New Jersey
Police Chief Dean Ackermann bids farewell in Glen Rock ceremony
Glen Rock Police Chief retires after 40 years of service
Dean Ackermann, Glen Rock Police Chief retires, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, after 40 years of service to the borough.
GLEN ROCK − Police Chief Dean Ackermann headed off to retirement on March 31 after serving 40 years in the department.
A “final walk-out ceremony” was held at the Glen Rock Police Headquarters on Tuesday to honor the career of Ackermann.
“I can’t believe it has been 40 years. I left the place better than I found it and I left it in the hands of a great leader who is going to take the department to new heights,” said Ackermann
About 100 people from the community came to see Ackermann’s farewell which included many current and former police officers along with the family and friends of the retired police chief.
Ackermann took the podium on the warm spring afternoon and first thanked his wife for being by his side throughout his career. He thanked the Glen Rock police department for their support to him and thanked everyone who showed up to the walkout.
Ackermann was named the chief of police in 2016, having prior positions of detective and sergeant. He joined local law enforcement in 1986. Prior to his time with the Glen Rock Police Department, Ackermann worked as a New Jersey Transit Police officer, assigned to look over towns Newark, East Orange and Hoboken.
Tuesday’s ceremony was also a passing of the torch moment in Glen Rock as Ackermann introduced the new police chief, Michael Trover. Ackermann presented Trover with the chief police badge, which he said would be his last act as the Glen Rock police chief.
Trover has been a member of the Glen Rock police department for 20 years and served as captain at the department. He was officially sworn in as chief on March 25.
Like many North Jersey towns, major crime was low in Glen Rock during the years of Ackermann’s tenure as police chief. New Jersey crime statistics, which localized in 2020, show no murders and rapes were reported in the last six years in Glen Rock. From that time frame, only three robberies were reported, all in 2022.
The Glen Rock PBA presented Ackermann with a plaque as they wished him good luck on his retirement.
“We want to wish you the very best. I know Glen Rock and the surrounding communities are indebted to you for all that you have done for all the residents,” said Assemblywoman Lisa Swain at the ceremony.
The ceremony finished with Ackermann taking photos with his family and the generations of those who worked in the Glen Rock police department.
New Jersey
Heat wave to bring near 100 degree weather. When does NJ heat wave start
Governor Mikie Sherrill at BJ’s Wholesale Club in Ocean Township after collapse
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill meets with first responders before a press conference at BJ’s Wholesale Club in Ocean Township.
Last week wasn’t a great one when it comes to weather at the Jersey Shore.
This one will be much better, at least if you like heat.
A heat wave will hit New Jersey this week with hot weather moving into the area on Tuesday. The warm temperatures will stick around for most of the week before we get a little relief by the end of the weekend.
The National Weather Service forecasts the heat wave to start July 14 with a sunny day with highs around 92 degrees. Wednesday is even hotter with temperatures expected to flirt with 100 degrees. Thursday stays hot with a high of 92 degrees forecasted, with Friday and Saturday also expected to see highs in the low 80s.
According to the NOAA, Wednesday the Jersey Shore area will be under an extreme heat watch.
Tuesday through Friday are expected to be sunny, with some clouds. Saturday is when showers roll in.
Sunday the heatwave is expected to break. Showers are also expected to stick around with a high of 84 degrees expected.
New Jersey
New NJ businesses include non-alcoholic liquor store, art school
2-minute read
Paper Plane Coffee adding a new Maplewood NJ location
Paper Plane Coffee, the popular Montclair spot, will open a Maplewood location.
The Record, NorthJersey.com, the Daily Record and the New Jersey Herald want to keep you up to date on all the newest shops, restaurants and service providers moving into your towns. Below is a roundup of businesses that recently opened or are coming soon.
Are you opening a business in North Jersey? Get the word out to your neighbors as soon as possible. Send us your information and photos and we will try to add them to our next new-business roundup.
We’re also interested in reporting business closings. Have a tip? Contact Business Reporter Daniel Munoz at munozd@northjersey.com, or 201-270-9870, and Stephanie Noda at noda@northjersey.com, or 973-558-0950.
Story continues below photo gallery
Cre8sArt School, Westwood
Arts education classes for students of all ages and levels, including year-round classes, camps, workshops and portfolio development programs.
WHERE: 24 Booker St., Westwood
WHEN: Grand opening was June 14. Hours are 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Call 888-371-9904 or visit https://cre8sart.com/
Point 5 Jersey, Morristown
Liquor store dedicated to non-alcoholic drinks, from mixers to specialty beverages.
WHERE: 48 Washington St., Morristown
WHEN: Grand opening was June 17.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Call 862-286-0555, email point5jersey@gmail.com or visit www.point5jersey.com
Daniel Munoz covers business, consumer affairs, labor and the economy for NorthJersey.com and The Record.
Email: munozd@northjersey.com; Twitter:@danielmunoz100, Facebook and Instagram
New Jersey
8 Off-The-Beaten-Path Towns In New Jersey
Every Saturday night all summer, cowboys ride bucking broncs in a Salem County town called Pilesgrove. That rodeo has run weekly since the 1950s. Two hours north, Frenchtown builds its whole downtown around a contemporary arts center on the Delaware River. High Bridge sends walkers straight from Main Street onto an old iron-country rail trail. These eight towns each reward a single Saturday. You have driven past their exits for years.
Frenchtown
Fewer than 1,500 people live in Frenchtown, which sits on the Delaware River in the hills of Hunterdon County, in the western part of the state. The whole town fits into a few blocks around Bridge Street, where the restaurants, shops, and river views cluster alongside ArtYard, a contemporary arts center that runs both gallery shows and live performances. From the edge of town you can pick up the Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park Trail, more than 70 miles of flat, multi-use path along the old canal route with connections into other trail networks, so you can leave the car parked all day. Just outside the borough, Frenchtown Preserve adds miles of trails for hikers, cyclists, and anyone hoping to spot wildlife.
Tuckerton
Long Beach Island gets the crowds, but Tuckerton sits just a few miles across the bay and keeps a much lower profile. The town centers on the Tuckerton Seaport, a stretch of preserved historic buildings and boatworks that doubles as an event space, with local tours and a seasonal ferry running out of it. Main Street runs down to Lake Pohatcong, and beyond that you will find marinas, restaurants, and waterfront spots like South Green Street Park, a reliable place to fish or just watch the water. Tuckerton also makes an easy base for the protected coastline nearby, including the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge.
High Bridge
The Columbia Trail starts just off Main Street in High Bridge and runs north into Morris County, which makes this small Hunterdon County town a natural jumping-off point for a long walk or ride. Main Street itself is a short run of coffee shops, restaurants, and local businesses, enough for a meal before or after the trail. The town wears its ironworking past openly, most visibly at the Solitude House, one of its oldest homes and a window into the era when iron drove the local economy. Lake Solitude sits nearby for anyone who wants the water view to go with the history.
Pitman
The Broadway Theatre of Pitman anchors this South Jersey town, a restored 1920s venue that books plays, concerts, and stand-up through the year. A few blocks away is Pitman Grove, which started as a Methodist summer camp meeting ground; its streets fan out from the Pitman Grove Auditorium, where the community and religious gatherings were once held, and the radial layout is still visible on a map today. The Uptown Pitman district around both sits lined with restaurants, galleries, and neighborhood shops, so a theater night easily turns into a full afternoon and evening.
Cranbury
Cranbury has held onto its old architecture better than most towns its size, and the result is a Main Street that reads like a preserved 19th-century streetscape. The Cranbury History Center, a small museum focused on how the village grew, makes a good first stop for the backstory. From there it is a short walk to Brainerd Lake, best taken in from Cranbury Village Park on the north shore. What stands out is how complete the small-town feel is, given that some of the busiest stretches of Central Jersey sit only a short drive away.
Mount Holly
Mount Holly is the county seat of Burlington County, and it still flies under the radar for most people outside the area. The Mill Race Village district at its center is a restored historic neighborhood of independent shops and restaurants, and the Union Firehouse handles the after-dark side with live shows. For something stranger, the Burlington County Prison Museum opens up a 19th-century jail with a long, reputedly haunted history. It is the most populated town on this list, but Rancocas State Park is close enough that trading the streets for hiking, fishing, or hunting takes only a few minutes.
Woodstown
Woodstown sits in the middle of Salem County farm country, and its biggest draw is right next door in Pilesgrove: the Cowtown Rodeo, the oldest weekly running rodeo in the country, staged on Saturday nights through the summer. The same grounds host the Cowtown Farmers Market, a year-round indoor and outdoor produce and flea market. Downtown Woodstown fills in the rest with breweries, bookstores, diners, and the Blue Moon Theatre for community shows. For a slower look at the surrounding countryside, the Woodstown Central Railroad runs scenic rides and themed excursions through the fields.
Belvidere
Belvidere sits in a bend of the Delaware River across from Pennsylvania, out in rural Warren County, about as far off the main routes as this list goes. Its historic district is one of the best preserved in the region, with buildings dating to the early 1800s arranged around a classic town green. The Warren County Historical Society runs a museum here for anyone curious about how the town and county took shape. A town boat ramp puts you straight onto the river, one of the more underrated stretches for paddling and fishing in this corner of the state.
Eight Towns Worth the Detour
What ties these eight together is not a single landscape but a single habit: each one built its identity around something concrete and kept it. Frenchtown and Belvidere lean on the river, Tuckerton on the bay, Woodstown on its farm-country rodeo, Pitman and High Bridge on a restored theater and an old iron trail. Spend a Saturday in any of them and the appeal is obvious within the first hour, which is the whole argument for taking the exit instead of driving past it.
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