New Jersey
NJ officers surprised with Eagles playoffs tickets for saving boy who fell through ice
Officers in Gloucester County, New Jersey, got a big surprise on Friday morning.
A representative from Dunkin’ gave them free tickets to this weekend’s Eagles playoff game as a huge thank you for their courageous actions last weekend.
It was a tense scene in Woolwich Township when officers used ropes and went into a frozen body of water to save a child who had fallen through the ice.
“As soon as he started screaming that he couldn’t feel his hands, I just went out there and tried to go get him,” Sgt. Joseph Rieger said. “Immediately thought of my own son and what I would have done with my own son- just go out and get him as soon as I could.”
The boy was screaming and was not able to grab onto the rope that the officers had thrown to him.
“I try to get him the rescue rope but he can’t hold it because his hands aren’t working. So I go to grab him out of the awter and we both go into the water. So I was able to stand up and throw him on top of the ice and start breaking my way back,” Rieger explained.
The team was able to get the 13-year-old out of the frozen water with no one getting hurt.
Then, Dunkin’ showed up to the police department for Law Enforcement Appreciation Day and praised their actions by giving them tickets to Sunday’s Eagles playoff game against the 49ers.
“This is my job. It was what I signed up to do so getting this kind of attention, I’m not used to it. I’m very appreciative and very excited,” Rieger said.
The officers said that if there’s anything to take away from this story, it’s to stay off of the ice.
Thankfully, the boy they saved is doing just fine and stopped by the police department earlier this week to thank them.
“It was awesome. It was nice to see that he was safe. He learned his lesson. He was very appreciative,” Rieger said.
New Jersey
2 lottery players split $756,544 Jersey Cash 5 jackpot. Here’s where
Two New Jersey lottery tickets split a $756,544 Jersey Cash 5 jackpot on Friday, Jan. 23.
The New Jersey Lottery announced that tickets sold in Bergen and Middlesex counties matched all five numbers to win the jackpot.
The winning tickets were sold at:
- 7-Eleven on Main Street in Hackensack (Bergen)
- Krauszer’s on Woodbridge Avenue in Highland Park (Middlesex)
Each retailer will receive a $2,000 bonus for selling the winning tickets.
The Jersey Cash 5 winning numbers for Jan. 23 were: 12, 17, 20, 31 and 39. The XTRA was 03 and Bullseye was 17.
In addition to the jackpot, 49 players matched four out of five balls and the Bullseye to win $500 and 14 of those increased the prize to $1,500 by matching the XTRA.
The Jersey Cash 5 jackpot will be $150,000 for the Saturday, Jan. 24 drawing.
Jersey Cash 5 is a daily lottery draw game from the New Jersey Lottery. Players pick five numbers between 1 and 45 and can add the Xtra for a chance to increase non-jackpot prizes by up to five times. The Bullseye gives players another chance to win. Drawings are held seven days a week at 10:57 p.m.
New Jersey
Fierce snow, ice storm barrels toward N.J. Snowfall forecasts shift as ice threat rises.
Snow and ice forecasts continue to shift for major winter storm that will hit New Jersey starting tonight, with a surging threat of significant icing and power outages for parts of the state.
“There is high confidence in major impacts from snowfall, sleet, and ice accumulations across much of the area, making travel very difficult, and potentially resulting in widespread closures and infrastructure impacts,” the National Weather Service said early Saturday. “Travel could be nearly impossible.”
Snowfall total forecasts for the southern half of the state have been lowered slightly due to more mixing with sleet and freezing rain Sunday afternoon.
But forecasters cautioned that means more dangerous ice in addition to snowfall and potential power outages.
“There is an increasing threat for impactful ice accumulations, on top of the heavy snow that falls tonight and tomorrow morning,” the weather service said. “Ice/sleet on top of snow will result in VERY hazardous travel conditions.”
Gov. Mikie Sherrill declared a state of emergency starting at 5 p.m. Saturday. A commercial vehicle travel ban will also be in effect on major highways.
“I’m urging New Jerseyans to make plans to avoid travel Saturday evening and all day Sunday,” Sherrill said during a Friday press conference.
The entire state is also under a winter storm warning.
Snow is expected to start falling overnight and continue through Monday, which will likely result in school closures.
“Snow begins after midnight tonight, with the heaviest snow occurring daytime Sunday into Sunday evening (1-2 inches per hour rates likely),” the weather service said. “The storm winds down into Monday morning, with very cold conditions through the week.”
Northern New Jersey counties, which should see all or mostly snow during the storm, remain on track for the highest snowfall totals of 12 to 16 inches, with locally higher amounts closer to 18 inches possible.
“Snowfall rates near 1-2 inches per hour expected during the daytime period Sunday,” the weather service said.
The major ice threat is concentrated along the New Jersey Turnpike, particularly in southwestern counties near Philadelphia.
“There remains a threat for notable ice accumulations ranging from 0.1 to 0.3 inches across the I-95 corridor, southern New Jersey,” the national weather service said. “The combination of heavy snow followed by sleet/freezing rain and breezy northeast winds gusting 20-30 mph could result in some isolated instances of downed trees and power lines, and power outages.”
These ice accumulations will occur after 4 to 8 inches or 8 to 12 inches of snow has already fallen, the weather service said.
County-by-county storm warnings
- Burlington, Camden, Cumberland, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Salem and Somerset – From 7 p.m. Saturday to 1 p.m. Monday. Heavy snow with mixed precipitation expected. Total snow and sleet accumulations between 7 and 13 inches and ice accumulations up to three-tenths of an inch. Ice accumulation on power lines and tree limbs may cause tree damage and power outages.
- Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Union and eastern Passaic – From 3 a.m. Sunday to 6 p.m. Monday. Heavy snow expected. The snow may mix with or change to sleet Sunday evening. Total snow and sleet accumulations between 10 and 14 inches. A brief changeover to light freezing rain along with a light glaze of ice may occur Sunday night.
- Western Passaic – From 3 a.m. Sunday to 6 p.m. Monday. Heavy snow expected. Total snow accumulations between 12 and 16 inches. Sleet may briefly mix in with the snow Sunday night.
- Atlantic and Cape May – From 7 p.m. Saturday to 7 a.m. Monday. Heavy snow with mixed precipitation expected. Total snow and sleet accumulations between 4 and 8 inches and ice accumulations up to one-tenth of an inch. Winds gusting as high as 35 mph.
- Sussex and Warren – From 1 a.m. Saturday to 1 p.m. Monday. Heavy snow expected. Total snow and sleet accumulations between 11 and 15 inches.

Forecast for Saturday
Dangerous cold conditions continue through Saturday morning with wind chills below zero for most of New Jersey.
A cold weather advisory is in effect for New Jersey through 10 a.m.
Highs on Saturday will only reaching the upper teens to low 20s ahead of the storm.
Brutally cold week
Arctic air will remain in place through the upcoming week with temperatures below freezing into Friday.
Monday may be the mildest day of the week, with highs in the upper 20s to low 30s, though a strong cold front Monday night will send lows crashing into the single digits.
Wind chills as low as 10 degrees below zero are possible Tuesday morning.
Highs on Tuesday will struggle to reach the teens and low 20s.
The rest of the week is expected to continue with similar temperatures. Lows will remain in the single digits through Friday.
As a result of this prolonged cold, the new snow is not expected to melt much.
Current weather radar
New Jersey
New Jersey’s Traffic Ranking Reveals Challenges And Safety Focus In 2026 Study
The average U.S. driver spends 49 hours a year in traffic. That significant fact leads to the loss of millions of dollars in productivity, so says a new 2026 study by WalletHub.
Driving
How to determine the most driver-friendly states in the U.S.
To determine the most driver-friendly state, WalletHub compared all 50 states across 31 key metrics. The data ranged from average gas price to rush hour congestion, to road quality, and other factors.
The U.S. has an amazing 10 out of the world’s 25 worst cities for traffic.
If you are stuck in traffic, road conditions can lend high emotions to the already stressful situation of your commute. If you are stuck in traffic on a bad road, that can fuel major stress and cause longer delays.
Driving, Happy
Where are the best states to drive in?
The best state to drive in, ranking 1-5, is absolutely no surprise. In order, Vermont, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and Indiana. I have driven in all these states. Of course, states 2-4 have flat, wide-open highways with tremendous infrastructure and no traffic. Vermont is beautiful, my experience has been wonderful scenery, great roads, and clearly marked signage.
Photo via Ivanko_Brnjakovic
Where does New Jersey rank?
New Jersey ranks somewhere in the middle, on the cusp of best and worst states to drive in. Coming in at No. 27, New Jersey received the middle-of-the-pack rank due to a no-surprise ranking of 47th worst for traffic and infrastructure.
I know we have some tough roads, very tough roads, but the Garden State Parkway and the Turnpike, for the most part, are in much better shape than I have seen on other major roadways, namely Chicago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and the traffic in Los Angeles, fuhgeddaboudit!
While New Jersey ranked 47th for traffic and infrastructure, they rank 7th overall for safety rank which helped in the overall average.
New Jersey also ranked 29th in car cost in ownership and maintenance.
These factors put New Jersey in the middle. We know we have traffic problems, we know we have infrastructure and road condition issues, but we also know how to drive safely. That is a good thing. Be careful out there.
For the full study and information, please follow the link below: Best & Worst States to Drive in 2026
LET’S GO Back to the ’80s: The Coolest Cars and the Ads That Sold Them
Whether you dreamed of cruising in a Porsche 944 like Jake Ryan, showing off in an IROC-Z, or riding shotgun with KITT from Knight Rider, the cars of the ’80s had something for everyone. Some were fast, some were flashy, and some just got you to tennis practice. Keep scrolling to see the most iconic cars of the decade — and the ads that convinced us we needed them.
Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz
LET’S GO Back to the ’80s: The Coolest Cars and the Ads That Sold Them
Whether you dreamed of cruising in a Porsche 944 like Jake Ryan, showing off in an IROC-Z, or riding shotgun with KITT from Knight Rider, the cars of the ’80s had something for everyone. Some were fast, some were flashy, and some just got you to tennis practice. Keep scrolling to see the most iconic cars of the decade — and the ads that convinced us we needed them.
Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz
LOOK: See the iconic cars that debuted the year you were born
The post above reflects the thoughts and observations of New Jersey 101.5 weekend host Big Joe Henry. Any opinions expressed are Big Joe’s own.
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