Police in Fairfield County are asking the public for help identifying a man they believe may be involved in two fires.Sgt. Sean Scanlan, of the Stamford Police, said the department is working to identify the man who was caught on surveilla…
A firefighter was injured and a family of five displaced during a large house fire in Fairfield County.The blaze broke out in Stamford around 5 a.m., Thursday, Sept. 29 on Fairfield Avenue on the city s west side.Stamford firefighters from…
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Despite disagreement from those interested in the historical integrity of the West Side Fire Station, Kent City Council voted to move forward with plans to change out its current flat roof for a peaked one.
The decision to update the station on North Mantua Street is a year in the making, City Manager Dave Ruller told city council last week. Staff manning the project had to address three aspects during planning: historical value, stewardship of public dollars and functional value of the structure to the people housed inside it.
The prominent issue was related to the historical accuracy of the update, specifically plans for the building’s historically flat roof. Though city administration continues to be mindful of historic preservation and have advocated such in the past, Ruller said, more than just that had to be considered.
N.J. communities mourn those lost to COVID-19 with flowers and memories
Updated Mar 02, 2021;
Posted Mar 02, 2021
On March 1, mourners gathered at five locations across New Jersey to memorialize those lost to COVID-19. Pictured are Maria Vazquez, whose husband Israel Tolentino died from the coronavirus, and Cesar Perez, Tolentino s mentor.Courtesy of Amanda Elisca
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Nearly a year after New Jersey’s first reported case of the coronavirus, Garden State residents gathered at locations across the state to take part in a national day of mourning to remember the loved ones lost to COVID-19.
On Monday, residents who lost friends and family to COVID-19 gathered in Passaic City, Roselle and Union to lay flowers arranged as hearts and to remember those who succumbed to the virus, including the first firefighter in the state to die from the coronavirus and a Passaic EMT.