BOONTON â Morris County Administrator John Bonanni has been honored by the New Jersey Association of Counties (NJAC) with the organizationâs first-ever County Administrator Lifetime Achievement Award during its County Government Leadership Awards presentations.
âIâm honored to be here today ⦠Thank you very much. Iâm very humbled,â said Bonanni, a Boonton resident, during a virtual meeting of the NJAC Board of Directors, which was attended by several members of the Morris County Board of Freeholders, Morris County Sheriff James Gannon and many county officials throughout New Jersey on Friday, Dec. 11.
Both Bonanni and Passaic County Administrator Anthony J. DeNova III were issued County Administrator Lifetime Achievement Awards by NJAC Executive Director John Donnadio, who explained they were the first awards of their type presented by NJAC and it was important to honor the hard work of county administrators, especially during the current pandemic
Murphy’s dire predictions on how coronavirus would wreck N.J. finances far from what’s actually happened so far
Updated Dec 15, 2020;
Posted Dec 13, 2020
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy delivers his Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Address at Rutgers University s SHI Stadium in August, maintaining social distancing protocols and following CDC guidelines.Michael Mancuso | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
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Starting in
March and continuing over the turbulent weeks that followed, Gov. Phil Murphy predicted the coronavirus pandemic would plunge the state into fiscal and economic peril.
New Jersey could lose $20 billion in revenue, maybe even $30 billion, the governor said. The state could run out of cash by fall. Two-hundred thousand public workers might be laid off. And, in the absence of a second federal stimulus package, funding for public schools may be slashed by $1 billion.
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On Wednesday morning, a nonprofit released poll data showing that
77 percent of New Jersey Republicans think President Donald Trump won the election even though he lost the election.
Less than two hours later, Assembly Minority Leader Jon Bramnick
The New Jersey Association of Counties will be sending a letter to the governor s office to ask about using nursing students to help administer the COVID-19 vaccine doses to help