DEAL-A plan by the borough council is under fire by the New Jersey Chapter of the Surfrider Organization.  The organization is claiming that beaches aren’t the only thing here that need cleaning, but so does a new ordinance that could allocate public funds to beaches that are off limits to the general public.

According to Andrew L. Chambarry, Esq., representing the public, “The Borough of Deal has proposed their most sinister parking plan to date. They want to charge the public for parking passes which would fund the purchase of a beach sweeping machine. The machine will be used to clean beaches that you can’t access.”

At a public meeting on April 5, 2017, the Borough of Deal introduced Ordinance #1143 which would require permit parking during the summer months on five streets (Monmouth Terrace, Monmouth Drive, Hathaway, Sydney and Neptune Ave) with two vital beach access points for a cost of $100 for the summer or $50 per month.

“Mayor Cohen also said, and this is a direct quote from the public hearing, that this ordinance is the lesser of two evils,” said Harry Chambarry.  “So he admits that the ordinance is evil.”

A release by the organization read:

At the meeting, Mayor Cohen said it best, “If you want easier public access, you’re going to have to pay!” The Borough wants the public to pay $100 for a parking permit that won’t guarantee a space. They won’t restrict beachfront residents from purchasing permits and parking on the street to keep you away. They won’t admit that restricting parking is restricting access. They have no plan for ADA access or handicapped parking. They have no plan for increased traffic west of Ocean Ave. They want to push Ordinance #1143 through.

Worst of all is the Borough’s reasoning behind the Ordinance. They plan to purchase a $100,000 “beach sweep” machine to clean the beaches. Sounds great right? Wrong. Deal has notoriously horrible public access. Many of the street ends lead to dead-ends where access points should be. These street ends were vacated by the Borough in the 1980’s and early 1990’s to benefit adjacent homeowners and create private beaches. In essence, the Borough wants to charge you for a permit to fund beach cleaning equipment for beaches that you can’t enjoy.

The borough tried to pass similar ordinances in October 2015 and June 2016 restricting access. Those ordinances were tabled after they were met with fierce opposition. Ordinance #1143 is another slap in the face to local taxpayers, given that Deal’s beaches were recently the benefactor of a $40 million taxpayer-funded beach restoration project by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

It’s clear to everyone that the Borough intends to keep surfers, fisherman and the general public away from what they consider to be “their” private beaches. We have a right to access and enjoy the shoreline under New Jersey law. We can’t allow the Borough of Deal to restrict access to beaches that we all paid for.

 

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Press Release by Toms River Republican Club

The Toms River Regular Republican Club (TRRRC) Trustees announced today that incumbents Maria Maruca, Kevin Geoghegan, Jeff Carr and Dr. Al Manforti received organizational backing to run for Toms River Township Council, the party announced.
The process included a screening committee endorsing the ticket and forwarding those recommendations to the TRRRC Trustees, who unanimously approved the slate. The ticket was then put in front of the full membership for approval and received no opposition.
“We are honored and humbled to receive the unanimous endorsement of the TRRRC to run as a ticket for Township Council again this year,” said Councilmembers Maria Maruca (Ward 1), Kevin Geoghegan (Ward 2), Jeff Carr (Ward 3), and Dr. Al Manforti (Ward 4) in a joint statement.
“We look forward to running on both our individual and collective efforts to rebuild and grow our local economy, keep property taxes stable and under the statemandated cap, advocate for school funding reform, and continue to battle against unfair and onerous affordable housing mandates that rob towns like Toms River over the freedom to responsibly plan and develop our community as we see fit,” the group added.
“Republican leadership has helped to make Toms River a great community in which to live, work, build a business and retire,” said Bob DiBiase President of the Toms River Regular Republican Club. “This is an exceptional slate of solutions-oriented, conservative-minded candidates that we are confident can both win in November and govern our town effectively over the next four years.”

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

TOMS RIVER-Ocean County officials are trying to set the record straight, it is not a sanctuary county, despite it once being identified as such by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Division of Homeland Security (ICE).

As of August 2014, Ocean County was officially designated as a sanctuary county.

According to ICE, Ocean County previously stated it would not honor ICE detainers unless an individual committed an indictable offenses such as being a danger to the community, offenses against property, offenses against others or offenses against public order, health and decency.

Ocean County also honored ICE detainers for offenses such as escape and eluding police officers.

Now, the county wants to let the world know it should no longer be called a sanctuary county.

“We are not a sanctuary county, nor has Ocean County ever had an interest in being a sanctuary county,” said Ocean County Freeholder John P. Kelly, Director of Law and Public Safety.”

We have been actively working to correct the record and have Ocean County’s name removed from whatever lists are out there calling us a sanctuary county.

“ICE has taken steps to memorialize this information (March 31) by removing Ocean County’s name from its declined detainer outcome report list of sanctuary counties and cities,” Kelly added.

The change officially took effect in 2015, when Sandra Mueller took office to replace longtime jail warden Theodore Hutler and rescinded a previous policy that placed restrictions on when suspects would be reported to ICE.

In an email sent to Ocean County Jail Warden Sandra Mueller on March 30, an ICE official wrote: “I want to thank you again for the continued cooperation between the Ocean County Department of Corrections and ICE… I have submitted your updated policy regarding Immigration Detainers dated July 28, 2015 to the department responsible for Declined Detainer Outcome Report and have explained that Ocean County works very closely and cooperatively with ICE.”

Shortly after the email, Ocean County’s name was no longer listed on the ICE declined detainer outcome report, but was listed in prior reports.

Ocean County’s 48 Hour Immigration Detainer Policy was crafted on July 28, 2015 by Jail Warden Mueller. This was done to cooperate with the intention of detainer requests by ICE under the Priority Enforcement Program (PEP). This policy was jointly developed with ICE. Under the policy Ocean County would maintain custody, not to exceed 48 hours, of a removable alien who has been identified as an immigration enforcement priority under the Priority Enforcement Program and that probable cause existed that these individuals are removable aliens. Earlier detainment procedures were not this specific and had not been created in partnership with ICE which appears to have resulted in the county being viewed as a sanctuary county.

Now, the county must hope the change filters through many resources on the internet that continue to list it as a sanctuary county as the federal government begins to take aim at sanctuary cities and counties with the threat of reduced federal funding.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

BRICK-The Township of Brick and the Brick Township Police Department have created a Safe Exchange Zone at the Municipal Building to provide residents with a place to complete online transactions and custody exchange. The Safe Exchange Zone is located in the rear of the Brick Township Municipal Building to the west of the entrance to the Police Department. The Zone will be under surveillance 24 hours a day.

“We are excited to provide this invaluable service to the resident of Brick Township. There has been a sharp increase in people using social media and the internet to sell and buy goods. The Safe Exchange Zone was created to provide anyone who is tentative or concerned about buying or selling goods with a safe place to complete their transactions,” said Mayor Ducey. “We certainly encourage anyone who has concerns to err on the side of caution and safety and use the Safe Exchange Zone.”

The Safe Exchange Zone consists of two clearly marked parking spots. The area is well-lit and under 24-hour a day surveillance. The Zone is free for anyone to use.

The Brick Township Police Department offers the following tips for anyone planning on using the Safe Exchange Zone:

• Let a friend or family member know about the exchange meeting
• Know who you are dealing with: Look into the seller’s background, either through a consumer protection agency such as the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs, or through online feedback if you are shopping on a website like Ebay or Amazon. Get a phone number and physical mailing address.
• Try to complete all transactions during daylight hours (if possible)
• Never invite strangers to your home or agree to meet at their home
• Do not agree to a transaction if the other party refuses to complete the exchange in the designated “Safe Exchange Zone”
• Police Department or Township employees will not act as a witness or be part of these transactions.
• Remember to bring a cell phone in case of an emergency.
“The Safe Exchange Zone is another example of Chief Riccio and our Police Department keeping their fingers on the pulse of the community. As more people sell things on the internet, there will be more opportunities for people looking to take advantage. This Zone will reduce that risk,” said Mayor Ducey.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Ousting Chief Strategist Steve Bannon from the National Security Council (NSC) is one of many shake-ups that will continue to define Donald Trump’s White House. Yet, this realignment is different in the impact it will have on US foreign policy. Even though the move appears like a sudden game changer, it is a merely an aftershock…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

ATLANTIC CITY — They’re going to rebuild this city on rock and roll. The former Trump Taj Mahal is receiving a $375 million facelift that will turn it into the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Atlantic City. Officials anticipate the project to bring 1,000 construction jobs and 3,000 permeant jobs. The opening is anticipated for summer…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Sadly, there’s nothing we can do about it—yet Pixabay It’s a known fact that as we age, we sleep less. But the reasoning behind this phenomenon is poorly understood. Do older adults sleep less because they need less sleep, or because they simply can’t get the sleep they need? In a review out today in the…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Some of the 72 victims of the recent suspected gas attack in northern Syrian were buried on Wednesday as their families grieved. One man lost his twin daughters and his wife. “It was an airstrike by the criminal air force. I took my wife and children out of the house. Five minutes later, we started smelling…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Jeremy Friedman, Assistant Professor, Business, Government, and the International Economy, Harvard Business School. 3D_creation/www.shutterstock.com Forty-five years ago last February, U.S. President Richard Nixon returned from a visit to China that shocked the world and unsettled leaders in Moscow, who were awaiting a visit from Nixon a few months later. Soviet leaders wondered if they were…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Thousands of refugees, a sea of tents, and a big, open desert. Five years ago, this was Zaatari. Today, the tents are gone from this refugee camp in Jordan. But the refugees aren’t. In fact, they’re more settled than ever. About 80,000 people live here, now in rows and rows of trailers. There are nine schools.…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

A Muslim man has died after being attacked by a mob while transporting cows in India, police said on Wednesday, as tensions continue to rise over the slaughter of what is considered a holy animal in the Hindu-majority country. No arrests have been made, but police said they registered a murder case over the death of…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Barry Manilow has always kept his private life private. But now, he’s ready to talk. The singer opened up in the latest issue of PEOPLE about his decades-long, secret relationship with manager Garry Kief. Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images “I’m so private. I always have been,” he said. Early in his life, Manilow married his high…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Angie: “Whaddya feel like doin’ tonight?” Marty: “I don’t know, Ang … what do you feel like doin’?” Angie: “We’re back to that, eh? I say to you whaddya feel like doin’, and you say back to me I don’t know what do you feel like doin’, then we wind up sittin’ around your house with…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

7-Eleven is buying most of Sunoco’s convenience stores and gas stations in a $3.3-billlion deal, company officials announced Thursday The deal, expected to close in the last quarter of the year, includes 1,108 of Sunoco’s 1,345 locations. The other stations are expected to be sold as part of a different deal. Sunoco has more than 175…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

New Jersey will stop paying the rent to NJ Transit’s landlord at Penn Station New York until Amtrak guarantees the Northeast Corridor is in good repair and may sue to get 2016’s payments back. Gov. Chris Christie directed the state Attorney General to stop making the $2.5 to $5 million in monthly rent and maintenance payments…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

I took a walk around the local strip mall the other day. The only traffic was a guy in a muscle car doing burn-outs. In the old days, the cops would have been on him in a minute. But no one was there to notice him except for me. The parking lot was empty except for…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

An almost week-long commuting nightmare for NJ Transit train commuters may be over on Friday when Amtrak officials say they expect to complete repairs to track damage from Monday’s train derailment in Penn Station New York. “We’re hoping to have the work done by Friday,” said Mike Tolbert, an Amtrak spokesman. Until then, NJ Transit trains…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

A-Rod and J. Lo? Marriage? Maybe. Retired Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez and pop star Jennifer Lopez have talked about getting hitched, according to a report from US Weekly. From the report: “They’ve been talking about the future and, of course marriage has come up,” says the source. “They aren’t making wedding plans, but they have been…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Lauryn Flynn scored four goals and added an assist as Southern defeated Jackson Memorial, 12-9, in Manahawkin. Crystina Blaney, Shannon Lytle and Alexis Maul scored two goals apiece in the win as Kelly Fontana and Kaitlyn Spaschak also found the back of the net. Spaschak’s goal was her first varsity goal as Rachel Sauer, who tallied…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Sean Miller | For NJ Advance Media COLUMBUS — After a sub-.500 campaign in 2016, the Northern Burlington boys lacrosse team came into this year with much higher expectations. Based on the game Wednesday with New Egypt, it appears that the Greyhounds may be able to meet those lofty goals. Northern Burlington used a strong first…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

TRENTON — A Trenton mom says her 5-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted on the school bus by an older student, the latest in a series of incidents involving special education students. The mom, who doesn’t want her identity revealed, said the incident occurred March 28 on an afternoon bus leaving P.J. Hill Elementary School. Her daughter…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

PHILADELPHIA– A former player with the New Jersey Nets will remain behind bars after he lost his appeal of a conviction for orchestrating a multimillion dollar fraud, Acting U.S. Attorney William E. Fitzpatrick said in a statement. C. Tate George, a Newark native, was sentenced to nine years in prison in January 2016 for defrauding investors…

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

It was a close game, but Brick High School defeated Toms River East 1-0.  Christine Frazee pitched 7 innings and struck out 13 batters for the shutout.   Corrine Connelly, Jamie Fogarty, Frazee, Alexa Halley and Erica O’Rourke each had hits.

 

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 R H E
Brick Township
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 0
Toms River East
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1
0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

You can't access this website

Shore News Network provides free news to users. No paywalls. No subscriptions. Please support us by disabling ad blocker or using a different browser and trying again.