New Jersey
NJ Lottery Pick-3, Pick-4, Jersey Cash 5, Pick-6 winning numbers for Thursday, April 25
The New Jersey Lottery offers multiple draw games for people looking to strike it rich.
Here’s a look at Thursday, April 25, 2024 winning numbers for each game:
Pick-3
Midday: 4 – 5 – 4; Fireball: 0
Evening: 3 – 8 – 2; Fireball: 8
Check Pick-3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Pick-4
Midday: 6 – 1 – 4 – 1; Fireball: 0
Evening: 8 – 9 – 2 – 5; Fireball: 8
Check Pick-4 payouts and previous drawings here.
More: Here’s a look at NJ’s top 5 big lottery winners in 2023
Jersey Cash 5
03 – 05 – 18 – 26 – 38; Xtra: 5
Check Jersey Cash 5 payouts and drawings here.
Cash4Life
03 – 07 – 39 – 49 – 58; Cash Ball: 01
Check previous Cash4Life drawings here.
NJ lottery: Where does all the billions in ticket sales money go?
Pick-6
02 – 09 – 10 – 17 – 30 – 39
Double Play: 03 – 09 – 13 – 40 – 43 – 44
Check previous Pick-6 drawings here.
Winner: New Jersey grandmother of 10 planning Disney trip after winning $1 million in Powerball
Quick Draw
Drawing are held every four minutes. Check winning numbers here.
Cash Pop
Drawing are held every four minutes. Check winning numbers here.
Beware: No, a lottery jackpot winner isn’t giving you money. How to spot a scammer
Gambling too much? You can get help by calling 1800-GAMBLER or clicking on www.800gambler.org
New Jersey
South Jersey schools would bear the brunt of state aid cuts, led by Burlington County
Singleton and Tiver are sponsoring a measure that would reconfigure how funding is distributed within the state’s school funding formula.
“Essentially, every school district would receive an increase of 4.5%, which is consistent with the consumer price index here in our region,” Singleton said, adding that some districts would get more based on tougher economic climates.
“And then, we’d still – within the existing pot of money in the school funding formula – we would still have an additional pot of money in the neighborhood of about $300 to 350 or so million, that would … be utilized by the Department of Education to provide additional resources to support districts that make a case that, hey, we needed a little bit more for this reason or that.”
A formula for tension and pressure
The numbers that the Education Department calculated are guided by the School Funding Reform Act of 2008, or SFRA. A revision, known in Trenton as “S2,” was added in 2018.
Before SFRA, school funding reform was driven by a series of court decisions, according to Dr. Mark Weber, senior analyst for education policy at New Jersey Policy Perspective, starting with Robinson v. Cahill in the early 1970s and continuing through several Abbott Decisions starting in the mid-1980s.
The formula is based, in part, on a district’s ability to raise revenue.
“[With SFRA] the legislature said, ‘Okay, we’re going to help all districts, every district,’” he said. “We’re going to provide the aid for you that is commensurate with your ability to be able to tax yourself and with the population of students that you are educating,” he said.
Once the formula was executed, the amount of aid given was changed after some districts complained, and lawmakers moved to preserve funding for those districts.
Another factor was when Gov. Chris Christie, in 2010, put in place a 2% cap on annual property tax increases, limiting a district’s ability to raise revenue. A measure to allow districts to exceed the cap was proposed over the winter.
Weber said SFRA is not a “complete disaster,” but it could be better while defending the fundamental core of the law.
“The idea that if you have more students who have greater needs, you should get more funding,” he said. “If you have a community that doesn’t have the ability to raise enough in taxes, you should get more funding.”
Weber believes the problem is in the “nuts and bolts” of the law.
“There are…specific parts of SFRA that are subjected to economic swings and all kinds of volatility that school districts really don’t expect,” he said. “All it takes is a few changes in property values for your district, particularly if you’re a small district, you may be expected to contribute a lot more.”
Better funding targets with real data plus a more careful look at “local fair share” are a couple of ideas that Weber offered to improve SFRA.
What the long-term fix will look like remains to be seen according to Gov. Murphy. During the April edition of WHYY’s “Ask Governor Murphy” program, he said a conversation with all parties would be needed.
“Not just the legislators, but certainly them and our team, but also the stakeholders,” said Murphy. “Whether that’s superintendents, principals, the teachers’ unions, moms and dads; let’s get around a table and figure out where this is working and where it isn’t working.”
New Jersey
New Jersey state trooper dies during training at headquarters
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New Jersey
Kathy Forsyth, Brendan Byrne's press secretary, dies at 73 – New Jersey Globe
Kathryn Forsyth, who served as press secretary to Gov. Brendan Byrne and as state director for U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg, died on May 2. She was 73.
Forsyth had started in politics as an intern on Rep. Peter W. Rodino’s 1972 re-election campaign. She was a press assistant for Byrne’s 1973 gubernatorial campaign and she became deputy press secretary when Byrne took office as governor in January 1974.
She became press secretary in July 1977, succeeding Richard Campbell, while Byrne was an underdog in his re-election campaign. At age 26, she became the first woman to hold the post — and youngest press secretary to a New Jersey governor – a record she held until earlier this year when Gov. Phil Murphy named 25-year-old Natalie Hamilton.
Forsyth was among those who turned the lights off in the Byrne administration, departing in January 1982 after spending the entirety of Brendan Byrne’s tenure in the governor’s office.
In 1984, she joined the Assembly Democratic staff, and became communications director in 1986. Forsyth was the spokesperson for Assembly Speaker Joseph Doria in 1990 and 1991.
In 1991, she left Trenton to become Lautenberg’s top New Jersey aide.
After leaving Lautenberg’s office in 1995, she became the vice president of a New Jersey lobbying firm.
Forsyth returned to state government in 2004 as the public information officer for the New Jersey Department of Education. She remained there until Republican Chris Christie took office in 2010.
She is survived by her husband, Edward Liston, and her step-children and step-grandchildren.
A funeral mass will be held on May 8 at 10:30 at Our Lady of Lourdes RC Church in West Orange. Visitation will be held on May 7 at Danger Funeral Home in West Orange.
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