New Jersey
Legal pot in New Jersey — do you know the whole story?
Pot is authorized throughout the Backyard State as of this Thursday, April 21. Though many people thought that it is about time that hashish is taken off the record of legal offenses, there are some issues.
My buddy Tom Pyle, a Princeton educated, native chief working with folks bothered with psychological sickness, joined me for an in-depth dialog on my podcast. We mentioned the leads to Colorado and different states which noticed a rise in minority youths being arrested within the fast aftermath of legalization, an increase in visitors accidents, and property crimes across the dispensaries.
I shared my ideas after assembly with a number of giant buyers in native dispensaries studying that many leaders within the hashish trade are those pushing for pot to stay unlawful on the federal degree.
It is smart, after all. No pot throughout state strains forces native rising licenses, which restrict provide and probably retains the value artificially excessive. The unintended consequence of this can doubtless be a thriving black market. Cheaper merchandise result in probably extra harmful conduct.
My buddy Heather Darling, who serves because the Morris County surrogate, weighed and shared among the identical issues. Hearken to my full dialog with Heather right here:
And with Tom Pyle right here:
Hit me up on the free New Jersey 101.5 app and let me know your ideas about authorized pot within the Backyard State.
The submit above displays the ideas and observations of New Jersey 101.5 speak present host Invoice Spadea. Any opinions expressed are Invoice’s personal. Invoice Spadea is on the air weekdays from 6 to 10 a.m., talkin’ Jersey, taking your calls at 1-800-283-1015.
LOOK: States With the Most New Small Companies Per Capita
Each NJ metropolis and city’s municipal tax invoice, ranked
Rather less than 30 cents of each $1 in property taxes charged in New Jersey assist municipal companies offered by cities, cities, townships, boroughs and villages. Statewide, the common municipal-only tax invoice in 2021 was $2,725, however that assorted extensively from greater than $13,000 in Tavistock to nothing in three townships. Along with $9.22 billion in municipal function taxes, particular taxing districts that in some locations present municipal companies akin to hearth safety, rubbish assortment or financial improvement levied $323.8 million in 2021.
New Jersey
New Jersey Titans pull ahead in the third to defeat Maryland Black Bears – The Rink Live
The New Jersey Titans were victorious against the Maryland Black Bears on Friday, Jan. 16, 2025 at Middletown Ice World Arena.
After two periods, the teams were tied at 0, but New Jersey pulled away in the third, winning the game 2-0.
The Titans first took the lead early in the third period, with a goal from Owen Leahy, assisted by
James Schneid
and
Blake Jones
.
The Titans increased the lead to 2-0 with 52 seconds remaining of the third after a goal from James Schneid, assisted by
Nikita Meshcheryakov
and
Ryan Friedman
.
Next up:
The teams play again on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025 at 6 p.m. CST at Middletown Ice World Arena.
Read more NAHL coverage
Automated articles produced by United Robots on behalf of The Rink Live.
New Jersey
Fmr. South Jersey camp director accused of sex assault released pending trial
Friday, January 17, 2025 10:53PM
A former South Jersey camp director accused of sexually assaulting a teenage boy is out of jail.
DEPTFORD TWP., N.J. (WPVI) — A former South Jersey camp director accused of sexually assaulting a teenage boy is out of jail.
Forty-six-year-old Tara Carr, of Woodstown, is accused of assaulting the 14-year-old four times last year and sending him inappropriate videos and photos.
She faces charges including sexual assault of a juvenile, and second-degree luring.
Carr is a former owner of Rastelli Kids Complex in Deptford Township.
A judge ruled Carr could be released pending trial.
She is scheduled to next appear in court on February 18.
Copyright © 2025 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.
New Jersey
Devils GM ‘Open-Minded’ on NHL Trade Market
Over the last little while, the New Jersey Devils weaknesses have exposed themselves. It’s not unlike anything we’ve already mentioned before. The Devils need depth scoring, and they need it as soon as possible. The Devils general manager explained in a recent interview that he’s “open-minded” when it comes to the NHL trade market.
MORE: Devils GM Could Be Forced Into Tough Decision
In a recent interview with The Athletic’s Pierre Lebrun, Devils GM Tom Fitzgerald disclosed he’s in the market for a center.
We know one thing is for sure. Said center will not bump Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier down the lineup. Therefore, whoever comes in is playing in the bottom-six, which fits the need for depth scoring.
“Somebody that can come in and maybe give us that extra oomph — and maybe properly slot people to make us a strong, four-line team come playoff time,” Fitzgerald told The Athletic. “And build depth because of injuries. And build competition, too. We love what we have. I just really want to add on top of that.”
As far as Fitzgerald’s open-mindedness, he explained he’s willing to pay for a rental or someone with term.
GMs cannot disclose specific names for tampering purposes, but LeBrun mentioned the likes of Ryan O’Reilly, Yani Gourde, and Scott Laughton, as possibilities. Those are all players who will certainly cost a pretty penny.
The problem? Well, right now, there’s no one team you can really point to in the Eastern Conference as a bona fide seller. With such a tight race, the NHL trade market is being held up as teams assess whether they’re going for it or not which will determine their buyer or seller status.
We’re about three-plus weeks away from the 4 Nations Face-Off. The expectation is that there will be some NHL trade activity just before the international tournament, which will act as somewhat of a trade deadline.
However, the real deadline is March 7th, and the expectation is that the Devils will certainly be adding to boost the roster.
From the sound of it, a center is the priority. Right now, the Devils deploy Justin Dowling and Curtis Lazar on the third and fourth line. Erik Haula is out with an ankle injury, and typically man’s third-line duties.
However, Haula’s struggled to fill the scoresheet and the Devils could use an upgrade.
Part of Fitzgerald’s open-mindedness is the willingness to add on the wing if his center focus doesn’t present a formidable option.
Names such as Taylor Hall, Kyle Palmieri, and Trent Fredric come to mind.
The Devils have dropped three of their last four games in overtime. They haven’t necessarily been bad losses, hanging in tight with some well-established teams.
Yet, one could certainly argue that the Devils might have swept the extra points they left on the table if they had a little more punch in their bottom-six.
Certainly, Fitzgerald is willing to deal now. However, with the hold up on the market, it could be a few weeks before anything comes to fruition—with the potential for a longer wait closer to the March 7th deadline.
For more Devils news, visit New Jersey Hockey Now, subscribe to our YouTube and like our Facebook page.
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