New Jersey
U.S. Senate sends Biden giant spending package hours before midnight deadline • New Jersey Monitor
WASHINGTON — U.S. senators on Friday cleared a bipartisan spending package for President Joe Biden’s signature, completing work on half of the annual bills that were supposed to become law by Oct. 1.
The $468 billion spending legislation rolls together the Agriculture-FDA, Commerce-Justice-Science, Energy-Water, Interior-Environment, Military Construction-VA and Transportation-HUD spending bills into a so-called “minibus.”
The House voted 339-85 on Wednesday to approve the 1,050-page spending package that was released on Sunday.
The Senate vote of 75-22 followed hours of delay as conservative GOP senators pressed to make changes to the legislation that were ultimately rejected. Any changes to the bill would have required it go back to the House for approval, likely leading to a funding lapse when a stopgap spending law expired at midnight on Friday.
The six bills are just part of the equation Congress must solve before the next funding deadline of March 22, when the other six bills, which are much more challenging and include a higher price tag, come due.
Those include Defense, Financial Services and General Government, Homeland Security, Labor-HHS-Education, Legislative Branch and State-Foreign Operations.
Senate complaints
Senate debate on this spending package was broadly bipartisan, though several conservative GOP senators argued the spending levels were too high and it didn’t do enough to rein in the Biden administration.
They also said the earmarks in the bills should be removed.
Senate Appropriations Chair Patty Murray, a Washington state Democrat, said during floor debate Friday the bill includes important priorities like the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children or WIC, housing assistance, environmental protection programs and veterans health care.
“This first package is evidence that we can get things done when everyone is focused on what can actually help folks back at home and what can actually pass in a divided government,” Murray said.
“This isn’t the package I would have written on my own,” Murray added. “But I am proud that we have protected absolutely vital funding that the American people rely on in their daily lives.”
Senate Appropriations ranking member Susan Collins, a Maine Republican, rebuked some of her colleagues for making statements about the process and having the opportunity to amend the legislation that weren’t true.
She reiterated that the spending panel, made up of 29 senators from both parties, debated and approved all dozen of the full-year bills last summer on broadly bipartisan votes. The full Senate then spent nearly two months last fall debating a package that included three of the bills in this final package.
“The Ag and FDA bill, the MilCon-VA bill and the Transportation-HUD bill were brought to the Senate floor,” Collins said. “So to say, as one of my colleagues did, that there was no opportunity for amendments and debate is flat out wrong. Those bills were on the floor for about seven weeks. We had 40 amendments. So I would urge my colleagues to stop playing with fire here.”
Collins added the Senate Appropriations Committee held 50 public hearings on the budget requests from various departments and agencies before it drafted the original dozen government funding bills.
Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee spoke against approving the package, in part, because of all the spending that House and Senate lawmakers were able to direct to projects back home, known as earmarks.
“Just days ago, we saw the text of this legislation in its entirety. We saw that it contained, among other things, more than 600 pages of earmarks totaling over 6,000 earmarks,” Lee said. “It spends a lot of money. It’s significant legislation. Whether you love it or hate it, you can’t dispute the fact that the legislation does a lot of things in government. It funds a lot of things in government.”
FBI, ATF see spending cuts
The bill includes funding for the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, Transportation and Veterans Affairs.
Smaller agencies, — like the Army Corps of Engineers, Environmental Protection Agency, Food and Drug Administration, National Aeronautics and Space Administration or NASA, National Science Foundation and military construction projects — are also funded in the package.
Dozens of accounts throughout the six bills will need to account for spending cuts that range from mild to significant.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation as well as the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, both of which have been the subject of Republican ire during the Biden administration, are seeing their funding cut.
The FBI will get $32 million less and the ATF will get $47 million less for salaries and expenses.
The Interior-Environment spending bill would see a cut of $1.5 billion to about $38.5 billion for fiscal 2024.
Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski, ranking member on the spending subcommittee, said Friday that negotiating the bill was especially challenging given those constraints.
“When you have cuts of that nature, it really does require some very difficult funding choices,” Murkowski said.
Appropriators, she said, looked to address “the most pressing needs within the bill” to ensure there were “meaningful reductions that are able to help us meet the terms under the Fiscal Responsibility Act.”
The payments in lieu of taxes program or PILT, which provides states with large swaths of federal public lands with funding to make up for taxes they would otherwise receive if that land were private, received full funding, Murkowski said.
“When you don’t have a tax base in your state because so much of your state is occupied as federal land — where do you generate that tax base to provide for the needs of local communities, whether it’s county roads or public safety or schools?” Murkowski said. “Well, PILT helps with that.”
The EPA, funded within that bill, will drop to $9.2 billion after receiving $10.1 billion during the last fiscal year. That represents nearly a 10% cut.
“What we attempted to do within this budget is to prioritize funding for those programs that result in concrete actions to improve the quality of the environment across the country,” Murkowski said of the EPA portion. “And I think we tried to ensure that the mission moved forward in a way that does, again, allow for that protection of the environment, but recognizing that there are many areas within the EPA budget that we could look to reduce.”
Numerous other agencies, including the National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management, would see their annual appropriations cut under the bill.
WIC increase
Programs that generally garner bipartisan support had their budgets increased for fiscal year 2024.
The USDA will see its funding rise by $383 million to a total of $22.3 billion. Several of the accounts within that bill were singled out for specific spending boosts, including the Agriculture Research Service, the Food Safety and Inspection Service and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children or WIC.
Numerous other USDA accounts are seeing reductions in their budget authority. The National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service and Agricultural Marketing Service will all need to account for millions less in spending than they currently have.
The Energy Department would see a $1.8 billion increase in spending, bringing its total budget to $50.2 billion. That money would go toward its defense activities, like the National Nuclear Security Administration, and its non-defense programs, such as nuclear energy research, development and demonstration.
Military Construction would increase to $18.7 billion, which would go toward housing, child development centers and the NATO Security Investment Program.
Medical care at the Department of Veterans Affairs would receive $121 billion in funding, an increase of $2.3 billion compared to its current funding levels. That money would be divvied up between numerous initiatives, including veterans homelessness programs, mental health, rural health care and women’s health care.
The Federal Aviation Administration would get an increase of more than $1 billion, bringing its total allocation to more than $20 billion.
Senate Democrats wrote in a summary of the bill that funding “will allow the FAA to continue its air traffic controller hiring surge by adding 1,800 new controllers, improving training facilities at the air traffic controller academy, and addressing the reliability of critical IT and telecommunications legacy systems.”
Thousands of earmarks
The package includes more than 6,600 earmarks totaling $12.655 billion, according to two people familiar with the list. All the approved earmarks as well as senators’ original requests for funding can be found here.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, didn’t request any earmarks in these six spending bills, but Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican did.
The Barksdale Air Force Base will receive $7 million for major construction on the 307 Bomb Wing Medical Facility Addition due to an earmark he sponsored alongside Louisiana GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, received about 170 earmarks through these six bills, many co-sponsored with fellow New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand.
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, of New York, received 15 earmarks for projects.
Murray secured funding for nearly 60 projects, ranging from $11 million for the planning and design of an aircraft regional services facility at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island to $552,000 for a community violence prevention program in Burien, Washington, to $3 million for public safety radio network improvements in Okanogan County.
Several of Murray’s funded projects were requested alongside fellow Washington state Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell.
Collins received more than 165 funded community projects throughout these six spending bills, many of which were co-sponsored with Maine independent Sen. Angus King.
The Collins earmarks include $2.9 billion for the town of Brownfield Public Safety Building, $90,000 for the Maine Coalition Against Sexual Assault for sexual assault expert witness and attorney training, nearly $7.8 million for the Maine Department of Marine Resources for Woodland Dam Fish Passage Replacement and $7.4 million for the National Guard to complete a vehicle maintenance shop in Saco, Maine.
New Jersey
Richard Codey, former New Jersey governor who replaced Jim McGreevey, dies at 79
NEW JERSEY — Former New Jersey Democratic Gov. Richard Codey, a longtime lawmaker who replaced Jim McGreevey as governor after his resignation in 2004, has died at the age of 79, his family announced on Sunday.
Codey served as the 53rd governor of New Jersey, leading the Garden State between 2004-2006. He spent over half a century working in the state legislature.
In a statement released on social media, Codey’s family says the former governor died peacefully at home, surrounded by family, after suffering from a brief illness.
“Our family has lost a beloved husband, father and grandfather — and New Jersey lost a remarkable public servant who touched the lives of all who knew him,” the statement said.
“He lived his life with humility, compassion and a deep sense of responsibility to others. He spoke the truth when others wouldn’t and fought tirelessly for the people of New Jersey during his record-setting 50 years in the Legislature. He made friends as easily with Presidents as he did with strangers in all-night diners. We take comfort in knowing how many people he helped, inspired and stood up for over the years. We will share information about services in the coming days.”
New Jersey State Sen. and former Democratic Gov. Richard Codey is seen before New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy delivers his State of the State, in Trenton, N.J., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke
In a statement Sunday afternoon, outgoing Gov. Phil Murphy says he will remember Codey, who was often referred to by his nickname Dick, for his “legacy of heroic service.”
“If anybody embodied our proud New Jersey values, it was Governor Dick Codey,” Murphy said.
“He proved that every single day of his life. Whether as Governor or as the longest-serving lawmaker in New Jersey history, Dick built a safer, healthier future for all of us. From championing funding for mental health care and stem cell research to advancing smoke-free indoor spaces in New Jersey, Dick protected every one of our communities and sought to cultivate the potential of every one of our neighbors.”
Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr. also issued a statement reflecting on Codey’s impact and legacy.
“Richard Codey was a prominent figure in Essex County and New Jersey for over a half century, serving as an Assemblyman, Senate President and Interim Governor. I respected Dick for his ability to get things done and how he always was a staunch advocate for his constituents. I am glad that we dedicated Codey Arena in his honor in 2005 while he was alive so that he could see how much people appreciated him and the impact he had. My condolences go out to his family,” DiVincenzo Jr. said.
In 2023, a then 76-year-old Codey announced his plans for retirement, fifty years after first stepping into politics.
The calls poured in to salute a man who served in the Assembly, Senate and also served 14 months as governor after McGreevey announced he was a gay American and planned to leave office in August of 2004.
Codey’s wife was having minor surgery that day and he walked to his office to wait, unaware McGreevey was stepping down.
“I walk into my office and they say, ‘hello governor,’” Codey said.
Once it was confirmed, he returned to his recovering wife and delivered the news.
“She’s in recovery and I tell her, ‘you’re the first lady,’” Codey said. “She’s like ‘what do you mean I’m the first lady?’ I said, ‘well McGreevey is resigning and I’m going to become the governor and you’re going to be the first lady. She’s like, ‘is there anything to knock me back out?”
But during his time in office, the governor and his wife Mary Jo went public with her mental health issues and he became a leading advocate for helping those suffering from depression.
“We’re very proud of her and because of that, we passed many laws to help women, especially those who have just given birth,” Codey said at the time.
Codey was the first in his Irish family to go to college. In fact, he went to four before graduating from Fairleigh Dickinson.
He won his assembly seat in 1973, became a senator in 1982 and then Senate president in 2002. That’s how he became governor when McGreevey officially left office in November of 2004.
Besides improving mental health, Codey expanded the turnpike, improved school security and he was an early supporter of future President Barack Obama.
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New Jersey
Monmouth County high school among best schools for athletes across NJ
New Jersey has many schools that offer a great education for students interested in sports.
Student-athletes seeking the best schools with leading sports programs have options in the Garden State, says Niche.com.
The online platform for rankings and review rounded up the top New Jersey schools with the best high school sports programs based on analysis of key statistics and millions of reviews from students and parents using data from the U.S. Department of Education.
In addition these rankings based on the number of state championships, student participation in athletics and the number of sports offered at the school.
One school from Monmouth County made the list in the number 6 spot.
Red Bank Catholic
Red Bank Catholic is a private Catholic high school in Monmouth County and offers students extracurriculars that include an award winning athletic program with 28 varsity sports. The institution also ranked in the top 5 list for Best Private High Schools in Monmouth County.
Here’s why RBC made the list:
- Sports: grade A+
- Clubs & Activities: grade A+
- Academics: grade A
- College Prep: grade A minus
- Teachers: grade B+
- Diversity: grade B minus
Red Bank Catholic overall Niche grade: A
Top 10 High Schools for Athletes
This list is was compiled from Niche.com and includes private and public schools across New Jersey.
- Delbarton High School
- Bergen Catholic High School
- Seton Hall Preparatory High School
- Saint Peter’s Prep
- Don Bosco Preparatory High School
- Red Bank Catholic High School
- Haddonfield Memorial High School
- Westfield Senior High School
- Ramapo High School
- Northern Highlands Regional High School
New Jersey
Isolated snow showers, wind gusts up to 35 mph in N.J. forecast for Sunday
Rain will continue through tonight across New Jersey before a cold front passes through Sunday morning, followed by wind gusts up to 35 mph and the chance of isolated snow showers.
The heaviest rain tonight is expected along the southern portions of the state where 1 and 1.5 inches rainfall totals are possible, according to the National Weather Service.
Most other areas of New Jersey should receive around 1 inch of rain, with the northwest portions of the state picking up 0.5 to 0.75 inches.
Once the rain ends between 6 and 9 a.m. Sunday, conditions should remain cloudy and foggy until a cold front passes through late Sunday morning into early Sunday afternoon.
Temperatures will drop into the upper 30s to low 40s Sunday morning as cold air moves in behind the first cold front.
A secondary cold front will cross New Jersey late Sunday afternoon accompanied by a period of rain and snow showers.
The isolated snow showers are possible mainly from 7 to 11 p.m., the weather service said. Snow accumulations are not expected in New Jersey.
Winds of 15 to 20 mph on Sunday afternoon are expected to increase to 25 to 35 mph by sunset.
Monday’s forecast calls for mainly clear skies with temperatures in the upper 30s to low 40s and winds gradually diminishing.
Tuesday will be milder with above-normal temperatures and mainly clear to partly cloudy skies, with a slight chance of some rain showers possible.
Wednesday’s temperatures will remain above normal with partly cloudy skies and a slight chance of rain showers as a cold front approaches from the west.
A potential coastal storm could impact New Jersey with snow on Thursday and Friday, though significant uncertainty remains regarding the exact track and timing of the system, the weather service said.
Some forecast models suggest a significant winter storm while others indicate the system will remain offshore.
A colder air mass is forecast to move into New Jersey by late next week and into the following weekend.
Current weather radar
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