Dover NJ marijuana businesses ban should be dropped, resident says njherald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from njherald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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PARSIPPANY Two weeks after the township Council tabled an ordinance to authorize a $5 million emergency loan to help balance the 2021 budget, it tabled it again on Tuesday to have more time to study the controversial effort.
Council President Michael dePierro said if the township s revenue shortfall is not resolved, residents may face a 14.6% municipal tax increase in 2021. The mayor wants the township council to approve a budget that is not statutorily correct, including a $5 million loan, plus interest, that must be paid off within five years, dePierro said at the Council s first in-person meeting since the beginning of the pandemic more than a year ago.
Parsippany council tables $5 million loan as tax hike looms dailyrecord.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyrecord.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Morristown Daily Record
Last year, the final graduating class of the College of Saint Elizabeth was limited to a virtual commencement due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
This year, a novel hybrid commencement honored the first official graduating class of Saint Elizabeth University. More than 200 students returned to the campus to accept degrees in a carefully planned, socially distanced in-person ceremony after a full academic year of remote and hybrid instruction.
The event took on a drive-in aspect as President Helen J. Streubert kicked off the ceremony from inside the University’s Annunciation Center. Outside, graduates and their families waited in or near their vehicles, then were led in groups to walk across the stage in Dolan Performance Hall.
Morristown Daily Record
ROCKAWAY TOWNSHIP Rising high above the tree line to the east of Wildcat Ridge Wildlife Management Area, a steep cliff displays decades of graffiti left by those who dare to risk life and limb to scale the remote, rocky and dangerously vertical mountain ridge.
Many of the spray-painted messages, which can be seen from about a mile away on Green Pond Road, are of the common variety, such as names or initials. Some years ago, the visibility of what has come to be known as Graffiti Cliffs increased with the addition of a large American flag.
A more recent addition a large red, white and blue MAGA sign supporting former President Donald Trump angered some residents and especially outdoor recreation enthusiasts, including Nick Homyak of Parsippany.