Let’s make sure we don’t fix property taxes today. Or school funding. Or overspending. Or the pension debacle. Let’s make sure we instead focus on something to confuse drivers and lead nowhere.
You know the move over a lane law when there’s a cop on the shoulder of the road? Where you have to either move over out of the right lane or slow way down and hug to the left of your lane as much as possible? The legislature is now working on a bill that will do the same to protect bicyclists and pedestrians on roads of any speed.
NJ lawmakers pass bill to end public health emergency
MIKE CATALINI, Associated Press
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1of3Rallygoers carry signs that say Unmask our kids and chanting kill the bill, opposing a bill that would end the public health emergency stemming from the COVID-19 outbreak, Thursday, June 3, 2021, in Trenton, N.J. New Jersey s Legislature passed a bill to end the public health emergency brought on by the COVID-19 outbreak, ending most of the more than 100 executive orders that Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy enacted to address the pandemic.Mike Catalini/APShow MoreShow Less
2of3Rallygoers carry signs that say Unmask our kids and chanting kill the bill, opposing a bill that would end the public health emergency stemming from the COVID-19 outbreak, Thursday, June 3, 2021, in Trenton, N.J. New Jersey s Legislature passed a bill to end the public health emergency brought on by the COVID-19 outbreak, ending most of the more than 100 executive orders that De
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TRENTON - New Jersey lawmakers on Thursday sent Gov. Phil Murphy a bill to end the public health emergency declared early in the COVID pandemic as a throng of protesters called for lawmakers to do more to limit the governor s powers. Kill the bill, those in the crowd chanted. Murphy is not our king, they shouted, at times loud enough to drown out senators debating the bill inside the Statehouse.
The bill, A5820/S3866, gives the governor power to continue 14 executive orders through Jan. 1, 2022. Dozens of other orders would end 30 days after the bill is signed into law by the governor, which is expected to happen Friday.