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High Bridge gets $4M water main funding from 16th District legislators

HIGH BRIDGE - State 16th Legislative District Sen. Andrew Zwicker and Assemblyman Roy Frieman have been successful in bringing in $4 million funding to assist in the replacement of the

Wawayanda to get inclusive playground

Wawayanda to get inclusive playground
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Things to do at NJ state parks: What makes each one special?

Whether it is summertime fun, an autumn hike among the changing leaves, a visit to an indoor exhibit during the winter, or watching the springtime flowers bloom, these are year-round attractions.

Your ultimate N J camping guide See details for 27 parks

Your ultimate N.J. camping guide. See details for 27 parks. NJ.com 2 hrs ago Michael Sol Warren, nj.com © Nick Scalera | For NJ Advance Me/Nick Scalera | For NJ Advance Me A felled tree allows visitors to sit beside the Musconetcong River in Jenny Jump State Forest in Warren County, NJ. It’s mid-May in New Jersey, and the signs of summer are everywhere. Temperatures are comfortably in the 70s and pushing higher, the Garden State is in full bloom and Memorial Day weekend is right around the corner. From Vineland to Newark, from Lambertville to Jersey City, New Jerseyans are ditching the sweatpants of a pandemic winter for the comfort of shorts as they return to the sun-filled outdoors.

What to expect when visiting N J s state and federal parks in the spring and summer of 2021

What to expect when visiting N.J.’s state and federal parks in the spring and summer of 2021 Updated 10:00 AM; Today 10:00 AM People walk their dog along a trail at Double Trouble State Park in Berkeley and Lacey Townships in May 2020. Lori M. Nichols | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com Facebook Share Last year, when the coronavirus pandemic drove an unprecedented number of people to parks across the state, it was exactly what state officials wanted to see even if they weren’t prepared for it. “No one I think imagined just how intense . the increase in visitation would be,” Shawn LaTourette, the acting commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, told NJ Advance Media. “Not because any agency or apparatus of government wasn’t ready to help its citizens, but because the spaces themselves don’t hold all the people that wanted to partake in them.”

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