New Jersey
Latest NJ Snow Total Predictions For Impending Winter Storm
NEW JERSEY — A cross-country winter storm is on track to hit New Jersey and is likely to end its nearly two-year-long snow drought, say forecasters.
AccuWeather meteorologists are saying the storm “will deliver the first big snowfall along the Interstate 95 corridor in nearly two years.”
As it gets closer snowfall total predictions for New Jersey have been released ahead of the weekend.
Find out what’s happening in Across New Jerseywith free, real-time updates from Patch.
“A coastal system will bring widespread precipitation to our region. Snow and some mixed precip will occur northwest of I-95. The immediate urban corridor is unlikely to experience anything more than a wet coating of snow,” said the National Weather Service(NWS) Mount Holly.
Some areas in the north in the Sussex County area are predicted to get hit the hardest with 6 to 8 inches of snow. Around the I-80 area, 3 to 4 inches are expected to fall.
Find out what’s happening in Across New Jerseywith free, real-time updates from Patch.
The majority of the Central Jersey area such as Somerset and Hunterdon Counties could get 1 to 2 inches. Anything below I-95 will see rain.
The storm will drop drenching rain along areas of the Gulf Coast from late Thursday night to Friday before moving NorthEast to the mid-Atlantic coast where it will strengthen before arriving in New Jersey on Saturday afternoon. The storm will remain in the area through Sunday.
AccuWeather meteorologists are now saying this storm will likely end New Jersey’s almost two-year-long snow drought.
“A few inches of snow or more can occur along the I-95 corridor from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City and Boston, which would be the most snow some of these cities have seen since early 2022 thanks to the multiyear drought of major snowstorms in these areas,” said AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jon Porter.
As of New Year’s Day, it has been 683 days since the New York City area received at least 1 inch of snowfall — which was on Feb. 16, 2022.
Regardless, any wintry mix or snow expected to fall in the area will likely have an impact on travel as it has been years since travelers had to traverse through it.
“Any accumulating snow can result in significant travel slowdowns, but this storm may have greater impact than others of similar magnitude because it has been such a long time since more than 1 inch of snow has accumulated in these areas – it can take people a bit of time to once again get used to driving in and otherwise dealing with the snow,” said Porter.
Forecasters are also following another major winter storm that could shift from the Central States and hit New Jersey later in the week on Tuesday, Jan. 9, and Wednesday, Jan. 10.
While the second storm is too early to track, let’s take a look at the weather ahead:
North Jersey
Thursday: Partly sunny, then gradually becoming sunny, with a high near 39. West wind 5 to 10 mph becoming northwest 10 to 15 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 22. North wind 5 to 15 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 35. Northwest wind around 10 mph.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 25. West wind around 5 mph.
Saturday: A chance of snow after 1 p.m. Cloudy, with a high near 35. Light and variable wind becoming east 5 to 10 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New snow accumulation of less than one inch possible.
Saturday Night: Snow. The snow could be heavy at times. Low around 30. Chance of precipitation is 90 percent.
Sunday: A chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 35. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26.
Central Jersey
Thursday: Mostly cloudy through mid-morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 43. Light northwest wind increasing to 10 to 15 mph in the morning.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 22. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 38. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 23. West wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
Saturday: A chance of snow between 1 and 4 p.m., then snow likely, possibly mixed with rain. Cloudy, with a high near 39. Light and variable wind becoming east 5 to 10 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
Saturday Night: Rain and snow. Low around 32. Chance of precipitation is 100 percent. New precipitation amounts between three quarters and one inch possible.
Sunday: A chance of rain and snow before 4 p.m., then a chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 37. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 27.
South Jersey
Thursday: Isolated showers before 9 a.m. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 43. Northwest wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 24. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 38. West wind around 10 mph.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 25. West wind around 5 mph.
Saturday: Rain, mainly after 1 p.m. High near 45. Light and variable wind becoming east 5 to 10 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible.
Saturday Night: Rain, mainly before 1 a.m. Low around 37. Windy. Chance of precipitation is 100 percent. New precipitation amounts between three-quarters and one inch possible.
Sunday: A chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 39. Breezy. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 27.
Have a news tip? Email alexis.tarrazi@patch.com.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
New Jersey
Independence Day surprise: New Jersey’s costly new data broker law | IAPP
The risks and costs of being a data broker in the United States just went up — again. On 30 June 2026, Gov. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., signed A 5328 into law, making New Jersey the seventh state to enact a data broker law, and the second this year, following Connecticut. The bill was introduced and signed over the course of a few days, as New Jersey’s Legislature sprinted toward an end-of-fiscal-year budget deadline.
This is not a simple copy-paste of any other state. The most notable divergence is its breadth. It creates requirements not only for data brokers, but also for data collectors, entities that have a direct relationship with individuals but sell their personal data to data brokers.
Its greatest impact comes from the creation of a tiered — and costly — structure for annual registration fees, requiring the largest data brokers and data collectors to pay a USD1.5 million annual registration fee. Although the minimum fee, payable for selling the personal data of any number of New Jersey consumers, is not the highest in the country, the second tier is higher than any other state, and kicks in at 100,000 consumers. Data brokers and data collectors also face significant fines for failing to register or update their registration information.
Further, the law prohibits the sale of sensitive data both through the data broker provisions and by amending New Jersey’s consumer data privacy law. Violations of that prohibition carry a severe USD50,000-per-record fine.
The law takes effect immediately, except for the requirement that the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs create a registry, which takes effect 270 days after enactment, on 27 March 2027.
Data brokers and their suppliers
New Jersey
Empire State Building daredevil couple are New Jersey residents
Who’s the couple that climbed the Empire State Building?
Daredevil climbers Angela Nikolau and Ivan Beerkus are making waves after their apparent proposal atop the Empire State Building.
The daredevils who climbed to the top of Empire State Building’s spire on July 1 are from New Jersey.
Angela Nikolau, 33, and Ivan Beerkus, 32, who originate from Russia, are residents of East Orange in Essex County, according to the NYPD.
The couple climbed the antenna spire atop New York City’s most famous building to hang a large banner that read: “When the power of love beats the love of power the world knows peace.”
Beerkus then appeared to propose to Nikolau atop the skyscraper some 1,454 feet about the Manhattan streets below.
Nikolau, wearing her trademark Catwoman-style headgear, then was seen admiring her hand and taking photographs of her ring to share on Instagram. The couple and their adventures in what has become known as “rooftopping” were the subject of a 2024 documentary called “Skywalkers: A Love Story.”
When the couple climbed down, they were arrested and charged with burglary, reckless endangerment, criminal mischief, violation of local law, possession of burglar’s tools, criminal tampering, criminal trespass and disorderly conduct, according to the NYPD.
Nikolau’s acrobatics run in the family, and her father, the Russian circus artist Dmitriy Nikolau, was aware of his daughter’s climb when answering a call from a reporter.
“I think it is normal to climb up a roof in any country, including the United States, according to any constitution,” he said. Asked if he was worried about his daughter, he said: “Why should I be worried? I climb up roofs myself.”
Reuters contributed to this article.
New Jersey
Exclusive | NJ’s suburbs are in a full-blown bidding war frenzy — with houses going 33% above asking
New Jersey’s suburban gold rush has no ceiling in sight, and buyers are paying whatever it takes.
Forty-two Euclid Ave in Maplewood hit the market at $1,795,000. It sold for $2,279,000, a staggering 27% above ask. Down the road in South Orange, 376 Melrose Pl listed for $998,999 and closed at $1,332,200, a 33% premium.
These aren’t outliers. They’re the new normal across a stretch of Essex and Union County suburbs where inventory has all but evaporated and buyers are throwing caution, and hundreds of thousands of dollars, to the wind.
Maplewood, South Orange and Montclair are leading the charge, with homes across the region averaging double digit percentages over asking price and spending under two weeks on the market before going under contract.
The numbers, according to weekly market data compiled by Mark Slade of Keller Williams Midtown Direct Realty, tell the story clearly.
Maplewood’s average sale price sits at $1.34 million as of late June, with buyers paying 15.6% over ask. South Orange isn’t far behind at 16.2% over asking with an average sale price topping $1.27 million. Montclair, meanwhile, is running the hottest of the bunch, with buyers paying nearly 25% over list.
Slade, who has tracked these markets since becoming a realtor in 2009, says the upward march has been remarkably steady.
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a down-trending year in Maplewood, South Orange or Montclair,” he told The Post, adding that the last several years in particular have brought “dramatic changes in the performance of the market.”
The pandemic supercharged an existing trend, according to Slade, who traces the appeal of these towns back to 1997, two years after Midtown Direct train service began running straight into Penn Station without a transfer in Hoboken.
“That’s when we started to see some movement, some significant movement and attraction to the area,” he said.
Slade has a name for what’s happening now. He calls it “value convergence equilibrium” — a theory built on the idea that Northern New Jersey buyers are catching up to what Westchester and Long Island commuters have paid for decades.
“What we now see is that more and more people as buyers, are recognizing that with their economics, they can afford more house for less money in Northern New Jersey,” he said.
The buyers driving this frenzy aren’t only fleeing Manhattan. Slade says most are also coming from Brooklyn, Hoboken and Queens, current apartment dwellers looking to trade up.
“Northern New Jersey offers some of the best values as much as it may seem crazy for someone like me watching these prices grow by leaps and bounds,” he said. “It’s still a better value if you’re looking for a 45 minute and under commute to the city.”
Basic economics explains the rest. Supply simply hasn’t kept pace. Slade points to Maplewood specifically, a town of 25,000 residents with more than 5,500 single family homes, yet only a couple dozen actively listed at any given time.
“I mean, that’s just ridiculous,” he said. He tracks a metric he calls a “hypermarket,” where the number of homes under contract nearly doubles the number of active listings, a ratio he considers more telling than the traditional six month absorption rate used across the industry.
The demand has changed the character of these towns, longtime residents complain.
Slade says he’s heard grumbling that the small town feel is being “supplanted by more New York, impatient, higher end buyers.”
He offered an only half joking anecdote about downtown Maplewood’s diagonal parking spots, where illegal U-turns into spaces happen constantly despite signage every 30 feet.
“I think that today’s buyers are much more affluent,” he said. “They’re even more time pressed, so to speak, which is why they’re choosing these areas to live for the more manageable commutes.”
Township meetings haven’t been immune to the anxiety. After a record breaking sale in Maplewood’s Hilton neighborhood last year, Slade recalls committee members raising concerns at the next public meeting about what runaway prices mean for longtime residents. Still, he sees the appreciation as a feature, not a bug, of homeownership.
“This is real estate,” he said. “This is what real estate is all about.”
Momentum tends to soften slightly as the year goes on, Slade says, a seasonal pattern he attributes half jokingly to what he calls “bonus baby syndrome,” when buyers flush with year end bonuses resolve to finally buy a house “so we don’t have to trip over the stroller.”
When buyers get priced out of one town, they simply move to the next rung down.
Montclair shoppers frustrated by bidding wars often land in Maplewood. Maplewood buyers priced out end up in West Orange, where the year to date average sits at $763,000 with a 10.7% premium over ask, or Union, averaging around $600,000.
Bidding wars, meanwhile, have become simply expected.
“Bidding wars are very much part of the current market scenario, given the limited number of homes for sale and the fact that the amount of buyers far outweighs the supply,” Slade said.
“Buyer’s should generally expect some type of bidding war.”
He uses an ice cream metaphor to describe buyer psychology, borrowed from a Cold Stone Creamery portion chart.
“There are three sizes of ice cream at Cold Stone Creamary, Like It, Love it and Gotta Have It!,” he said. “So, if a buyer is in the Gotta Have It mode, their offer could likely blow everyone else away.”
Homes that have recently traded well above ask include 8 Colony Dr in West Orange, which sold for $1,178,000 against an $865,000 list, a 36% jump, and 35 Porter Pl in Montclair, which closed at $1,525,000 on a $1,395,000 ask, pricing out at 30% higher per square foot than the town average.
Whether this run has a natural endpoint is another matter. Slade doesn’t see one coming, short of the state “building a wall around Manhattan.”
New Jersey remains the most densely populated state in the country, meaning new construction is largely limited to developers subdividing larger lots rather than building fresh inventory from scratch.
Relief in the form of significantly lower mortgage rates also seems unlikely anytime soon, Slade says, leaving buyers to keep competing for a shrinking pool of homes in towns that offer what he still considers, even amid the chaos, the better deal.
-
Entertainment2 minutes agoArgentine club queen Six Sex wants you to get free
-
Lifestyle9 minutes agoWhy Chanel Is Acquiring Charvet
-
Politics12 minutes agoHow Roberts led a fractured Supreme Court to wins for the right and defeats for Trump
-
Science17 minutes agoContributor: Alcohol should be stigmatized like smoking
-
Sports24 minutes agoThousand Oaks native Claire Liu finally reaches Wimbledon’s third round, will face Coco Gauff
-
World32 minutes agoCould water become a flashpoint between Islamabad and New Delhi?
-
News57 minutes agoUkraine latest / Limits of military might / Can major powers regain dominance? : Sources & Methods
-
Los Angeles, Ca2 hours agoJuvenile charged with murder after 4-month-old Claremont infant thrown to her death
