New Jersey
NYC to MetLife round-trip bus fares for World Cup ticket holders slashed by 75%: report
Round-trip bus fares for fans attending the 2026 FIFA World Cup have been cut by 75% as officials scrambled to secure backup transportation between the Big Apple and New Jersey, a new report said.
The New York/New Jersey host committee slashed fares from $80 to $20 for ticket holders traveling from three Manhattan locations to MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ — and boosted capacity from 10,000 to 18,000 seats by adding yellow school buses for the eight World Cup games, The Athletic reported.
Buses will shuttle up to 18,000 people on non-school matchdays, and about 12,000 on school-day games between June 13 and July 19.
The steep price cut comes after New York Gov. Kathy Hochul pumped $6 million into hacking down fares – with the investment setting aside about 20% of bus tickets for state residents who have purchased match tickets, the outlet reported.
Sources familiar with ticket sales told the Athletic that about 25% to 30% of tri-state area residents have already scooped up admissions for games at MetLife Stadium.
Alongside the major investment, Highland Fleets, which manages electric school bus fleets, worked with the New York City School Bus Umbrella Services – after contacting Hochul, the committee, and NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani – to secure additional buses, with about 300 hitting the road on peak matchdays.
The transit rides will leave from the Port Authority Bus Terminal, a Midtown east location east of Grand Central Terminal, and a Midtown North location west of Central Park, the outlet reported.
Highland Fleets chief operating officer Ben Schutzman said the goal was to create “affordable and accessible” bus services during the World Cup, while a Mamdani spokesperson praised the mayor’s support for discounted rides for ticketholders.
“Mayor Mamdani supports any effort that makes transportation more affordable for New Yorkers – including reduced-cost buses for World Cup ticketholders,” the mayor’s rep told the outlet.
“We look forward to rolling out additional free and affordable events to ensure that all New Yorkers can enjoy the World Cup.”
The price-slashing effort comes days after New Jersey Transit trimmed its widely slammed World Cup fare hike by 30% after securing funding from “sponsors and other sources.”
The new price will be set at $105 for a round-trip ticket from Manhattan to MetLife after fares were bumped more than 1,000% from the standard $12.90 ticket to a whopping $150.
The eight games being played at the Garden State stadium are set for June 13, June 16, June 22, June 25, June 27, June 30, July 5, and July 19.
New Jersey
24-year-old elected mayor of NJ town as incumbent faced backlash in wake of massive warehouse fire
BELLEVILLE, New Jersey (WABC) — Frank Vélez, a 24-year-old town councilman, was elected as the new mayor of Belleville, New Jersey, on Tuesday.
Vélez may be young, but he has years of experience after he became involved in politics at 19 because his sister has special needs.
He has served on the school board in Belleville and the town council, and he was on the staff of former congressman Bill Pascrell.
Vélez said his win is a testament to hard work.
“We ran on getting back to the basics, the quality of life. Talking about responsible development and just talking about getting back to the priorities of working people,” Vélez said.
Incumbent Michael Melham faced backlash for his handling of a massive warehouse fire that shut down schools for more than a week.
There has been growing pessimism in town, highlighted by the massive 14-alarm warehouse fire this month that caused residents to evacuate and schools to shut down for days.
Parents and educators wrote a joint letter critical of Melham and school leadership for failing to communicate with parents during the emergency.
“In the hours and days following the fire, our community was left navigating uncertainty with little or no official instruction, resorting to group chats and scavenging social media for guidance or information, both of which should have been provided by the government that we entrust for such tasks,” the letter read in part.
Vélez said he’s ready to get to work.
“I feel grateful. I am humbled, and I’m just- just so ready to get to work as the next mayor of Belleville. And I’m so grateful to everyone for support. This was a resounding victory,” Vélez said.
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New Jersey
Feds seize over 260 pounds of methamphetamine in New Jersey, 2 charged
Two men are facing charges after more than 260 pounds of methamphetamine were seized by law enforcement in New Jersey last month, the largest meth bust in state history.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey said Marcos Cesar Acosta, most recently of Chicago, and Carlos H. Cordero-Guiterrez, a Mexican citizen and national, were charged with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances after they were arrested on April 28.
Federal officials said Acosta, 47, traveled to New Jersey to supervise delivery of the meth in a truck driven by 53-year-old Cordero-Guiterrez. After the truck arrived in the state, law enforcement seized three storage boxes, one duffel bag and a garbage bag full of drugs from the vehicle.
According to FBI Special Agent in Charge Stefanie Roddy, the 260 pounds of meth had a value of $6 million.
“By preventing hundreds of pounds of methamphetamine from hitting the streets, this historic seizure has made New Jersey a safer place,” U.S. Attorney Frazer said. “And it has also sent an unmistakable message to drug traffickers who plan to enter the Garden State: stay out. We will find you and you will answer for any attempt to bring poison into our communities. I want to thank our law enforcement partners for their tireless work in this case and for putting themselves at risk for the benefit of public safety every day.”
The seizure was carried out in partnership with the Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Homeland Security, FBI and IRS-Criminal Investigation Division.
Officials said conspiracy to distribute meth carries a mandatory minimum penalty of 10 years in prison, a maximum potential penalty of life in prison and a fine of up to $10 million.
New Jersey
24 hours with 3 teenage birders: Welcome to the World Series of Birding
Otys Train, 16, (left) and teammate Jack Trojan, 17, search for different bird species while competing in the world series of birding at High Point State Park in New Jersey on May 9. They competed in the 43rd annual World Series of Birding where they counted as many bird species within New Jersey as they could in 24 hours.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
It’s just after midnight in north New Jersey when a white SUV pulls up next to a deserted park, and three teenage boys leap out into the dark. They sprint across a field, vault a fence and peer through binoculars — up toward giant nests atop a pole — all in the hopes of catching a momentary flash of a sleeping parrot’s tail.
By the light of street lamps, they strain to get a look through the nests’ dark holes. Then, after 10 minutes of waiting, 16-year-old Otys Train calls out: “I’ve I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it, I got the monk parakeet!”
He and his friends, 17-year-old Jack Trojan and 16-year-old Zade Pacetti, have repeatedly come to this park late at night to try to find this bird. And tonight, the work has paid off. They’ve found their first bird of the 43rd annual World Series of Birding. The competition started at midnight on Saturday, and they have until the last seconds of the day to count as many bird species within New Jersey as they can — and claim victory.
A snowy egret flies by a nesting area in Ocean City.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
The teenagers are accompanied by their dads: Mark Trojan, Chris Pacetti and Jeff Train. They’re in charge of driving the van and ensuring that their sons remember to drink water and eat food, not just energy drinks and a family-sized bag of M&Ms.
To keep warm, the team sports matching gray sweatshirts, emblazoned with their team name: The Pete Dunnelins. It’s a portmanteau of dunlins, a shorebird often spotted along the New Jersey coast, and a local birding hero: Pete Dunne, who founded the World Series of Birding back in 1984. It’s put on by the nonprofit New Jersey Audubon, part competition for birding glory and part fundraiser for conservation.
It’s become an intergenerational gathering of bird lovers: This year, 87 teams are participating in several divisions sorted by age. They range from birders who have competed for decades, to first-graders who are just learning the ropes. Smack dab in the middle, in the high school division, are The Pete Dunnelins, who have been friends since 2021, around the time they really fell in love with birding.
Pete Dunne uses binoculars during the World Series of Birding in an estuary in Cape May in 2007. He founded the event in 1984.
Stan Honda/AFP via Getty Images
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Stan Honda/AFP via Getty Images
For them, it’s not just a casual hobby. They’ve placed first in the competition for the past two years — the result of years of practice, mentorship from older birders and training their eyes and ears to catch every bird, no matter how swift the appearance or faint the call. The three of them have been preparing for this year’s competition for months, even creating a spreadsheet with the day’s schedule planned “down to the minute,” Jack Trojan says.
It’s a strategy they hope will lead to another win — or, at the very least, help them reach their goal of 200 species. (Last year, they got 199, tying for first place with their fellow high school competitors and “nemeses,” the Flying Penguins from southeast Pennsylvania.)
“Every minute we’re driving, we’ve accounted for,” Trojan, the team captain, says. But they can’t account for the whims of nature. “Birds are animals, and you can’t really predict too well when you’re going to see or hear everything.”
The clock is ticking, and they have to move on to other locations, Trojan says: “It’s owl time.”
3 a.m. in marshland
After a few hours of looking for owls, bitterns and rails, the team has moved onto a marshland trail on the edge of the state. It’s still pitch-black, and they’re listening to the tell-tale sounds of the marsh birds they want to add to their list — in particular, the elusive sora, which hides in the reeds.
This is when their years of training their ears pays off, says Jeff Train, Otys’ dad and the team’s mentor. The teens can’t see the birds, but they can pick out their calls.
Trojan (right), makes bird calls at High Point State Park in northern New Jersey.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
It’s something Otys Train excels at. He went through a list of all the birds that were possible to hear at the World Series. “I memorized them to the point where I would get [them] like, immediately,” he says. “When you go into the field and hear the actual birds and see them, it kind of imprints the song in your head.”
Train, Trojan and Pacetti whisper to each other as they listen to the marsh starting to come alive as the minutes tick by. There’s the whinny of a sora, then the cheep of a swamp sparrow and the nasally “peent” of an American woodcock. “Am I hearing a green heron to the left?” Otys asks. They confer and either agree or disagree on what they hear; competition rules require unanimous team agreement before they can list it.
Jeff Train watches them from a short distance away. He’s careful to stay quiet, keeping his voice to a whisper and walking slowly in the grass; the teenagers are quick to shush anyone making unnecessary noise. The dads have learned this the hard way. “We always used to have a lot of laughing fits,” Train says – but no longer.
Further away on the trail is Chris Pacetti. How’s he holding up? “I’m cold,” he says. “I’m ready for the sun to come up.”
Sunrise in the woods
Zade Pacetti, 16, looks through binoculars.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
When the sun comes up a little before 6 a.m., Mark Trojan is driving the crew down a long, winding road in nearby High Point State Park — and The Pete Dunnelins are stressed. They’re running behind schedule, and they need to get back on track.
During this stretch, they’re trying to count as many warblers as possible. For maximum efficiency, they’re staying in the car as it cruises slowly down the road, windows rolled down.
The teenagers stick their heads outside the car to get a better look. “There’s a lot of yellow warblers, there’s a lot of thrushes,” Zade Pacetti murmurs, looking through his binoculars.
Then, all of a sudden, Otys Train sees something and cries out: “Mark! No! Stop!” The senior Trojan groans quietly, and brings the car to a halt.
The teammates begin to “pish” — blowing air through their clenched teeth and lips to make “a pish-pish-pish” sound, trying to draw out the birds from hiding. But not much happens, and after a minute, they continue driving. “We can’t spend too much time on this,” Jack Trojan says.
But not long after, their luck changes: there’s a sharp-shinned hawk’s nest up in a tree. “Sharpie nest is good,” Trojan says. Train agrees: “Ho-ly.”
The teammates sit on the ledges of their SUV’s rolled-down windows while looking for birds at High Point State Park.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
As the car continues to move along, Pacetti, Train and Trojan all sit on the ledges of their rolled-down windows, torsos sticking out of the car, arms on the top of the car to balance. It’s a move that they saw one of the top college student teams do during the competition a few years ago, Jeff Train says. And when he saw Otys sit on the ledge for the first time, he “freaked.”
But now that their sons are older, Train says, the dads have agreed that the move helps them hear better and compete. “They are really in their element, and they’ve learned so much, and they’re safe about it,” he says. “We don’t want to hold them back in any way.” After all, he says, birding is where he’s seen his son and his friends really thrive.
It’s not always been something their peers have understood; Jack Trojan says birding is “not seen as cool, actually.” But, Zade Pacetti says, “if you come across as confident … [classmates] respect that. And it’s not something to be made fun of.”
Otys Train used to “get made fun of a good amount for it,” he says. “But I kind of just learned to be myself and now I’m more open about it. And I guess people see it as interesting now.”
Early afternoon, on the side of the road
Train (left), Pacetti and Trojan look through a scope and binoculars at Malibu Beach Wildlife Management Area.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
Near the coastline of the south Jersey Shore, the team pulls off to the road shoulder, scoping out, among other birds, the piping plover. The fluffy, dull-feathered shorebird camouflages into the sand, hard to pick out among the dunes on an overcast day, Trojan says. They’re peering through the scope, but no dice.
With the day more than half over, they’ve started to use a timer to make sure they don’t linger. Trojan starts the countdown: in 1 minute and 40 seconds, they have to leave, no matter what.
At the 11th hour, Train calls over Pacetti and Trojan — he’s scoped a small, pale dot among other distant birds. His teammates peer through the lens, confirm his sighting, then bolt for the car.
Shorebirds forage along the marsh at Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in southern New Jersey.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
Later, Jeff Train marvels at the teens’ planning acumen. “It’s funny, because I have to remind my son to pack his bag before he goes to baseball. But the spreadsheet he has created, telling him where a bird is and when he’s going to see it and what time he has to get there, it’s pretty funny to see that he definitely has those skills.”
Sunset at the wildlife refuge
The sun is starting to go down when The Pete Dunnelins step out of the car at the coastal Edwin B. Forsythe Wildlife Refuge, a migration hotspot. The team has dozens of species that they need to find in the next two hours: It’s time to do or die.
As the trio walks around the refuge, they dial into the cacophony of wildlife surrounding them. Meanwhile, their fathers hang back, observing, cracking wise about their teens’ antics. Over the years, the six of them have become like family, Jeff Train says; the three sons interact more like brothers than they do teammates. (That brotherliness is particularly apparent that evening: When Zade Pacetti gets the hiccups during a chorus of birdsong, his teammates hiss at him to “shut up.”)
The teammates have grown as birders and as people over the years, Train says, thanks to a village of mentors and teachers. They’ve attended birding camp, been coached by college students, and gotten tips from experts at Cornell’s famed lab of ornithology. And along the way, they became obsessed with not just birds, but nature and conservation, Train says.
Train and Pacetti jog over to Trojan, who has spotted a bird. All teammates all have to see the bird to count towards their total.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
“Teenagers get a bad rap sometimes that they don’t care about much,” he says. “And this is clearly an illustration that, you know, the younger generation is not apathetic. They actually care a lot and they’re actually doing a lot of really good things.”
The sun starts to sink below the horizon, and the sky fills with birds gobbling up their last insects of the day. Craning their necks, the three boys try to not miss anything; they’ve got a number of species they need to spot if they have any chance of cracking 200.
“Nighthawk, right up there,” Jack Trojan blurts out, “going right, coming towards us.” His teammates murmur in agreement.
Trojan looks for birds out of the car window as the sun sets.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
Trojan picks up another sound — a yellow-breasted chat that has been eluding them. “It’s calling right now! That!”
Then, it chirps loudly, unmistakable. “Yes!” they yell in unison.
“And you say I’m not a good birder,” Trojan says, jostling his friends as they laugh. “I’m picking up so much more. I proved myself.”
The next morning in Cape May
The team stayed out until the very last minute, nabbing a king rail as their last bird of the day. The next morning, at the awards ceremony, the total counts are announced.
The Pete Dunnelins’ final count: 206 species, easily surpassing their goal.
But it wasn’t enough. The Flying Penguins — made up of team members Christian Scheibe, Noah Bieljeski, Ethan Kang and Ellie McDonald — got 209. In the end, three birds made the difference.
Trojan (left), Pacetti and Train look for a nighthawk at Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge after the sun set.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
The trio say they found out about their loss not long after midnight. “We were pretty pissed last night,” Pacetti says. Then, they woke up the next morning in a better mood. There were things Pacetti says they could’ve done better — running behind schedule at times didn’t help. But other factors were beyond their control: Rainy conditions quieted some of the birds, and peak migration hadn’t quite hit the area yet.
Many teams of skilled young birders compete at a high level, so chance is a big part of the day, according to Tom Reed, the migration count coordinator at the Cape May Bird Observatory and a mentor of The Pete Dunnelins.
A mixture of great egrets, snowy egrets and white ibis nesting near the welcome center in Ocean City.
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
“These birds have wings, they have their own lives they’re going about each day. You try to be in the best place at the best time or the best tide level to try to see each bird. But part of it is luck,” Reed says. “And then, there’s some years when you don’t get those lucky breaks.”
When The Pete Dunnelins go up to congratulate the Flying Penguins on their win, they swap notes on routes – though each is careful to not reveal the locations of their most prized birding spots. Sure, there’s no cash prize at stake in this competition, but they’re still rivals.
The team is already thinking about next year. They’re considering strategy, but there’s a bigger problem at hand: Trojan is heading to college in the fall, meaning he’ll age out of the high school division. Pacetti and Train will need to find a new teammate.
Trojan (left), Train and Pacetti counted 206 bird species but their rivals, The Flying Penguins, got 209.
Mohamed Sadek for NPR
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Mohamed Sadek for NPR
Trojan has a possible solution: “I was thinking that since I’ll be over 18, at that point, I can be a mentor” to his friends, he says. “So, it’d be like I’m still participating, but I’m just verifying their words and verifying their methods and strategies.”
Pacetti and Train, on the other hand? A little less sure about that plan. “I don’t know if that would be … I don’t know about that one,” Pacetti says, laughing.
After all, they’re still teenagers. Who wants their best friend to tell them what to do?
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