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Property tax break or not. Why would you want to retire in New Jersey?

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Property tax break or not. Why would you want to retire in New Jersey?


Joe Strummer of the Clash once sang the line that everyone living in New Jersey thinks about as they get older, “Should I Stay or should I go?” The closer you get to retirement, the louder those opening chords play in your head.

How sad is it that the state you lived in and loved all your life may now be unaffordable to spend the rest of it in?

What if New Jersey made it easier for those retiring to stay? What if New Jersey gave seniors property tax breaks? It could soon be happening thanks to a 50% property tax cut to stay here. So, why would you want to retire in New Jersey?

Well, for one thing, you would finally have the time to enjoy all the great things our state has to offer. You could take advantage of all the things that you never had time for.

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Sea Isle City Gazebo on the Promenade (Photo: Townsquare Media)

Sea Isle City Gazebo on the Promenade (Photo: Townsquare Media)

Like the Jersey Shore. Have you seen Sea Isle City in the day, or at night?

Ocean City Boardwalk (Photo: Chris Choleman, Townsquare Media)

Ocean City Boardwalk (Photo: Chris Choleman, Townsquare Media)

Perhaps you like Ocean City. Check out this list of things to do when you’re there.

Grounds for Sculpture (Photo: David Michael Howarth Photography)

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Grounds for Sculpture (Photo: David Michael Howarth Photography)

Perhaps you could take advantage of these great day trips we have to offer in New Jersey. Maybe you could see a great show; anyone who goes anywhere makes sure they come to New Jersey.

If it’s the food you’re after, nobody beats New Jersey for whatever you crave.

The Highstown Diner (Photo: Steve Trevelise, Townsquare Media)

The Highstown Diner (Photo: Steve Trevelise, Townsquare Media)

How about a nice juicy steak? Or maybe prime rib? I know an amazing prime rib place in Hightstown that’s not only delicious but inexpensive as well.

Zoni’s Brooklyn Brick Pizza (Photo: Zoni’s Brooklyn Brick Coal Oven Pizzeria on FaceBook)

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Zoni’s Brooklyn Brick Pizza (Photo: Zoni’s Brooklyn Brick Coal Oven Pizzeria on FaceBook)

Don’t even talk about pizza, we’ve so got you covered. If you like pizza, then I assume you like Italian markets. You’re not going to find better outside New Jersey. If you’ve ever left the state or talked to anyone who has and tried, then you know that.

Hunan Taste Chinese Restaurant in Denville (Photo: Google Maps)

Hunan Taste Chinese Restaurant in Denville (Photo: Google Maps)

If it’s sushi you want, we’ve got it. If it’s Chinese you want, we’ve got it. Seafood? Whatever it is foodwise you want, we’ve got it.

Jing’s Sushi Bar in Burlington (Photo: Google Maps)

Jing’s Sushi Bar in Burlington (Photo: Google Maps)

But the one thing New Jersey has that the true New Jersey lover can’t get anywhere else is your heart.

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After all the reasons we’ve listed, as well as the ones we haven’t, your heart is the most important. It pumps the blood that you used to build your life here. You worked too hard, and it means too much to leave now. And if you’re going to stay, I’m going to stay…Then again I’m going to stay either way. Hope you are too!

LOOK: Where people in New Jersey are moving to most

Stacker compiled a list of states where people from New Jersey are moving to the most using data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

LOOK: Here’s where people in every state are moving to most

Stacker analyzed the Census Bureau’s 2019 American Community Survey data to determine the three most popular destinations for people moving out of each state.

Opinions expressed in the post above are those of New Jersey 101.5 talk show host Steve Trevelise only. Follow him on Twitter @realstevetrev.

You can now listen to Steve Trevelise — On Demand! Discover more about New Jersey’s personalities and what makes the Garden State interesting. Download the Steve Trevelise show wherever you get podcasts, on our free app, or listen right now.

Report a correction 👈 | 👉 Contact our newsroom





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What about tariffs? What North Jersey shoppers can expect from retail in 2025

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What about tariffs? What North Jersey shoppers can expect from retail in 2025



1-minute read

New Jersey is synonymous with retail.

With shopping malls throughout the state, including the largest mall in New Jersey located in Paramus, there are endless options to find what you need.

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And with one of the largest ports on the East Coast, New Jersey is not only home to retail, but also to a robust shipping industry.

Expect changes in both those areas in 2025 ― and be on the lookout for changes in the costs of goods if President-elect Trump enacts his proposed tariff program.

  • Port workers and the association representing marine terminals have until Jan. 15 to reach a deal on a new master contract, with automation being a main sticking point. The union representing the port workers has promised to go on strike if a deal is not met, potentially increasing prices on store shelves and upending supply chains.
  • Developers at Garden State Plaza and Bergen Town Center in Paramus are in the process of constructing thousands of new apartments. At the Garden State Plaza complex there will be retail, dining, outdoor markets and a 1-acre town green, with an early-2025 groundbreaking expected.
  • President Donald Trump has vowed to enact 25% tariffs on goods coming from Mexico and Canada, and 10% tariffs on goods coming from China. New Jersey manufacturers have sped up imports and stockpiled raw materials in anticipation of the increased costs from imports.



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New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Your 2024 Devils All-Prospect Team

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New Jersey Devils Prospect Update: Your 2024 Devils All-Prospect Team


The Rules

Before we begin, a quick breakdown of the rules. I select a lineup of players with an eye of putting the best projected lineup together of players as they are realistically projected to be in their prime. Players who are older will benefit from a higher degree of certainty, but younger prospects will be given consideration of their realistic (i.e. not ideal) projections so as not to load a lineup full of AHLers, who are further along in their development.

For this exercise, I will not differentiate between left and right wing or right and left defense, nor will I consider “handedness” of any of the prospects. Players who have made the full-time jump to the NHL are ineligible. Lastly, the age cutoff is 23, so players such as Nolan Foote, who turned 24 last month, are also ineligible. Let’s get started.

Top Line

Center Matyas Melovsky; Wingers Lenni Hameenaho and Arseni Gritsyuk

The Devils prospect pool is notoriously short of center depth. However, Matyas Melovsky has had a breakout season as a 20-year-old playing for Baie-Comeau Drakkar of the QMJHL. The first Devils prospect in any league to reach thirty points this season, Melovsky, who plays both wing and center, is more of a playmaker than a natural goal scorer. The center is well built for the NHL game at 6’1’’, 190 pounds and uses his strength to body opponents, earning high marks from many scouts for his defensive game. If properly developed, Melovsky could blossom into a versatile bottom 6 forward at the NHL level some day.

For this exercise, Melovsky will be dishing the puck to the top two offensive prospects in the Devils system on the top scoring line, while providing some much-needed two-way play at center. Russian winger Arseni Gritsyuk would provide zone entries and some dazzle to the line, while Finnish Forward Lenni Hameenaho would work his magic around the net. Gritsyuk and Hameenaho are both in the midst of strong seasons in their respective top leagues. It would not be surprising to see this entire line playing in North America for the Devils organization next season.

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2nd Line

Center Adam Beckman; Wingers Cam Squires and Herman Traff

Adam Beckman is a bit of a cheat as the player acquired by the Devils for Graeme Clarke over the summer has been playing right wing on Utica’s second line. However, Beckman can play center and the center depth is bad enough for me to slot him here. Whatever problems Utica has had this season, and there have been many, Adam Beckman has not been one of them, scoring sixteen points in eighteen games. This makes his lack of a call-up to the big club during the myriad of injuries so far this season rather surprising. At 23-years-old, Beckman is becoming close to a finished product as he awaits another opportunity to play in the NHL.

On the All-Prospect Team, the AHL veteran will center two younger players on this line. After a rough start and a couple of suspensions, Cam Squires has caught fire for the Cape Breton Eagles and is the only Devils prospect not named Matyas Melovsky to be averaging over a point per game. Power forward Herman Traff has been a steady presence in the SHL playing amongst men as a 18-year-old in his D+1 (Traff turns 19 on December 31st), tallying seven points in nineteen contests and earning a spot on Team Sweden in the World Juniors. Cam Squires has already signed his ELC with the Devils and should join the Comets next season as Utica’s season is likely to end before Cape Breton’s. Traff will likely continue to develop in the SHL next season.

3rd Line

Center Samu Salminen; Wingers Josh Filmon and Chase Stillman

Coming into this season, this line would have looked really good on paper. Samu Salminen, another forward who plays center and wing, centers this line by default, given the aforementioned lack of center depth. The power forward has been streaky this year after transferring to the University of Denver from the goal-anemic UConn. With six goals and six assists in eighteen contests, this will likely be Salminen’s best offensive season. Whether it be enough to earn him a contract with the Devils this summer is anybody’s guess.

Much has been written about wingers Josh Filmon and Chase Stillman this season. Filmon has already been demoted to Adirondack of the ECHL, where he has, at times, toiled on the fourth line. At the time this article was written, Stillman is still hanging onto a fourth line spot for the Utica Comets, but has struggled and I speculated last week whether a short stint in the lower league may help spark him a bit. It is way too soon to give up on Filmon or Stillman, but to say that this has been a challenging year for the duo would be a bit of an understatement.

4th Line

Center Max Graham; Wingers Kasper Pikkarainen and Cole Brown

The fourth line of the All-Prospect team is intriguing. Max Graham is another center, who also plays wing. That’s zero natural centers in the system for those keeping track. After being selected as an overager in last year’s NHL entry draft, Graham, who is known for his leadership and his fisticuffs, has broken out offensively in the WHL with 24 points in 26 games. Graham’s pathway to the NHL would be that of a physical two-way grinder, who kills penalties (something he would need to learn) and sticks up for his teammates, but at 6’3’’ doesn’t quite have the size to be a true heavyweight in the NHL.

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The two wingers on the fourth line are big question marks. Kasper Pikkarainen was chosen in the 3rd round by the Devils this summer and then proceeded to get injured in his first game for the Red Deer Rebels of the WHL and has not played since. As such, Pikkarainen’s progress is impossible to evaluate and one will have to wait until the winger returns to game action to see how the injury impacted his development. Pikkarainen’s selection here is purely based on his status from the draft. Cole Brown is a winger for the Brantford Bulldogs, who is on pace for 60 points, a full 21 points more than last season. More impressively, this pace has been a result of a late surge after a very slow start. As with Salminen, it is still up in the air as to whether this will be enough for the Devils to offer Brown a contract, but the winger has certainly earned that consideration.

Defensive Pairings

Anton Silayev, Simon Nemec

Seamus Casey, Daniil Orlov

Topias Vilen, Ethan Edwards

The first three selections for the Devils defense were rather straightforward. Not much needs to be written to justify the inclusion of Anton Silayev, the 6’7’’ Russian blueliner who has suited up for 32 games for Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod of the KHL this season and tallied seven assists as an 18-year-old. Likewise, #2 overall pick Simon Nemec broke into the NHL last season and has been the odd man out with the stellar play of Jonathan Kovacevic. Nemec has not exactly lit up the AHL since his demotion, but his focus has been on becoming a steadier presence in the backend. The offense for the Comets from the blueline has been left up to Seamus Casey, the third easy selection for defense on this team. Casey has proven capable of playing in the NHL already in a sheltered role and has carried his four points in his first eight NHL games to fourteen points in seventeen games since his demotion to the Comets.

The other three defensemen were a much tougher decision. One could argue Daniil Karpovich deserves consideration and I would agree. However, as Karpovich split nine games between the KHL and VHL this season before his injury and after a season in the more obscure Belarusan league, it is really difficult to pinpoint his progress. Likewise, Santeri Hatakka probably would have made this team if not for his injury this preseason. Fellow Comet Daniil Misyul, who played one game for the Devils this season, has aged out of consideration for this team. Defensive defensemen Charlie Leddy and Artyom Barabosha were also considered and Barabosha might have made the cut if not for splitting time between the KHL and VHL this year after seemingly earning a full promotion to the KHL last season.

I chose Russian defender Daniil Orlov, who seems to have the speed and transition skills to possibly play in the NHL one day should he ever stay healthy enough to fully develop and decide to come to North America. Topias Vilen and Ethan Edwards were also difficult selections. Ethan Edwards has a chance to be an Andy Greene-like defenseman should he reach his potential, but such players are very rare at the NHL level. Moreover, as a senor this season, it is unclear where Edwards will end up this summer. Former 5th rounder, Topias Vilen earned his ELC after showing tremendous promise with a breakout in the Liiga. After a demotion to the ECHL last season, Vilen picked up his game and finished strong with 29 points in 54 AHL games proving his newly-found offense could translate to North America. This season, Vilen has only played in fourteen contests for the Comets, totaling a goal and three assists, after returning from an upper body injury suffered during the preseason. Vilen is still only 21-years-old and defensemen develop later, so I would not worry too much about him yet. There is still a chance Vilen develops into a strong puck-moving defenseman in the NHL some day given his skill set.

Goaltenders

Jakub Malek

Nico Daws

At 22-years-old, Jakub Malek is the best goaltending prospect in the Devils system. Since the Devils drafted him in the fourth round (100th overall) in the 2021 NHL entry draft, Malek has dominated just about everywhere he has played. Currently, that somewhere is the Liiga, where the netminder has either been at the top or near the top all season in GAA (2.06) and SV% (.918). Malek also possesses the athleticism to be a starting goalie in the NHL should he reach his full potential. That is not just me saying that. The latest Dobber update on Malek says essentially the same thing. Of course, most players never reach their full potential and whether Malek will remains to be seen, but given the goaltender’s track record of consistency since his draft year, I would not bet against him. Even if Malek maxes out as a capable back up in the NHL, the netminder would earn the top spot here.

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Devils fans are likely more familiar with Nico Daws, who has already played quite a few games for the Devils in recent seasons, mostly in call-ups. After the Devils traded Akira Schmid over the summer, Daws became the defacto third string goalie for the Devils. Daws has struggled this season for a bad Comets team with a 3-10-2 record, 3.18 GAA and .895 SV%, but has outperformed (at least in terms of SV%) his platoon-mate Isaac Poulter after losing out to Poulter last year. It is no secret that Daws has played on a lot of bad Devils teams and it is hard to say how much of Daws’s raw numbers have been diminished by that reality. Daws has the ability to steal games at times, even high profile games at the NHL level. Consistency has been the issue with Daws, something Malek has not struggled with. For that reason, Malek gets the nod as the starter of this hypothetical team.

Your Take

Tell us what you think. My best to all our readers and their families. May you enjoy all your end of year festivities.



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Body Found in Refrigerator in New Jersey State Park, Investigation Ongoing

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Body Found in Refrigerator in New Jersey State Park, Investigation Ongoing


A body was found in a New Jersey state park just days before the holidays.

On Sunday, Dec. 22, a body was discovered in an abandoned refrigerator in Belleplain State Forest in northern Cape May County, NJ. State Police Sgt. Jeffrey Lebron released information stating that the body was found by troopers shortly before 3 p.m. inside the forest in Dennis Township.

“NJSP are actively investigating a body that was found out in the woods in Belleplain,” Dennis Township Mayor Zeth Matalucci shared in a statement on the official Dennis Township Facebook page. “There’s no threat to the public, and more information will be provided once it’s received,” he continued.

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According to its official website, Belleplain State Forest was “established in 1928 for public recreation” and “consists of almost 23,000 acres,” including over a dozen trails for walking/hiking and biking and several campsites. Boating, swimming and fishing are also permitted in the nearby lakes and ponds.

No further details have been shared regarding identification of the body or speculation as to what occurred, as the investigation is ongoing. PEOPLE has reached out to Cape May County Sheriff’s Office, New Jersey State Park Police and Matalucci for comment.

It’s the second body found in eastern New Jersey in as many weeks.

Two weeks ago, a body matching the description of a retired teacher was found in the Galloway Township of New Jersey. Alan Levin, 84, was reported missing by his family on Dec. 7. Remains were discovered two days later along the bank of Nacote Creek, a waterway that leads to the Mullica River about 10 miles north of Atlantic City.

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“After an extensive search of the area, a drone team from the Atlantic City Police and Fire Departments located a body matching the description of Mr. Levin deceased along the bank, approximately 3/10 of a mile east of the Port Republic Bridge,” authorities said in a post on Facebook at the time.

Levin’s disappearance remains under investigation by the Galloway Township Police Department and the New Jersey State Police.



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