View Comments
LONG BRANCH - Anne Evans Estabrook, a real estate developer with deep ties to the Shore, will donate $3 million to Monmouth Medical Center for its new campus on a former Fort Monmouth site, hospital officials said.
Estabrook, owner and chairwoman of Elberon Development Group, said the donation is deeply personal. She grew up in the Elberon section of Long Branch. And both her father and husband were treated at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch for critical illnesses. The staff not only treats their patients; they treat the whole family, Estabrook said in a statement.
The gift is targeted for Monmouth Medical Center s proposed Vogel Medical Campus, a 100,000-square-foot project in Tinton Falls on the site of the former Myer Center, a Cold War-era research facility that was known as the Hexagon.
Monmouth Medical Center gets $3M for new campus
njbiz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from njbiz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
POLITICO
Get the New Jersey Playbook newsletter Email
Sign Up
By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or updates from POLITICO and you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service. You can unsubscribe at any time and you can contact us here. This sign-up form is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Presented by Pre-K Our Way
Good Tuesday morning!
Brent Spiner has made his determinations. Or maybe it was pressure from other states. But with New Jersey s COVID-19 positivity rate steadily decreasing, Gov. Murphy announced a joint plan with New York and Connecticut to lift most capacity restrictions in a couple weeks (after Cuomo beat him to the punch with his own announcement, and a long time after Connecticut).
ICE Jailer in New Jersey Is Sued By Its Landlord, Claiming Unsafe Conditions
arrow Marie DeLuca
The owners of a windowless former warehouse that houses Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees in New Jersey are alleging dangerous conditions at the facility and suing to terminate its lease, representing another potential victory for activists seeking the end of controversial immigration detention in the state.
The lawsuit filed Monday alleges that CoreCivic, the private prison operator that leases the facility and contracts with ICE to hold about 145 asylum seekers and other undocumented immigrants, breached its contract by failing to follow local and federal safety regulations to stop the spread of Covid. The Elizabeth Detention Center has had more Covid cases than other ICE facilities in the region, and both security and medical employees have died. One dozen detainees newly tested positive at the end of April, just as cases statewide were dropping.
April 29, 2021
Known for contributions that shaped the ILR School in its first decades, a gentle manner and long-running friendships with peers, Professor Emeritus Robert “Bob” Aronson died April 19 at age 104 at Bridges Cornell Heights, Ithaca.
He was the last surviving faculty member from the school’s first years and a labor economist who saved money to enter Ohio State University by pausing his education after high school to work in a Harley-Davidson dealership, a foundry and department stores.
The son of Eastern European immigrants, he interrupted his graduate studies at Ohio State University to enlist in the U.S. Army and serve as a B-24 navigator in World War II. After the war, he earned a doctorate at Princeton University.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.