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Housing moratorium in effect amid COVID-19 cases in N.J.

Earlier this month, New Jersey Gov. Murphy enacted a moratorium on removals of individuals who would suffer evictions

N.J. Gov. Murphy implements housing moratorium to help the less fortunate avoid evictions.
— Provided photo

or foreclosures in the State.

This was part of the Gov’s continued efforts to help contain the impact of COVID-19 pandemic, and to protect residents who experience immediate financial needs, and thus he took action by signing A-3859 into law.

This current A-3859 law “explicitly provides authority to the Gov. to issue an executive order declaring a moratorium on removing individuals from their homes pursuant to an eviction or foreclosure proceeding,” states an official State of N.J. press release.

Next, the Gov. signed Exec. Order No. 106, which imposes the moratorium.

“The move will ensure that no renter or homeowner is removed from their residence while this Order is in effect,” the press release states.

Similarly, a day prior to N.J. Gov’s moratorium, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac announced that they have suspended all foreclosures and evictions for at least 60 days.

“This outbreak affects all of us and we are all in this together,” said Gov. Murphy. “The steps I am outlining…will help those who are suffering financial harm through no fault of their own continue to stay afloat as we work our way through this. They will also bolster public health by ensuring that residents facing eviction or foreclosure can stay in their homes, protecting them against increased risk of contracting and spreading COVID-19.”

N.J. Gov. Murphy stands with men who wear protective face masks to prevent the risk of infecting others with the deadly coronavirus.
— Provided photo

The Administrative Office of the Courts and Assembly members Angela McKnight, Holly Schepisi, and Benjie Wimberly; and Senators Joseph Cryan and Nellie Pou sponsored the Assembly Bill No. 3859.

“I applaud the Gov’s swift action in signing this bill into law in the midst of the expanding coronavirus crisis,” said Sen. Joseph Cryan.

“This is a public health emergency that confronts all of us with challenges, especially those who live paycheck to paycheck to support themselves and their families. It would be cruel to allow people to be forced out of their homes due to circumstances beyond anyone’s control, such as the pandemic. This is a time to care for our neighbors and fellow citizens,” he said.

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PBA Local 127 via Texas Roadhouse delivers Meals on Wheels to community

Last week, members of Old Bridge PBA Local 127 offered a gesture of empathy and kindness to their community by delivering hot meals from Texas Roadhouse to nearby residents.

With the Coronavirus Pandemic affecting just about nearly every family in these communities, the Local just “wanted to give some assistance to those families to make their day a little brighter,” states a Facebook post from the PBA Local 127 Page.

The Local has decided to continue purchasing these meals from Texas Roadhouse and will deliver them to various families in town over the next couple of weeks.

“We want to thank Texas Roadhouse for forming this partnership with us and allowing us to be a part of this special mission,” the post states.

It further explains that Texas Roadhouse has been a loyal support of “our PBA for many years and we are thankful for their continued generosity especially during these unstable times.”

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Christmas decorations at FBCT evoke festive moods

With Christmas Day almost here, lights and decorations are everywhere.

Rev. Powell of FBCT talks about the annual tradition of “Hanging of the Greens” at the church.
— Photo by Michelle Dryden

Close to home in New Jersey, we can visit Rockefeller Center in New York City to see their famous Christmas tree. Also, residents from the southern region of  New Jersey can visit Philadelphia to see their Christmas Tree at their City Hall as well.

But right here in Trenton, the capital city of New Jersey, the community can visit First Baptist Church of Trenton (FBCT) to enjoy that church’s “Hanging of the Greens” decorations that took place Sunday at the church.

FBCT Pastor Rev. Calvin Powell explained the “Hanging of the Greens” tradition at the church as a “time when we come together, and we share in decorating the church. It’s all about love. We come together and we share in love. We have fellowship. We have some food. We have some fun.”

Rev. Powell explained that “Hanging of the Greens” at FBCT is more than a 35-year-old event that takes place the first week of each Advent season.

He said Advent means “coming,” and that for him it signifies the coming of Jesus’s birth that would bring peace into the world. This year Advent began Dec. 1 (the Sunday closest to St. Andrew’s Day) and will end Dec. 24.

By decorating the church, the FBCT congregation is “just trying to get into the spirit of the season,” said Powell.

A fairly new pastor at the 214-year-old church that just celebrated an anniversary in November, Powell also just had his own 4-year anniversary in October.

He enjoys his congregation and the “Hanging of the Greens” activity, among several other ministries at FBCT.

Powell compares the multicultural congregation of his church to Heaven.

“It’s beautiful because we have so many different ethnicities here” like you will see in Heaven, he said.

Other church members who were decorating the church talked about the tradition.  A new member, Jacqueline Jones, said it will bring a festive mood so that all who enter the church will be in the holiday spirit.

Also, Naw Martha Hla from Burma, who has been a member at FBCT for 10 years, says she was having fun with the “Hanging of the Greens,” and was happy to celebrate with family and friends.

Meanwhile Jim Russo, says he has been a member of FBCT for more than 30 years, and has been a part of the Christmas decoration activity for a long time.

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EHA residents thankful for Turkey Giveaway

A week ago, residents at Edison Housing Authority were looking forward to their Annual Turkey Giveaway, and this year they were thankful for the generosity.

This group participates in Edison Housing Authority Turkey Giveaway to its residents last Friday.
— Provided photo

Many residents celebrated Thanksgiving with their families yesterday by enjoying a meal that included the turkeys that the community provides for those in need during the holiday.

Martina Cruz gives thanks each year for the Annual Turkey Giveaway that took place Nov. 22 at the EHA, where she lives with her son and granddaughter.

“My family has really benefitted from this program,” she explained. “The money I save on buying a Thanksgiving dinner, I am able to spend on other necessities. I also love that the Housing Authority gives other food products like cereal that we use on a daily basis.”

Another EHA resident and neighbor also shared Cruz’s sentiments. Doris Bradly, who lives alone said, “I am thankful I can enjoy a good meal on a special day like Thanksgiving.”

This year’s Turkey Giveaway provided many households at EHA with a reason to celebrate. Families enjoyed a Thanksgiving with a table laden with traditional dishes.

“Everyone’s efforts provided us the opportunity to feed 150 families that came out last Friday to receive dry goods and turkeys,” reported Deborah Hurley, EHA executive director.

“We even had a few packages left over to provide to our Sect. 8 families that participated in our ‘Homeownership Program’ on Saturday morning. We truly could not have provided our families with these resources, if it weren’t for our donors’ prompt responses.”

Donors that lend a hand to the Turkey Giveaway community effort include the support of EHA’s commissioners; Edison Twp.; donations from many EHA service providers, which include EHA Chair Carlos N. Sanchez, Commissioner Chris Mazauskas, McLaughlin Stauffer & Shaklee, P.C; Polcari & Company; Netconnect; Breslin & Breslin; Stateside Affairs; Federal Business Center, Inc.; Shoprite of Edison; and Hymanson, Parnes & Giampaolo.

“The Turkey Giveaway brings the community together to give a helping hand to those who need one, which is especially felt during the holiday season,” said Sanchez.

“This is truly a team effort for a great cause. The Turkey Giveaway is an effort, fueled by amazing generosity that makes a difference in so many lives,” he said.

The EHA creates, offers and provides qualified lower income families the best opportunities for affordable, safe and decent housing and communities.

EHA’s goal is to significantly contribute to families achieving and sustaining economic self-sufficiency.

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N.J. schools win awards for outstanding communications

The New Jersey School Public Relations Association (NJSPRA) honored school districts for their significant

Cherry Hill: Barbara Wilson, Public Information Officer; Dr. Joseph Meloche, Superintendent receive the 1st place Social Media, Schools Communications Award for Cherry Hill School District.
— Provided photo

communications programs with a special reception held recently at Heldrich Hotel in New Brunswick, N.J.

These school districts have communications programs in the categories of print and electronic collateral that the professional communicators in New Jersey use for the product they develop “that go above and beyond to disseminate important messages to their various stakeholders,” states Lori Perlow, NJSPRA president.

The awards this year recognized a highly competitive contest with a record of 64 submissions from 34 different school districts.

There were awards for eight categories: Marketing, Branding, Image; Newsletter; Media Relations – Human Interest; Photography; Social Media; Special Interest Publication; Video; and Website.

“The video category had the most submissions, which supports the need for school districts to utilize multiple channels in their communications,” Perlow states.

An esteemed panel of judges, including professors from Rowan University, and other industry experts across the county judged the submissions for the 2019 School Communications Awards.

The first to third place winners in the eight categories for the 2019 School Communications Awards are:

Electronic Newsletter    

1st Place – Piscataway Township  Schools

2nd Place – Linden Public Schools

3rd Place – Perth Amboy Public Schools

Marketing, Branding, Image 

1st Place – Camden County Educational Services Commission

2nd Place – Sparta Township Public Schools

3rd Place – South Bergen Jointure Commission

Media Relations – Human Interest

1st Place – Pine Hill School District

2nd Place – Roselle Schools

3rd Place – Linden Public Schools

Photography

1st Place – Waterford Township School District

2nd Place – New Brunswick Public Schools

3rd Place – Linden Public Schools

Social Media

1st Place – Cherry Hill Public Schools

2nd Place – Hunterdon Central Regional High School

3rd Place – Bloomfield Public Schools

Special Interest Publication

1st Place – Morris School District

2nd Place – Piscataway Township Schools

3rd Place – Freehold Regional High School District

Video

1st Place – Warren Township Schools

2nd Place – Mercer County Technical Schools

3rd Place – New Brunswick Public Schools

Website

1st Place – Camden County Educational Services Commission

2nd Place – Perth Amboy Public Schools

3rd Place – Westfield Public Schools

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Award-winning artists display habitat preservation art

Now, on exhibition at D&R Greenway Land Trust’s Johnson Education Center, four award-winning artists are demonstrating the vital connection between artworks and preserving habitat.

This is a Pumpkinseed spotted fish from the Carnegie Lake in Princeton, N.J.
Photo by Patrick Bernuth

In a meet-the-artist reception nearly two weeks ago in Princeton, Creature Comforts: Habitat Immersions Artists Patrick Bernuth, Annelies van Dommelen, Judith Hummer, and Minako Ota met their audiences and talked about what inspires them.

Their artworks about Creature Comforts: Habitat Immersions celebrate wildlife in their aquatic, forest, desert, ocean, and meadow habitats.

“I tend to paint what excites me at a particular moment,” says Hummer. “It may be the twisted intermingling of trees, or the way water cascades over rocks.”

The milkweed, honeysuckle and bluebells in Hummer’s paintings provide essential food for Monarch butterflies, bees and other pollinators.

Whether it’s the trees of autumn at sunset, or in winter at dawn, Hummer is out there painting them. She is even out there during abnormal weather patterns, such as snow in October.

Since nature has gone awry, due to human intervention, Hummer’s “Fractured Birds” artwork depicts creatures that have lost their habitat.

But, “through preservation of more than 20, 500 acres in central New Jersey, D&R Greenway has been at the forefront of protecting wildlife habitat for three decades,” says Director of Land Stewardship Tina Notas.

For example, “the vast contiguous grasslands at St. Michaels Farm Preserve provide excellent opportunities to create and enhance habitat for grassland bird populations such as bobolinks, sparrows, and American Kestrels,” she states.

There’s so much to learn about the natural world through D&R Greenway exhibits. And with Climate Change being a factor in our world, the artists’ works suggest the importance of saving nature.

Therefore, the international artist Ota finds creature comforts in cats as connoisseurs of comfort that live in harmony with plants, birds and amphibians, as well as hummingbirds and butterflies, feeding on irises and tulips.

Ota is Japanese who has been a painter in the U.S. for 20 years where she combines the techniques of the East and West in her paintings and multimedia work.

Meanwhile, Bernuth works in acrylic on stone to create a glossy ibis, a great blue heron, a bald eagle, and a barn owl, even a Pumpkinseed – a spotted fish found in the Carnegie Lake.

This lifelong angler and outdoorsman took up painting in order to spend more time in nature. At first, he painted on the natural surfaces surrounding him, such as stone.

“The colors and forms of the landscape and its inhabitants are forever changing,” he says. “I try to capture the emotions and the perceptions that are not revealed in photographs or journals.”

The fourth award-winning artist van Dommelen shows us human figures whose habitats appear to be endangered, and are surrounded by architectural ruins, but are holding tight to what remains.

Her artwork serves as a reminder that after human destruction, nature will return and take it all back.

For her painting is a journey of discovery. “The human condition, nature and bestial imagery are part of my thoughts,” she says.

These artists’ works provide a profit to D&R Greenway’s work to preserve and care for land.

The variety of art present diversity in the exhibits “from splashes of vibrant violet to shimmers of shining gold leaf, the techniques in this exhibit provide artistic habitats for the magnificent birds, fish, butterflies, bees, and even cats within their frames,” says Curator Diana Moore.

“The exhibit as a whole celebrates the exciting creatures that delight us and warns us to preserve the habitats that sustain them,” she states.

This current exhibit lasts only two more days. For availability of gallery hours, call 609-924-4646, or visit www.drgreenway.org.

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Rider U. changes plans for location of Westminster Choir College

Over the past few years, Rider University has been contemplating the physical location status of its renowned Westminster Choir College (WCC), and now has new plans.

Although last year Rider announced that it had hired a non-profit

Westminster Choir College of Rider University sits at its Princeton Campus location.
— File photo

to keep WCC in Princeton, and that it would assume operations of WCC since this past July, that is no longer the case.

Instead, Rider is planning to move WCC to its Lawrenceville campus next fall, and has now established a Campus Transition Team to help with this effort, states Rider University President Gregory G. Dell’Omo.

Dr. DonnaJean Fredeen, provost and vice president of academic affairs chairs the Campus Transition Team, and has many working groups, including Kaiwen Collaboration that was originally considered to save WCC before the change of plans.

In the meantime, WCC will remain in Princeton for the 2019-20 academic year.

With these change of plans, Rider hopes to rebrand the University with “a new vision for Rider University’s Westminster College of the Arts,” writes Dell’Omo.

“The move from one campus to another is not just simply a logistical change in geography, but rather a starting point for something new and very exciting,” he said.

The administration and Campus Transition Team have acknowledged the complexity of the move, but are looking forward to a rewarding venture.

“We would be naïve to think this transition will be simple, or not without problems and challenges both big and small that we must overcome together,” Dell’Omo admitted.

However, he also believes that “together we can make Rider University stronger and positioned for long term success not just in the arts, but university-wide.”

For more information about Rider University’s Westminster College of the Arts and the Campus Transition Team updates, please visit www.rider.edu/wccupdate.

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Mercer County Summer Concert Series bring big talents

As the summer continues to sizzle, the Mercer County Park Commission is also bringing top talents to Mercer County Park Festival Grounds.

Don’t miss great shows from well-known artists such as the upcoming performers Sat., July 27.

Information from the Mercer County Administration states that  “If you watched Sean “Diddy” Combs’ MTV show Making the Band, you probably remember seeing five hugely talented young men who became Day26, named for the day (Aug. 26) (when) they were selected by Combs.”

These Hip Hop artists, Day26, and model musician Sammy Cokas, who writes his own music, will perform at the Festival Grounds Saturday from 6 to 10 p.m.

The Administration states that, Day 26’s first album hit the Billboard 200 as #1 and became the biggest selling debut album from a male R&B group on SoundScan.  Their hits were Got Me Going and Since You Been Gone.

They celebrate their 10-year anniversary with their A New Day album.

Other musicians at the Festival Ground this summer will include Jazz musicians, Country musicians, and even a Woodstock Tribute.

For the return of Mercer County Jazz Festival on Sat. Aug. 3, the well-known musician Jeff Bradshaw will headline the event.

Mercer County has announced that Bradshaw is a Philadelphia based soul-jazz and hip-hop innovator who joined the Park Commission at the Jazz Festival in 2018 concert series and will return this summer.

Opening support for Jeff Bradshaw will be Destinee Maree, and R&B Soul/Pop singer, Algebra Blessett and Frank McComb.

Tickets for the events are available through Community Pass – $20. For more information, go to www.mercercountyparks.org

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City man narrowly escapes fallen tree

Stormy, windy weather followed a Tri-state heat wave Saturday evening, leaving behind damages and inconveniences to some area residents even in close by downtown Trenton.

Andersson Veras of Trenton is owner of this car that is damaged by a fallen tree during the windy storm that ends a heat wave.
— Photo by Michelle Dryden

A Trenton City man, Andersson Veras, who lives on the 200 Block of Jackson St. lost his car of about three months and narrowly escaped getting hurt, when a sidewalk tree along the street fell across the windshield due to the force of the windy weather.

Veras, who uses his car predominantly for work, said, “It’s bad because I spend a lot of money to accessorize it.”

He also said he just parked and exited the 2001 Honda CR-V car about 20 minutes before the tree fell on it.

About this, he said, “I feel amazing that I was not in the car at the time. It could’ve been somebody else in the car.”

The fallen tree blocked the entire width of the street for about four hours before City Workers showed up to quickly remove it, so that residents can leave the block by driving their cars.

Most of the residents affected by the fallen tree were drivers on the 200 Blocks of Mercer and Jackson streets.

Peter Scaglione of 257 Mercer St., and his girlfriend ordered pizza in Morrisville, Pa., and experienced inconveniences when they tried to drive around the block from Mercer Street to Jackson Street to go pick up their pie.

However, they figured they could use the alleys from Clay Street, and across Mercer and Jackson streets as emergency routes.

Scaglione said that although the trees make the streets look beautiful, he always tells his girlfriend to be careful when parking underneath them.

A City of Trenton tree removal worker said, it seems there were termites in the tree that caused it to rot and fell during the windy storm.

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Experts demonstrate fly-fishing at Stony Brook

“If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there’d be a shortage of fishing poles,” says the famous quote from Syndicated Columnist Doug Larson.

Hoping to engage the community in an important event, D&R Greenway invited the public to an evening of fly-fishing along the Stony Brook in Princeton earlier today, where Orvis of Princeton co-sponsored and provided stellar fishing equipment.

This is an annual event that welcomes all fishing skill levels, especially those with fishing licenses who are ages 10 years and older.

After the 5:30 p.m. registration, Orvis’ Fly-Fishing Manager Bruce Turner shared expert secrets of successful fly-fishing during a light meal.

Folks learned that fish are more easily caught at dawn, at dusk, and at full moon. Hands-on demonstration and actual fly-fishing followed.

Fishers are required to wear the appropriate footwear for being near the brook, have insect repellant, and use sunscreen.

For those who will need a fishing license, you may purchase and print them online at www.njfishandwildlife.com.

Fishers stand by the Stony Brook.
— Photo by Laura Hawkins