 18th agenda.

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Bloomfield, N.J.: A Walkable Suburb With Plenty of Green Space – The New York Times

Looking to move out of their apartment in Jersey City after their first child was born, Angelina and Scott Peters scouted communities in nearby Essex County, N.J. The couple fell in love with Montclair. “But it was a little out of our price range,” said Mr. Peters, 43, who works in the back office of a bank. Then they found Bloomfield, just next door.

In the summer of 2019, the couple, who now have two children, bought a four-bedroom colonial in the northern part of the township for $430,000. They liked the easy access to New York City, the diverse population and the well-regarded Oak View Elementary School in the neighborhood.

Bloomfield also offered “a nice mix of parks and restaurants,” said Ms. Peters, 40, a manager in a customer-experience consulting firm.

Buyers like the Peterses are heating up the housing market in Bloomfield, a township with about 53,000 residents across 5.3 square miles, about 18 miles west of Midtown Manhattan. And the newcomers are arriving during in a time of transition: The downtown shopping district is being redeveloped with more than 600 apartments, the result of the township’s 2003 designation as a transit village by the state of New Jersey, under a program meant to encourage new housing near rail stations.

Housing isn’t the only notable redevelopment. Bloomfield also recently converted a former industrial site into Lion Gate Park, a project that Councilwoman Wartyna L. Davis, the dean of the college of arts, humanities and social sciences at William Paterson University, is especially proud of.

“It was a significant undertaking to turn it from brown to green,” Dr. Davis said of the park, which includes a soccer field, a playground and four acres of wetlands.

Karine Limor, 34, and Rafael Martinez, 43, moved to Bloomfield in the fall of 2018. Ms. Limor, the director of sales for a baby-products company, and Mr. Martinez, a real estate investor, had lived in Manhattan for six years, enjoying the culture, restaurants and convenience of being able to walk nearly everywhere. But when they had their first child, they decided they needed more space and began working with Suburban Jungle, a company that helps urban dwellers find the right fit in suburbia.

The couple paid $540,000 for a three-bedroom colonial near Brookdale Park, the shops and restaurants on Broad Street, and the Watchung Plaza shopping area, in Montclair. They like the blend of suburban green space and urban walkability.

“I’m a big walker,” Ms. Limor said. “There are definitely conveniences in Bloomfield that you can walk to that you might not be able to walk to in a quieter suburb.”

Ms. Limor and Mr. Martinez, now the parents of two boys, have met other young families who moved to Bloomfield recently. “We liked the idea that it was up and coming,” Ms. Limor said. “It’s been very easy to find other like-minded people to connect with as a family.”

Bloomfield is roughly rectangular, sandwiched between Montclair and Glen Ridge to the west, Nutley and Belleville to the east, Clifton to the north and East Orange to the south. The population is diverse: 41 percent white, 29 percent Hispanic, 20 percent Black and 9 percent Asian, according to census data.

Much of the township was developed before World War II, with leafy neighborhoods and early 20th-century homes, including Tudors and colonials, on small lots. Amy Owens, an agent with Keller Williams Realty in Montclair, said that the Brookdale and Oakview neighborhoods are especially popular with young families, because of the highly rated elementary schools.

As in other suburban areas, demand for housing shot up in Bloomfield during the pandemic as buyers looked to leave cities, leading to multiple offers on many homes, said Oneida Mendez-Laws, an agent with Coldwell Banker, in Montclair.

According to the Garden State Multiple Listing Service, in the 12 months ending on Dec. 15, 2021, 516 single-family homes sold at a median price of $440,000; during the previous 12 months, 447 single-family homes sold at a median of $391,000.

A recent check of the multiple listing service found 49 properties on the market, from a studio condominium listed for $110,000 to a renovated three-bedroom colonial listed for $600,000.

The average monthly rent for a one-bedroom in an older building is about $1,500; in a new building, an apartment of a similar size might rent for $2,000 a month, said Michael Sisto, of Sisto Realty in Bloomfield.

Bloomfield has three shopping districts: Bloomfield Center, in the southern part of the township, on Bloomfield Avenue; Broad Street; and upper Broad Street. Green spaces include Watsessing Park, Brookside Park and Brookdale Park, as well as the township green.

Popular food-and-drink establishments include Gencarelli’s, an Italian bakery; Stamna Taverna, a Greek restaurant; Brookside Thai; The Pit Portuguese BBQ; Bloomfield Steak & Seafood House; and Anthony’s Cheesecake & Restaurant. Holsten’s, on Broad Street, offers ice cream and “Sopranos” nostalgia — it was the setting for the much-discussed final scene of the HBO series.

The Bloomfield School District serves about 6,300 students in 11 schools: one early-childhood center serving children in prekindergarten and kindergarten; eight elementary schools serving prekindergarten or kindergarten through sixth grade; one middle school serving seventh and eighth grades; and Bloomfield High School, serving ninth through 12th grades.

In the 2019-20 school year, the average SAT scores for Bloomfield High School students were 499 in math and 499 in reading and writing, compared with state averages of 536 in each. The student population is about 42 percent Hispanic, 26 percent white, 23 percent Black and 7 percent Asian.

Private school options in the area include the Montclair Kimberley Academy, for students in kindergarten through 12th grade; Montclair Cooperative School, an elementary school; and two Catholic elementary schools, St. Cassian in Montclair and St. Thomas the Apostle in Bloomfield.

Bloomfield is on New Jersey Transit’s Montclair-Boonton line, and trains stop at two stations in the township, Bloomfield Station and Watsessing Avenue Station. From either, the trip to Penn Station in Manhattan takes just over a half-hour and costs $6.75 one way or $184 monthly.

The train is “a huge draw for New Yorkers,” said Roy Castro, of Living New Jersey Realty, in nearby Lyndhurst. Some even find that their commutes improve, Mr. Castro said, citing one client who recently shortened his commute to Manhattan by moving to Bloomfield from Brooklyn.

Depending on traffic, New Jersey Transit buses can take 45 to 60 minutes (or longer) to reach the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Midtown; the one-way fare from the Allwood Road park-and-ride station, just over the border in Clifton, is $6, or $167 a month.

For those who prefer to drive, the Garden State Parkway runs north-south through Bloomfield, and Route 3 and Interstate 280 are major east-west highways nearby.

The Morris Canal, a 19th-century engineering marvel, ran through Bloomfield on its way to Jersey City and the Hudson River. The canal allowed for the transport of coal from Pennsylvania and iron ore from northwestern New Jersey, but ultimately it could not compete with the railroads, and was shut down in the early 20th century. In Bloomfield, parts of the Garden State Parkway and John F. Kennedy Drive were built on the bed of the old canal, said Jean Kuras, the president of the township’s Historical Society. Bloomfield was also once an industrial powerhouse, home to factories that produced consumer goods for General Electric, Schering-Plough, Clark Thread and Charms Candy.

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Essex County Man Charged with Sex Trafficking | USAO-NJ – Department of Justice

NEWARK, N.J. – An Essex County, New Jersey, man made his initial appearance today on charges of sex trafficking, U.S. Attorney Philip R. Sellinger announced today.

Amin Sharif, 47, of Newark, is charged by criminal complaint with one count of attempted sex trafficking an adult woman and one count of sex trafficking a minor. Sharif appeared by videoconference before U.S. Magistrate Judge Cathy L. Waldor and was detained.

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

Since January 2021, law enforcement officials have been investigating Sharif for transporting and attempting to transport women and minors from various states to New Jersey and elsewhere for the purpose of engaging in commercial sex acts and other illicit conduct.  Sharif used several social media platforms and profiles to recruit women and minors to engage in sex acts for money. Once in contact with his victims, Sharif used threats to coerce the victims into engaging in commercial sex acts. He advertised women and at least one underage girl online for commercial sex acts. Sharif also transported at least one underage girl located in another state into New Jersey and attempted to transport a woman located in another state into New Jersey via a commercial airline, in furtherance of his sex trafficking conduct.

The counts with which Sharif is charged are each punishable by a mandatory minimum of 15 years in prison and a maximum penalty of life in prison.

U.S. Attorney Sellinger credited special agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge George M. Crouch Jr. in Newark and Special Agent in Charge Jacqueline Maguire in Philadelphia, and officers of the Allentown, Pennsylvania, Police Department, under the direction of Chief Charles Roca, with the investigation leading to the charges.

The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kimberly Mitchell of the U.S. Attorney’s Office OCDETF and Narcotics Unit in Newark.

The charges and allegations contained in the complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

These NJ School Districts Have Switched To All Remote | Woodbridge, NJ Patch – Patch.com

NEW JERSEY — New Jersey parents, are your children back to virtual learning?

You are not alone. Gov. Phil Murphy said Monday that despite the highest case numbers recorded and hospitalizations now back at April 2020 levels, he will not enforce a statewide return to virtual learning. Read more: Close NJ Schools? Murphy Says No Amid COVID-19 ‘Tsunami’

Instead, Murphy said he would leave it up to each individual school district or board of education to decide what is best. And plenty of districts are choosing to go virtual on their own. A few, such as Red Bank, even closed entirely for a few days this week, citing soaring case positives among students and teachers.

Find out what’s happening in Woodbridge with free, real-time updates from Patch.

“We currently have no intention or plan to shut our schools,” Murphy said during a news conference Monday. “We have no desire to return to remote learning, which is suboptimal as we all know in terms of learning, instruction and learning loss. Certainly, individual schools and districts may make their own decisions after consulting with their own local health departments, but we will do everything we can to keep our kids in school, where we know they will have a more appropriate educational experience and where the data actually shows they can be kept in an overall reality safe.”

Patch has rounded up schools in the state that have “gone virtual” so far as 2022 begins:

Find out what’s happening in Woodbridge with free, real-time updates from Patch.

Essex County:

Millburn: Millburn schools were initially going to do half days this first week back from winter break, but a high number of teacher absences made them pivot to all virtual through Jan. 7.

South Orange-Maplewood: All remote until Jan. 7.

Montclair schools are actually remaining in person, but the district is providing a temporary remote option for parents who wish to keep their children home, administrators say.

Newark: All virtual until Jan. 18.

Union County:

Westfield: Half days through Jan. 7. Morning session will be in-person. Afternoon session will consist of 1-hour of “remote instructional support.”

Cranford: All virtual through Jan. 7.

Scotch Plains-Fanwood: Half days through Jan. 7. Students only come in for the morning session. No in-person or virtual class through the afternoon.

Plainfield: Virtual until Jan. 18.

Elizabeth: Elizabeth Public Schools are fully remote for two weeks, returning January 18.

Middlesex/Mercer counties:

Woodbridge: All three of Woodbridge’s high schools are virtual through Jan. 5, due to COVID-related teacher shortages. The rest of the district so far remains in person.

New Brunswick: New Brunswick schools have among the longest virtual schedule in the state, with students all virtual for the next two weeks, through Jan. 14.

Princeton: Princeton High School is remote through Jan. 7 due to having so many teachers out with COVID. The rest of the district is still in person.

East Brunswick: All schools in the district are virtual this week due to COVID-19-related staff shortages.

Lawrence Township: All schools virtual through Jan. 7.

Hamilton: All virtual through Jan. 7.

Piscataway: All virtual through Jan. 18.

South Amboy: All virtual through Jan. 7.

South Brunswick: Another two-week all virtual schedule. Students will return for in-person class Jan. 18.

Somerset County:

Hillsborough: All virtual through Jan. 7.

Bridgewater-Raritan Regional: The first day back, Monday, was an all-virtual day and then rest of the week is half days.

Watchung Hills Regional (serving Warren, Watchung, Green Brook and Long Hill): High school is doing half days this week, but the rest of the district remains in person.

Hudson County:

Hoboken: All schools virtual through Wednesday.

Jersey City: Virtual through Jan. 7.

Secaucus: All virtual through Jan. 14.

Monmouth County:

Little Silver: Virtual through Jan. 7.

Red Bank: Closed Monday and Tuesday due to high case numbers. Red Bank Regional High School is remote through Jan. 7.

Ocean County:

Lakehurst Elementary school (not the entire district): All virtual learning this week.

Jackson school district: Fully virtual through Jan. 7. “This is due to insurmountable COVID-related staffing shortages,” said the superintendent in this letter to parents. “We apologize for the late notice but our situation has changed. On Sunday, our numbers allowed us to transport and educate our students safely. In the hours passed since our update Sunday afternoon, we have had a drastic change to the number of staff who will be out due to COVID. Based on those numbers we can not safely open our buildings or transport students to and from school this week.”

South Jersey:

Black Horse Pike Regional School District (serving Gloucester Township, Bellmawr and Runnemede): All virtual through Jan. 7.

Burlington City schools: All virtual through Jan. 14.

Get great local news. Sign up for Patch emails: https://patch.com/subscribe Contact this Patch reporter: Carly.baldwin@patch.com

‘Not in My Town!’ Many New Jerseyans Resist Marijuana Dispensaries Close to Home – New Jersey Monthly

Illustration by Scott Bakal

Lacey Township Mayor Peter Curatolo doesn’t want his town to become a pot pit-stop when recreational dispensaries start opening up around New Jersey later this year.

Although 64 percent of Lacey’s residents voted last year to legalize recreational marijuana across the Garden State, many do not approve of its sale or cultivation in their community, leading the Ocean County township to opt out of allowing shops and other cannabis-related businesses to operate there in the near future, Curatolo says. “If we had chosen to opt in, our Parkway exit would be a pot destination,” he says. “I don’t badmouth the product or the people who grow it, but it’s best sold somewhere else. My job as mayor is to look out for the health and safety of our town.”

Nearly 71 percent of New Jersey communities—or about 400 towns—will not allow cannabis businesses in their municipalities, according to a USA Today Network analysis of marijuana ordinances, with some mayors saying they will take a wait-and-see approach as operations begin in the coming months.

WHY SAY NO (FOR NOW)?

The issue of dispensaries has sparked discussion and, often, controversy in towns all over the state. New Jersey voters approved legislation, by a margin of 2 to 1, last year to legalize recreational pot, yet a large number of individual towns were hesitant to allow weed so close to home.

Communities had until August 2021 to decide whether to allow cannabis businesses—including dispensaries, where adults 21 and over would be able to buy an ounce of marijuana. Many towns held off on making a decision until the last minute, when the Cannabis Regulatory Commission issued its rules describing how the operations would work.

In Lacey, the town’s governing body based its decision to opt out on residents’ concerns, as well as advice from the Ocean County sheriff, the town police chief, the Board of County Commissioners and the school board. Curatolo understands the issues well; he had been the Ocean County Health Department coordinator and the Ocean County Intoxicated Driver Resource Center director. “We don’t want to see increased DUI, increased addiction and gangs on the street,” he says.

Another factor for local leaders: Any town that opted in was locked into that decision for five years, while a community that opted out could later change its mind. Livingston Mayor Shawn Klein says that while his town opted out because “there was a tremendous amount of apprehension and concern about children,” he hasn’t shut the door. In the future, the Essex County town might entertain the prospect of growing, manufacturing and selling cannabis at an empty indoor facility, where the general public wouldn’t be affected. Klein says he doesn’t want to say a blanket no to legal, viable businesses, when tax money could help lower property taxes.

So Livingston’s leaders will sit back, wait and watch what others do this year. “We can benefit from what towns with dispensaries learn,” Klein says. “We need time to see that towns’ dispensaries don’t cause problems for kids.”

GROWING OPPORTUNITY

Legalization has created opportunities for both new and growing businesses, which can apply for six types of licenses—with retail sales attracting the most interest. Towns with ample room in warehouses or outdoor areas may attract cannabis growers. Licenses are also available for cannabis manufacturing (the making of cannabis products), distribution (transporting cannabis items between cultivators and manufacturers and selling them to a retail store), delivery (transporting a purchase from retailer to consumer) and wholesale.

When dispensaries will open remains up in the air. In August, the Cannabis Regulatory Commission declared legal sales would begin in February, but a spring date is more realistic, according to John Kagia, chief knowledge officer at New Frontier Data, a data, analytics and research organization specializing in the cannabis industry. License applications for pot growers, manufacturers and testing labs opened on December 15, but applications for dispensaries are not expected to be available until March 15.

Medical-marijuana dispensaries, meanwhile, were legalized in New Jersey in 2019. The state’s 23 medical dispensaries, which are owned by 10 operators and service about 117,000 registered medical-marijuana patients, will be able to expand this year to include recreational users if they can show they have enough cannabis for their medical patients.

PLOTTING THE ISSUES 

Some towns decided to opt in to the canabis business at least in part for the revenue that the 2 percent tax on dispensaries would bring. Fair criminal justice and personal and ethical issues played a part as well. In Jersey City, Mayor Steven Fulop calls the industry “an untapped resource that will serve as a great asset to our local economy and community and an opportunity to take part in a new industry.” Revenues from the tax will be evenly split to benefit public schools and to create social programs for those adversely affected by previous marijuana laws, he says.

Jersey City will allow all six classifications of cannabis operations, though the location of the businesses will be regulated, and cannabis consumption will not be permitted in any public place, indoors or outdoors. Cannabis lounges connected to dispensaries will be allowed.

Flemington is another municipality that approved marijuana dispensaries, following council discussions and after 71 percent of residents voted for legalization with little opposition at a public hearing. Betsy Driver, mayor of the Hunterdon County borough, says she hopes the two planned dispensaries will revive the town’s business district. “I don’t want to leave that tax money on the table,” Driver says. “We’re looking forward to attracting people who see a cannabis dispensary as a destination, especially since surrounding towns have opted out.”

Governor Phil Murphy and other lawmakers say social justice was their main motivation for supporting legalized recreational marijuana. Says Fulop: “A big part of the decision to opt in involves social justice, the disproportionate incarceration and arrest rate for possession of marijuana between whites and the minority population.”

A 2018 ACLU analysis found that Black New Jersey residents were arrested for pot possession at a rate that was 3.45 times higher than their white counterparts.

Adrienne Fusaro, an African-American resident of Flemington, agreed with her town’s decision to opt in. “Even if you did time 20 years before, your arrest and conviction will impact you for life, and Latinos and African-Americans are disproportionately affected,” Fusaro says. “Legalized marijuana will lead to fair criminal justice.”

Meanwhile, in Southwest Bergen County, the mayors and governing bodies in 10 small, intertwined towns—Wood-Ridge, Hasbrouck Heights, East Rutherford, Carlstadt, Wallington, Rutherford, Lyndhurst, South Hackensack, North Arlington and Moonachie—are taking a novel approach after all opting in.

The communities are working together to establish a coordinated policy regulating the cannabis industry. Retailer and delivery licenses will not be permitted within any of the municipalities, since the business districts are near residential neighborhoods, educational and recreational facilities, and other places the public frequents.

But the towns will permit cultivator, manufacturer, wholesaler and bulk-distributor licenses in industrial zones that are not near public areas—a move that could provide valuable insight for towns that, initially, just said no.


Eleanor Gilman is a frequent contributor with a special interest in health and lifestyle issues.

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What Are Monmouth County’s Best Towns? – 943thepoint.com

Monmouth County overall is a really awesome place to live, and it wouldn’t be very easy to boil the best towns to live in Monmouth County down to 10. But, that’s exactly what one national publication did. Let’s see if you agree.

Let me start with this bombshell. Colts Neck is not one of the Top 10 best places to live in Monmouth County according to this report. I couldn’t wait to hear the top 10 when I thought Colts Neck was on the list. Now I really can’t wait.

The site that put this list together was Niche, and wait until you hear some of the sources they got data from before making their list. It wasn’t neighbors and tourists and nice local people.

No, it was more like the FBI, the CDC, and the U.S, Census. So, it wasn’t like the list was thrown together without much thought. There is data here that sounds very official. You, know national security stuff or something. Who knows.

I know. You want to get to the list that doesn’t include Colts Neck, right? Alright, but before we do, I’ve got another bombshell. Ready? Spring Lake didn’t make the list either. What? So, this list is trying to tell us there are ten better towns to be a resident of in Monmouth County than Colts Neck and Spring Lake? You had me at hello.

So let’s get to it. 2021’s best towns to live in, according to Niche.

#10 Sea Girt

#9 Matawan

#8 Morganville

#7 Brielle

#6 Robertsville

#5 Manasquan

#4 Rumson

#3 Holmdel

#2 Fair Haven

#1 Little Silver

I have to go back to my original point, that to me the ommissions are more surprising than the towns that did make the list. So I started to ask around. I asked people with a lot of knowledge of the area (but no CDC, FBI, etc info) which towns they thought should make the list.

Then I added my own unscientific opinions, and we came up with our own top 10. So, it’s more like a “where I’d love to live” list. See what you think.

Our Best Monmouth County Towns To Live In For 2021

Remember, our list has close to no data to back it, just the love of some great towns in one of the most amazing counties in the state. Hope you enjoyed!

And Now We Check The Whole State

Stacker compiled a list of the best places to live in New Jersey using data from Niche. Niche ranks places to live based on a variety of factors including cost of living, schools, health care, recreation, and weather. Cities, suburbs, and towns were included. Listings and images are from realtor.com.

On the list, there’s a robust mix of offerings from great schools and nightlife to high walkability and public parks. Some areas have enjoyed rapid growth thanks to new businesses moving to the area, while others offer glimpses into area history with well-preserved architecture and museums. Keep reading to see if your hometown made the list.

The 100 Best Places to Live on the East Coast

Top 20 Baby Names in New Jersey

Every year we find out the top baby names in each state. Here are the top ten names for boys and girls in the state of New Jersey. I don’t know about you, but number one, for both, is really good.

COVID Closes Early Childhood Center Near West Orange/Livingston Border – Patch

ESSEX COUNTY, NJ — The director of a popular early childhood center serving Essex County announced late Monday afternoon that the center would have to close for the rest of the week because of COVID cases among staff.

But she said that depending on test results that are received from last month, they may be able to reopen Monday or sooner.

Leslie Fleischman, the director of early childhood programs for the Jewish Community Center (Metrowest) — based in West Orange and serving much of — said on Monday that because of positive COVID cases and outstanding test results, the day care programs would have to close for now.

“Due to a very high demand for testing,” she wrote in her letter to families on Monday afternoon, “our JCC test results remain outstanding for many staff. Additionally several staff members are presenting with symptoms, and results that are coming in have had a high ratio of positivity.”

She said this could cause a staffing shortage, but hopefully a short-term one.

“Rather than a day by day decision, we have made the difficult choice to choose to keep our ECC closed … for the remainder of this week,” she said. “If we can open any sooner than Monday, Jan. 10th we will and we will communicate to you immediately. By Monday, January 10th, from our December 30 testing, should an individual have had a positive result, the full 10 days that we require positive individuals to isolate will be complete.”

The rest of the letter is below.

Meanwhile, these were the 3,806 new cases of coronavirus reported in Essex County yesterday since the day before:

Courtesy Count of Essex

The Letter To Families

Dear Families,

This is the communication you have been waiting for, but unfortunately not the news you want.

Due to a very high demand for testing our JCC test results remain outstanding for many staff. Additionally several staff members are presenting with symptoms, and results that are coming in have had a high ratio of positivity. We are anticipating the ratio of returns to positive results to continue at the same rate. This presents what we hope to be a very short-term staffing shortage.

Rather than a day by day decision, we have made the difficult choice to choose to keep our ECC closed due to a staffing shortage as well as the high rate of positive cases and a lack of test results for the remainder of this week. If we can open any sooner than Monday, Jan. 10th we will and we will communicate to you immediately. By Monday, January 10th, from our December 30 testing, should an individual have had a positive result, the full 10 days that we require positive individuals to isolate will be complete.

If you have had a chance to review the flowchart we sent out last week and again today, http://eepurl.com/hRbHLf you can see that all positive cases of the ECC are still required to be out 10 days either from the date of the positive test results or onset of symptoms. The CDC requirement for a person testing positive that is vaccinated can return to the workplace in 5 days with a strict masking policy. As our teaching staff, in most cases is with children 7 hours or more a day and working around unvaccinated, susceptible children, we do not feel that the CDC policy applies to our vulnerable population, your children.

Additionally, we are not willing to accept rapid test results as they are not as sensitive and asymptomatic individuals do still spread the virus. Again, it is our business to proceed in the manner that we believe best protects all children in our school.

We understand how this interrupts not only your adult responsibilities, but also your child’s routine. We are agonizing over these decisions and will continue to do everything we can to provide a safe environment for your child and get them back to the ECC as soon as possible.

It is my hope that we have answered your questions or explained our decision thoroughly. We will keep you promptly informed as we move forward.

All the best,

Leslie

COVID Closes Early Childhood Center Near West Orange/Livingston Border – Livingston, NJ Patch

ESSEX COUNTY, NJ — The director of a popular early childhood center serving Essex County announced late Monday afternoon that the center would have to close for the rest of the week because of COVID cases among staff.

But she said that depending on test results that are received from last month, they may be able to reopen Monday or sooner.

Leslie Fleischman, the director of early childhood programs for the Jewish Community Center (Metrowest) — based in West Orange and serving much of — said on Monday that because of positive COVID cases and outstanding test results, the day care programs would have to close for now.

“Due to a very high demand for testing,” she wrote in her letter to families on Monday afternoon, “our JCC test results remain outstanding for many staff. Additionally several staff members are presenting with symptoms, and results that are coming in have had a high ratio of positivity.”

She said this could cause a staffing shortage, but hopefully a short-term one.

“Rather than a day by day decision, we have made the difficult choice to choose to keep our ECC closed … for the remainder of this week,” she said. “If we can open any sooner than Monday, Jan. 10th we will and we will communicate to you immediately. By Monday, January 10th, from our December 30 testing, should an individual have had a positive result, the full 10 days that we require positive individuals to isolate will be complete.”

The rest of the letter is below.

Meanwhile, these were the 3,806 new cases of coronavirus reported in Essex County yesterday since the day before:

Courtesy Count of Essex

The Letter To Families

Dear Families,

This is the communication you have been waiting for, but unfortunately not the news you want.

Due to a very high demand for testing our JCC test results remain outstanding for many staff. Additionally several staff members are presenting with symptoms, and results that are coming in have had a high ratio of positivity. We are anticipating the ratio of returns to positive results to continue at the same rate. This presents what we hope to be a very short-term staffing shortage.

Rather than a day by day decision, we have made the difficult choice to choose to keep our ECC closed due to a staffing shortage as well as the high rate of positive cases and a lack of test results for the remainder of this week. If we can open any sooner than Monday, Jan. 10th we will and we will communicate to you immediately. By Monday, January 10th, from our December 30 testing, should an individual have had a positive result, the full 10 days that we require positive individuals to isolate will be complete.

If you have had a chance to review the flowchart we sent out last week and again today, http://eepurl.com/hRbHLf you can see that all positive cases of the ECC are still required to be out 10 days either from the date of the positive test results or onset of symptoms. The CDC requirement for a person testing positive that is vaccinated can return to the workplace in 5 days with a strict masking policy. As our teaching staff, in most cases is with children 7 hours or more a day and working around unvaccinated, susceptible children, we do not feel that the CDC policy applies to our vulnerable population, your children.

Additionally, we are not willing to accept rapid test results as they are not as sensitive and asymptomatic individuals do still spread the virus. Again, it is our business to proceed in the manner that we believe best protects all children in our school.

We understand how this interrupts not only your adult responsibilities, but also your child’s routine. We are agonizing over these decisions and will continue to do everything we can to provide a safe environment for your child and get them back to the ECC as soon as possible.

It is my hope that we have answered your questions or explained our decision thoroughly. We will keep you promptly informed as we move forward.

All the best,

Leslie