Author: ECCYC

Woman accused of kidnapping child from N.J. apartment was a neighbor – NJ.com

A woman accused of kidnapping a 4-year-old boy from a Salem City apartment complex also lived in the apartment community and allegedly took the child while he was playing, according to court records.

Daishaliz Velez Fernandez, 25, was arrested in Delaware on Monday afternoon, about five hours after the abduction from Harvest Point Apartments, located on Grieves Parkway in Salem.

She allegedly took the boy to Pennsylvania before ending up in Delaware, where the child was found in her vehicle and recovered unharmed. Velez Fernandez was arrested at the scene without incident.

An Amber Alert was issued Monday afternoon, shortly before the child was located.

Authorities say Velez Fernandez and the child had no known relationship.

Maintenance staff at Harvest Point reported seeing the child in a car being driven by a woman around 11:30 a.m. Monday, according to Salem County Prosecutor Kristin Telsey.

A guard gate at the entrance to the complex monitors those coming in, Salem Police Chief John Pelura III noted, but no clearance is required as people leave Harvest Point.

Pelura praised the work by apartment complex employees.

“Harvest Point security and staff were instrumental in us locating the vehicle and the abductor,” he said.

Velez Fernandez is accused of taking the child and driving to Pennsylvania, where they visited a Walmart store before heading to Delaware, investigators revealed in a criminal complaint filed in the case.

The child was taken “without the consent of the parent or guardian of the child,” the complaint states.

Exactly how she was able to get to the child remains under investigation, Telsey said.

Police were able to make contact with Velez Fernandez by phone and remained on the phone with her until she was located by Delaware State Police on Route 13 in New Castle around 4:30 p.m. Monday.

She is charged with first-degree kidnapping and third-degree endangering the welfare of a child.

Velez Fernandez remains jailed in Delaware pending extradition to New Jersey.

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Matt Gray may be reached at mgray@njadvancemedia.com.

Five State Senate Republicans develop new plans to repeal specific sex education mandates – wobm.com

Amid the ongoing debate and conversation on new sex education standards and requirements set to head into school curriculums this fall, five New Jersey State GOP Senators have developed new plans with hopes of providing different outcomes and courses of action.

State Senator Holly Schepisi (R-39) and State Senate Republican Leader Steve Oroho (R-24) are teaming up to introduce legislation that, if passed, would repeal the sex education mandates set to be implemented by the New Jersey State Board of Education and allow parents and local communities to have more of a voice in deciding what their children learn in the classrooms.

Their legislation comes on the heels of Senate Republicans pitching their “Three Rs” plan which would repeal, replace, and restore curriculum requirements.

If the bill should pass, the State Board would not be allowed to adopt any future Student Learning Standards in Comprehensive Health and Physical Education or mandate any similar curriculum requirements in health and physical education classes, according to a statement from Senators Schepisi and Oroho.

Their legislation also “directs local boards of education to adopt curriculum standards for the instruction of students in the subjects of health and physical education within 180 days of bill’s enactment” and “ensures that important topics continue to be taught, including suicide prevention; organ donation; sexual abuse and assault; dating violence; gang violence; cardiopulmonary resuscitation; sexting; consent for physical contact and sexual activity; mental health; the “New Jersey Safe Haven Infant Protection Act”; breast self-examination; and substance abuse.”

“The current controversy over the extreme mandates imposed by unelected Trenton bureaucrats demonstrates exactly why we need to empower parents and local communities to control how sex education is taught in their children’s schools,” Senator Schepisi said in a written statement. “We believe sex education should be taught to students in an age-appropriate manner that is determined by local school boards in close consultation with parents. Different communities will likely find they have different perspectives on how best to teach sex education, and that’s okay. Under our legislation, they will have the authority to adopt learning standards that best fit the needs and concerns of their students and families without intrusive mandates from Trenton.”

“Parents have told us they are deeply concerned that state mandates to teach lessons about gender identity and various sexual acts are extreme and inappropriate for young children,” Senator Oroho said in a written statement. “They feel like important decisions on what must be taught to their children were decided in a back room before they even found out those discussions were taking place. That should never be the case. We’re going to fight for parents to take control of sex education away from inaccessible Trenton insiders and “Give It Back” to our communities. Republicans believe parents should always have a say.”

Meanwhile, State Senator Kristin Corrado (R-40) and State Senator Anthony Bucco (R-25) teamed up separately from the Schepisi-Oroho bill to introduce similar legislation called the “Parents Bill of Rights Act” which they explain would “provide parents substantially more information about what their children will be taught in school and to expand their ability to opt-out of concerning lessons to the entire curriculum.”

Their legislation is also part of the State Senate GOP’s “Three Rs” plan specifically would provide more parental rights in what is included in curriculums and in having more of a voice in deciding standards for their children’s education which Senators Corrado and Bucco explain that their legislation would lead to parents “having a summary of the curriculum to be taught to their child in the current school year, be able to review the curriculum to be taught to their child in the current school year, be able to review a list of the media services, textbooks, and books that are used in the classroom and that are available to a student through the school district, and opt their child out of any curriculum that the parent or guardian believes is in conflict with their conscience or sincerely held moral or religious beliefs.”

If their bill is passed, Senators Corrado and Bucco explain that their legislation would also prohibit “a school or school district from interfering with a parent or guardian’s fundamental right to engage in and direct their child’s education or denying a request by a parent or guardian for information made pursuant to the provisions of the bill.”

Senators Corrado and Bucco point to already existing laws that would allow opt-outs but only in certain circumstances: “N.J.S.A.18A:35-4.7 allows a parent or guardian to exclude a student from “health, family life education or sex education” by signing a statement that the instruction is in conflict with their conscience or sincerely held moral or religious beliefs,” and, “N.J.S.A.18A:35-4.25 permits a student to opt-out of science activities related to animal dissection.  Specifically, any student “may refuse to dissect, vivisect, incubate, capture or otherwise harm or destroy animals or any parts thereof as part of a course of instruction.”

Their legislation, in part, looks to expand on that and allow parents to opt their sons and daughters out of sexual education classes that touch on a variety of topics they don’t wish to have their children learning.

“The recent controversy over new sex education mandates from Trenton has really opened the eyes of parents to the fact that portions of their children’s curriculum are inappropriate and extreme,” State Senator Corrado said in a written statement. “Parents are calling us nonstop to say they want to review what their kids are being taught and they want the right to exclude their children from lessons that conflict with their values. They’re absolutely shocked to learn how little power they have when it comes to overseeing their children’s education. Our new bill resets the balance of power in favor of parents where it belongs.”

“Parents can exclude their child from portions of sex education in health class or from dissecting a frog in biology, but they can’t opt-out from concerning lessons taught in other parts of the curriculum,” State Senator Bucco said in a written statement. “That’s a growing problem because new Trenton mandates are forcing controversial topics such as gender identity and sexual orientation to be discussed in a variety of subjects and at every grade level. It looks like an intentional effort by Democrats to make it harder for parents to know where controversial lessons are being taught and impossible for them to opt-out. Our ‘Parental Bill of Rights Act’ will give back the power to parents that Governor Murphy has taken away.”

There is a fifth New Jersey GOP State Senator who issued a statement on Monday as well and he is calling for change as it relates to the products being placed in boys’ bathrooms at school.

State Senator Michael Doherty (R-23) wants to see amendments to legislation approved by the Senate Education Committee that permits feminine hygiene products such as tampons and sanitary napkins to be placed in boys’ bathrooms.

“It’s absolutely nuts that nobody could tell us in committee today if the proposed bill applies only to girls’ bathrooms,” State Senator Doherty said in a written statement. “It would be completely and utterly ridiculous to force New Jersey schools to make tampons and sanitary napkins available in boys’ bathrooms. It would be an immense waste of money and is almost certain to lead to vandalism that could be quite costly to repair. The sponsors should accept reasonable amendments to make clear that the legislation applies to girls’ rooms only.”

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Stockelberg, Held, Donnelly Achieve Eagle Scout Rank – MyVeronaNJ

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John Stockelberg, David Held and George Donnelly, members of Verona Boy Scouts of America Troop 2, have achieved the rank of Eagle Scout and were honored at a Court of Honor on Saturday, May 7.

The path to Eagle Scout, a level that only 2.5% of Scouts achieve, is a commitment that spans a bulk of the youth’s life, typically starting around kindergarten, and accelerating in junior high and high school. A Scout must complete requirements that demonstrate their mastery of outdoor skills, leadership tasks and community service projects.

The Eagle Scout achievement is an honor Scouts carry for their entire lives.

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“Somebody asked me if I was an Eagle Scout, ” said incoming Scoutmaster Craig Hanlon at the Court of Honor, which was held at the First Presbyterian Church of Verona. “And I thought about it for a moment and said ‘No, I am still an Eagle Scout. You never stop being one.’”

Indeed, Scouting is designed to prepare young boys and girls for whatever career path they choose by teaching collaboration, community activism, leadership and environmental reverence.

Held, a Verona High School senior who is planning on studying nursing at Seton Hall University, has demonstrated a commitment to his community by volunteering at Verona Rescue Squad for several years. His Eagle Scout service project involved the planning and construction of a bird observatory to enhance outdoor experiential learning for children and 10 boardwalks that allow visitors to better access the trails throughout the Essex County Environmental Center.

Donnelly is a junior and a member of the VHS chapter of Model United Nations, the French Club and the History Club. His Eagle project oversaw the building and installation of a miniature library placed at a beach entrance path in Lavallette. The library, dedicated to the memory of his grandmother, Susan P. Donnelly, who was a schoolteacher and librarian, encourages visitors to borrow, lend and share books.

Stockelberg is a remarkably young Eagle Scout, having completed his requirements before he finished his freshman year. He coordinated with the New Jersey Fish and Wildlife department to enhance the environmental experience at the Black River Wildlife Area. Stockelberg, who is a member of the varsity wrestling and football teams, built and installed bluebird and wood duck boxes. In addition, he worked on other projects at Black River, such as overseeing the planting of dozens of new trees and removing invasive plant growth. These efforts are part of requirements for the distinguished National Conservation award.

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Verona BSA Troop 2 is chartered by the First Congregational Church of Verona. For more information on Troop 2, please contact [email protected]

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Uproar over N.J. sex ed standards escalates as Senate panel debates proposal – NJ.com

For two hours Monday, a state Senate panel heard often-heated testimony from parents’ rights groups, conservative advocates, and religious leaders warning about young children being sexually exploited and exposed to topics such as pornography, sexual orientation, and gender identity under New Jersey’s updated sex education standards.

Republican lawmakers, meanwhile, repeated their calls to repeal the incoming guidelines, despite Democrats who insist the issue is being twisted and blown out of proportion.

In the end, the Senate Education Committee voted along party lines to move forward with a Democratic-sponsored bill that aims to allay fears by mandating school districts publish their sex ed curriculums online in the summer, ensuring parents can ask questions about the lessons, and reinforcing their right to opt children out of the classes.

“We will know what’s going on in our curricula in all of our school districts,” state Sen. Vin Gopal, D-Monmouth, the committee’s chairman and bill’s main sponsor, said during the hearing at the Statehouse in Trenton. “If we see bad actors out there, this is how we will address that.”

The new standards, adopted by the state Board of Education in June 2020, outline when students in the Garden State should learn about topics such as sexual orientation, gender identity, and anatomy. It’s up to individual school districts to implement their own curricula based on the standards starting in the 2022-23 school year.

But there has been sustained uproar in recent weeks from Republican officials and some parents who say the guidelines go too far. The issue exploded in recent weeks after the Westfield school district released sample lessons the state provided on a resource page — though local officials insisted they were merely examples and won’t be part of the curriculum in the fall.

Gov. Phil Murphy and fellow Democrats, who control the state Legislature, have defended the guidelines, saying they will provide students with a more inclusive education and that critics are misrepresenting what the standards actually say and maligning the LGTBQ community to score political points.

The standards are still on schedule and the state Board of Education president last week said the panel will not re-evaluate them despite a request by four of its 13 members to do so.

Gopal — who narrowly won re-election last year — and other Democratic lawmakers sponsored the bill that advanced Monday (S2481) to give parents a greater say in the matter. It would require school boards in the state to offer an annual opportunity for parents and guardians and any other residents, to provide comments on any curriculum using the New Jersey Student Learning Standards in Comprehensive Health and Physical Education proposed for the succeeding school year.

This was the first time the measure received a public hearing. The result was less a debate on the bill and more a forum for Republicans and some advocates to keep pressing Democrats to repeal the standards completely and start over.

Rev. Gregory Quinlan of the Center for Garden State Families said the standards would allow teachers to “groom” students for “sex traffickers” — an argument often raised by the far right on social media, using a stereotype that says LGBTQ people are trying to indoctrinate young people.

“Sir, you are completely out of line,” Gopal responded.

The chairman repeatedly chided speakers and Republican lawmakers for bringing up topics not related to the bill but to the standards instead.

“We’re talking about transparency in curriculum,” Gopal said. “Something you should all want. But for some reason, you’re all opposed.”

State Sen. Michael Doherty, R-Warren, said many parents “don’t want sexual orientation being taught” kindergarten, first grade, or second grade.

“They think it’s a little too early,” Doherty said.

The new standards do not say students should learn about sexual orientation in those grades but that “all individuals should feel welcome and included regardless of their gender, gender expression, or sexual orientation” by the end of fifth grade. They say by second grade, teachers should “discuss the range of ways people express their gender and how gender-role stereotypes may limit behavior.”

Just before the hearing began Monday, Republican lawmakers introduced two separate bills that would repeal the standards, prohibit the state Board of Education from issuing new health and physical education standards, and increase parents’ say in schools’ curricula.

“The current controversy over the extreme mandates imposed by unelected Trenton bureaucrats demonstrates exactly why we need to empower parents and local communities to control how sex education is taught in their children’s schools,” said Sen. Holly Schepisi, R-Bergen one of the sponsors.

Doherty on Monday called for lawmakers to consider those bills instead, saying Gopal’s measure “won’t change the standards at all.” He said the Republican proposal would “address legitimate concerns” of parents and “put decisions about how to teach sex education 100% in the hands of local school boards, parents, and their communities.”

It’s unlikely the Republican bills would get a vote in the Legislature, which is controlled by Democrats who determine which measures get considered.

Gopal stressed Monday the state Board of Education already voted on the standards and his bill would give parents a chance to come before school districts to ask questions and lobby for changes. He said said time is of the essence because if the bill isn’t passed soon, there will be no mandate by September for districts to post their sex and health curricula online.

“At the end of the day, if we don’t pass this today, we have nothing,” the chairman said. “I think it’s a really good start.”

The Senate committee ultimately approved the bill 3-1-1. Gopal and two other Democrats, Sens. Sandra Cunningham of Hudson County and Shirley Turner of Mercer County, voted in favor, while Doherty voted no and state Sen. Samuel Thompson, R-Middlesex, abstained.

It must now be passed by both the full Senate and state Assembly before Murphy could decide whether to sign it into law. Gopal said he expects the Assembly to consider the measure.

This all comes in the wake of Florida’s controversial “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which bans schools in the state from teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity in pre-school through third grade, and 15 similar laws proposed in other states.

The Senate Education Committee on Monday also approved a bill (S1221) that would require New Jersey public schools to provide free menstrual products in all bathrooms.

“This legislation will keep students in the classroom by making supplies readily available to those who need them,” said Senate Majority Leader Teresa Ruiz, D-Essex, a sponsor of the measure.

In addition, the panel approved another a bill (S2268) that would require a report on learning loss to study the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students. The measure would provide analysis based on district size, grade and subject areas as well as students’ race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, ability or disability and English language proficiency.

Both of those proposals would also need to be passed by the full Senate and Assembly before heading to the governor’s desk for final approval.

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Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @johnsb01.

Tina Kelley may be reached at tkelley@njadvancemedia.com.

Human fetal remains found in storage container in Wayne home – New Jersey 101.5 FM

WAYNE — An investigation continued Monday in this Passaic County township a day after residents reported the discovery of the remains of a human fetus on their property, according to prosecutors.

A release from the Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office said the residents called in their finding around 5:45 p.m. Sunday, telling police the fetal remains were located in a storage container in their basement.

The local medical examiner’s office took custody of the remains, according to the prosecutor’s office, and will conduct an autopsy.

No further details were available Monday afternoon, although the prosecutor’s office said more information would be released.

Officials did not immediately disclose the street or neighborhood in which the residence is located.

Anyone with information is being asked to contact the Wayne Police Detective Bureau, 973-694-0600, the prosecutor’s office tip line, 1-877-370-PCPO, or by emailing tips@passaiccountynj.org.

Patrick Lavery is a reporter and anchor for New Jersey 101.5. You can reach him at patrick.lavery@townsquaremedia.com

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Every NJ city and town’s municipal tax bill, ranked

A little less than 30 cents of every $1 in property taxes charged in New Jersey support municipal services provided by cities, towns, townships, boroughs and villages. Statewide, the average municipal-only tax bill in 2021 was $2,725, but that varied widely from more than $13,000 in Tavistock to nothing in three townships. In addition to $9.22 billion in municipal purpose taxes, special taxing districts that in some places provide municipal services such as fire protection, garbage collection or economic development levied $323.8 million in 2021.

Newark man arrested for bogus University Hospital bomb threat – New Jersey 101.5 FM

NEWARK — Rutgers University Police quickly identified and apprehended a city man they believe to be responsible for phoning in a bomb threat to University Hospital early Sunday morning.

The threat was called in around 4:45 a.m. Sunday, according to a Facebook post from RUPD, which responded to 150 Bergen Street, the address of the hospital, along with the Newark Police and Fire departments, the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, and the county Sheriff’s Department Bomb Squad.

The bomb squad’s investigation declared the building safe, according to police, and RUPD determined the threat was not credible.

Police said the call was traced to Newark resident Lamar Latif, who was arrested and charged with second-degree false public alarm.

RUPD reminded the surrounding community to take precautions including traveling in groups and avoiding dark or isolated areas during late night hours.

The university provides security escorts for students, faculty, and staff upon request, by calling 973-353-5581.

Patrick Lavery is a reporter and anchor for New Jersey 101.5. You can reach him at patrick.lavery@townsquaremedia.com

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Newark’s Up in the Air Election – InsiderNJ

There’s no public question on Newark’s election May 10 ballot about a controversial proposal by the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission to build a $180-million dollar gas powered generator to provide auxiliary power to its Newark Bay Treatment Plant. 

Like so much of Newark, the PVSC’s 172 acre sprawling complex is not under the dominion of the municipality where it exists to treat the human waste generated by 1.5 million residents in 48 municipalities in Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Union and Passaic Counties that make-up the Passaic Valley Service District, a kind of government unto itself. 

According to an impressive coalition of nationally recognized public health experts, the plant if built,  would further undermine the health of the surrounding community, especially children already coping with some of the highest rates of asthma in the nation.

While this environmental issue doesn’t seem to be part of the Newark campaign debate, it still is generating a lot of concern from the community. According to the New Jersey Monitor,  at a May 3 virtual hearing over 60 people, mostly community members and environmentalists took three hours to testify  against the project. 

“According to public documents, the plant could emit up to 39,000 tons of carbon dioxide, eight tons of carbon monoxide, and 4.6 tons of particulate matter in and around the Ironbound annually,” reported the independent, non-profit news site. 

“Now, in 2022, we’ve been through a pandemic. The world has changed. We’re on the verge, we’re at the edge of our limits when it comes to climate change,” said Maria Lopez-Nunez of the Ironbound Community Commission, the news site reported. “We have seen that Black and brown people will die and have been dying.” 

At the top of the tomorrow’s ballot, Mayor Was Baraka faces a challenge from Shelia Montague, a poet and former public school teacher. Back in 2014, Montague supported Baraka’s initial run of Mayor but has become disillusioned with his pragmatic endorsement of school board candidates that were charter school advocates and privatization boosters.  

Neither Baraka nor Montague responded to a query about their stand on the PVSC plant proposal, which Gov. Phil Murphy delayed briefly and then the PVSC ramped back up again. 

Back in 2020, Gov. Phil Murphy signed what he hailed as the nation’s strongest law  to protect communities like the Ironbound in Newark, from continuing to bear an unjust share of polluting infrastructure like incinerators and power plants. Historically, it’s been places like Ironbound, where industry left toxic waste behind and 21st century enterprises like the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey continue to contribute to the degraded air quality. 

Throughout the pandemic, Gov. Murphy has stressed the importance of addressing the wealth and healthcare disparities in the state’s communities of color like Newark that were brought into shocking relief during the pandemic. According to a national economic analysis, done by noted economist Jeffrey Sachs and Rev. Dr. William Barber’s Poor People’s Campaign,. Newark and Essex County saw some of the highest per capital death rates in the country with Essex County recoding 3,536 cumulative deaths, or 443 deaths per 100,000.

At an April protest rally against the plant, Dr. Robert Laumbach, a nationally recognized physician who teaches environmental and occupational medicine at  Rutgers School of Public Health said policy makers had to consider the cumulative impacts affecting the health of Ironbound residents that required the “need to draw a line” where “any increase in air pollution was too much.”

“Think of it triple whammy—what you have is more exposure in certain communities like Newark where you have more susceptible individuals with pre-existing conditions like asthma, heart disease, and diabetes that we know from a scientific point of view make more people susceptible to air pollution,  and then you have interactions with these various factors, that can be more than additive, they can be synergistic ” Dr. Lumbach warned. 

Down ballot, in the East Ward, where the PVSC plant is located , the longtime City Council incumbent Augusto Amador is retiring. The four way race includes Anthony Campos, for Newark Police Chief, Louis Weber, the executive secretary of the Newark  Police Department’s Alcohol Beverage Control unit, Johnathan Seabra, whose family own’s a local supermarket and works in financial services and Michael J. Silva, retired Newark Police detective. 

Efforts to reach Campos, Weber and Seabra were unsuccessful. 

“The so-called ‘Plan B’ for the new Passaic Valley Sewage Commission site in the East Ward is still a slap in the face to our community,” responded Silva in an email. “This high pollution facility is not ideal for our community’s health and wellbeing. As a cancer survivor, I’m very concerned about the cumulative impact this facility adds to our quality of life considering we already get pollution from our port, airport, traffic, industrial zones, garbage incinerator, sewer treatment facility, and several energy production sites already in use. As your next councilman I will take these environmental issues seriously, as this additional air pollution will have generational impacts on our community.”

The issue of Newark’s air quality did come up last month at the well-attended South Ward Council campaign debate held at St. John’s Community Baptist Church. With the retirement of Council Member John Sharpe James the seat is open in this district that share some of the East Ward’s environmental challenges.

The field includes: Trenton Jones, a former aid to the outgoing James; Terrance Bankston, an organizer with Clean Water Action; Cynthia Truitt-Rease, former chief of staff to James; Christina Cherry, former U.S. Navy Seabee with degrees in business management and psychology; and Douglas Freeman, who ran as a Republican for the Essex County Board of Freeholders.

In their answers to the air quality questions the candidates referenced and aligned themselves with the community organizing done by long-time Newark environmentalist activist Kim Gaddy, Clean Water Action’s National Environmental Justice Director, and leading figure in the opposition to the PVSC power plant proposal.  

“We are already coming together in our community,” said Freeman, who also described a plan he endorsed several years ago to have PSE&G install solar panels to put on residential properties. “Teaching our children about environmental studies, environmental awareness and also about environmental jobs. These are things we don’t touch on,” Freeman added.

Council, who is reportedly being supported by Mayor Baraka, also referenced the work of Kim Gaddy and the community’s battles with the Port Authority over air emissions from its airport and port facilities. “We need to continue to create legislation, not just on quality of life, or air issues, but on environmental racism,” Council said. “This is systemic. It is structural and we didn’t invent it but we have to something to change it.”

Cherry flagged the need for community engagement as a strategy to confront the issue of trucks idling their engines throughout the South Ward. “It is my job to have a conversation with the community and find out how your family members who have asthma are affected and what you think is contributing to that,” she said.   

Truitt-Rease also expressed her support for Gaddy’s activism, pledging to work with her if she was elected. “I am also passionate about this issue because I have had many friends that passed with asthma attacks,” she said. “Now, we are dealing with the oversized trucks being parked in residential neighborhoods. Now, we are dealing with people fixing cars on our streets  with leaking oil, transmission fluid—whatever.”

Bankston, who opposes the PVSC project as being “detrimental”,  touted at the forum he had been endorsed by Gaddy, who is also his aunt. He described what he saw as the generational consequences of the city’s chronic air pollution.  

“When it comes to asthma —a majority of our [school] absenteeism is due to asthma and part of that has to do with healthcare and part of that has to do with the lack of health insurance and our students having to stay home because  they’re not getting the proper treatments—the schools don’t know how to deal with it,” Bankston said. “We even have to deal with this when our kids leave this environmentally devastating place and they go to college and they are having breathing issues and its a whole climate change.” 

Whichever candidate prevails, they are going to find that there’s a real dynamic tension between what their constituents need and Newark’s elected officials to win concessions from entities like the PVSC and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. These agencies occupy vast swaths of the City of Newark, and are controlled by Commissioners who mostly live outside of the city insulating them considerably from the pollution their operations generate that Newark’s children must endure 24/7.

Almost 70 percent of property in Newark, an astoundingly high percentage, is tax-exempt because it belongs to the Federal or state governments, to government entities like the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey or to schools, hospitals or religious groups,” reported the New York Times in 1998. “These owners do pay the city fees in lieu of taxes, but city officials contend that the fees are only a fraction of what the owners would pay if taxes could be levied.”

Larry Hamm, a long time Newark political activist and founder of the People’s Organization of Progressive, a community based non-profit, believes that most Newark residents have no idea about  about this “other system of government” that has so much control of their city’s economy and environment.

“And the average person can’t even tell you who there City Council person is, much less their state senator or state assembly person—they might know who their member of Congress is—but all of these agencies represent a kind of government that people don’t see,” said Hamm during a phone interview. “People are not elected to these bodies but appointed by singular people like the Governor. Their operations are often outside the purview of even the people who work within the government.” 

Hamm said that Newark’s center city predicament was not that different from that of Washington D.C. as the nation’s capital, where so much of its destiny was shaped by people from outside the district. 

“In the old days in the 60s’ I even heard Martin Luther King use this term ‘internal colonialism’ for Black cities in this position,”  Hamm said. 

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NJ would put tampons in school boy restrooms and you’d pay for it (Opinion) – New Jersey 101.5 FM

When logic and reason are replaced by emotion and political favors, things go off the rails right quick.

Given the economic crisis in New Jersey with so many small businesses suffering under regulations and taxes if they haven’t already closed, you’d think the Legislature would have better things to do than push the absurdity of feminine hygiene products in the boy’s bathroom.

North Carolina Clashes With U.S. Over New Public Restroom Law

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The radicals are running the state now, with the extreme-agenda grade school curriculum and the anti-science push that there is essentially no difference between boys and girls, it’s all about how you “feel” or “identify.”

The basis of the new school curriculum pushed by the department of education is all about gender identity and questioning “birth gender.” We saw this disaster as a biological man became the girls swimming champion.

It’s time for parents and average people to push back. First of all, there are at least 99 other problems in New Jersey facing parents, kids, and small businesses, and the lack of tampons in the middle school boy’s bathroom isn’t one of them.

According to bill S1221, sponsored by state Sens. Teresa Ruiz, D-Essex, and Vin Gopal, D-Monmouth, the law would require school districts to provide students in grades 6-12 with “direct access to feminine hygiene products in all of the school bathrooms free of charge.”

“Any costs incurred by a school district in complying with the provisions of this bill will be borne by the State,” the bill says. “For purposes of this bill, ‘feminine hygiene products,’ mean tampons and sanitary napkins.”

Kenny Eliason via Unsplash

Kenny Eliason via Unsplash


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One of the few voices of reason in Trenton, Sen. Mike Doherty, R-Warren, joined me on the show to discuss his opposition to the bill and the next steps in the fight to return some normalcy to the Garden State.

The post above reflects the thoughts and observations of New Jersey 101.5 talk show host Bill Spadea. Any opinions expressed are Bill’s own. Bill Spadea is on the air weekdays from 6 to 10 a.m., talkin’ Jersey, taking your calls at 1-800-283-1015.

Every NJ city and town’s municipal tax bill, ranked

A little less than 30 cents of every $1 in property taxes charged in New Jersey support municipal services provided by cities, towns, townships, boroughs and villages. Statewide, the average municipal-only tax bill in 2021 was $2,725, but that varied widely from more than $13,000 in Tavistock to nothing in three townships. In addition to $9.22 billion in municipal purpose taxes, special taxing districts that in some places provide municipal services such as fire protection, garbage collection or economic development levied $323.8 million in 2021.

School aid for all New Jersey districts for 2022-23

The state Department of Education announced district-level school aid figures for the 2022-23 school year on Thursday, March 10, 2022. They’re listed below, alphabetically by county. For additional details from the NJDOE, including specific categories of aid, click here.

Daily Edition 05-09-22 – New Jersey Stage

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