Page 14 - செனட் ப்ரெஸிடெஂட் ஸ்டீபன் ஸ்வீனி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Despite tax filing delays, state financial analysts expect surge in new money
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N J takeover of Atlantic City s government may last even longer
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N.J.’s long public health emergency for COVID should end next month, Murphy, top Dems say
Updated May 14, 2021;
With New Jersey’s COVID-19 numbers significantly improving as vaccinations continue, Gov. Phil Murphy and top state lawmakers announced Friday they are working on a plan to finally end the public-health emergency the governor declared in the state 14 months ago to help battle the coronavirus.
Murphy signed an executive order Friday extending the emergency another 30 days. But he said he will let it expire next month if the state Legislature passes legislation before then to make sure the state has the “tools and flexibility” it needs to keep combatting the pandemic and rolling out vaccinations.
His mother is trying to keep him from falling.
It s not a real cliff it s a metaphor that families and advocates of people with disabilities use to describe the transition to life after they turn 21 and age out of special education programs.
John is 20 and has severe autism. The life he has known since the age of 3 will soon change when he turns 21 and no longer is eligible for special education programs, said his mother, Patricia Miller of West Orange.
“It’s been a difficult year for everyone, but for our kids who have autism it’s been extremely difficult,” she said. It was a year of interrupted routines, raised tensions and halted therapy. To top it all off, John and others like him across the state are about to “fall off a cliff.”
Credit: (Ryan Parker on Unsplash)
File photo
A Senate committee on Thursday unexpectedly rejected a bill that would have weakened local power over warehouse development, and given a greater say to other municipalities and state and county planning authorities.
The bill (S-3688) sought to control a current surge in warehouse construction by requiring towns facing warehouse applications to tell adjoining municipalities about the plans and seek their approval. It also proposed that disputes should be decided by county planning boards, and that appeals would go to the State Planning Commission.
But the bill garnered only two “yes” votes and three abstentions on the five-person panel, meaning that it failed to advance, in a rebuff to its architects including Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D-Gloucester).
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