New Jersey
Repairs to cracked road in Woodbridge, N.J. to take months, mayor says
Officials said Tuesday it will be some time before they reopen a Woodbridge Township, New Jersey, road that is closed due to a mysterious, long crack.
The damage to Smith Street is affecting traffic in Middlesex County and has neighbors on edge.
“The road has to be entirely redone”
Woodbridge Mayor John McCormac insisted Tuesday that residents who have returned to the area after being briefly evacuated are safe and that alarms will detect a road shift.
“There are monitors out there and equipment that can literally tell if it moved,” McCormac said.
The mayor said the road has moved an eighth of an inch in the past 24 hours.
McCormac said the problem is Smith Street is a major thoroughfare and it’s going to take months to repair the roadway.
“The road has to be entirely redone — take everything out and start all over,” he said. “If you look at a map, it’s a spaghetti factory of roads and this road is smack in the middle of all of it, and the blockage on Smith impacts so many businesses and so many residents.”
The mayor said a cause can’t be determined until crews get underground. For now, he says they are keeping an eye out to make sure gas lines don’t move and electric poles don’t stretch as they make repairs.
Theories abound as to why crack formed
Residents said they first noticed a small crack in the road that sits on the border of Perth Amboy and the Keasbey section of Woodbridge on Thursday morning. By the evening, however, the crack had grown into a two-foot gap in the road.
“What’s going to happen if the crack gets bigger? We don’t know,” Lehman said.
Josefina Jerez told CBS News New York in Spanish the crack is ugly. Her home was one of the 18 evacuated Thursday, but she and others were eventually allowed back in.
As for a cause, the mayor said it could be anything, but he doesn’t believe it’s because of the street’s age or mines underneath. Residents have their own theories, including one that has to do with the construction of a nearby warehouse.
“Whatever they’re digging for to put that warehouse up, that’s causing the dirt to fall down,” Keasbey resident George Cicchini said.
“It could be the construction. There are so many trucks going up here from Perth Amboy,” another resident said.
New Jersey
Severe thunderstorm watch declared for much of North Jersey
How to protect your NJ home from wind: Video
Here’s how to windproof your home to minimize damage, and what to do if a tree falls on your property as a result of the weather
A severe thunderstorm watch looms over North Jersey on the evening of June 12 after days of extreme heat.
Nation Weather Service New York declared a severe thunderstorm watch for numerous North Jersey counties including Bergen, Passaic, Hudson, Essex, Morris and Sussex among other Central Jersey and New York counties. The watch is in effect until 9 p.m., according to the NWS statement.
In an hourly forecast from The Weather Channel for Paramus, there is a 74% chance of thunderstorms at 7 p.m.
High temperatures reached past 90 degrees in many parts of North Jersey on June 11 and June 12 as a heat advisory also remains in effect until 8 p.m., said NWS New York.
New Jersey
Severe Storms, Dangerous Heat Targets NJ Friday
“Dangerous heat is expected to continue across much of our region through today, with several record highs likely to be challenged again. High temperatures are forecast to peak into the low to mid 90s across most of the area,” the National Weather Service said Friday.
A Heat Advisory is in effect until 8 p.m. across the state except for Atlantic, Cape May, Cumberland and Salem counties.
New Jersey
New Jersey man sentenced to 6.5 years for fatal Lehigh Valley plane crash
PHILADELPHIA – Philip McPherson II, a 37-year-old from Riverside, New Jersey, was sentenced Thursday, June 11, to 78 months in prison for his role in a 2022 plane crash in Lehigh County that killed a student pilot, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Sentencing and charges for fatal Lehigh Valley crash
What we know:
United States District Judge John M. Gallagher sentenced McPherson to 78 months in prison, three years of supervised release, a $5,000 fine, a $4,300 special assessment, and $19,530 in restitution. Judge Gallagher also barred McPherson from working in the aviation industry.
McPherson pleaded guilty in October to involuntary manslaughter, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, obstruction of an administrative proceeding, and 40 counts of serving as an airman without a certificate.
The backstory:
Court filings show that on September 28, 2022, McPherson took off from Queen City Airport in Allentown as the pilot-in-command with student pilot K.K. and crashed shortly after, resulting in K.K.’s death.
Prosecutors said McPherson acted with gross negligence, knowing he was not competent to fly as pilot-in-command. He had two prior crashes, nearly a third, and failed a reexamination for his pilot’s certificate in September 2021.
McPherson voluntarily surrendered his pilot’s certificate in October 2021 and let his Temporary Airman Certificate expire in November 2021, acknowledging his inability to meet FAA standards.
He admitted to flying with passengers without a valid FAA pilot’s certificate between October 12, 2021, and September 20, 2022.
Investigators from the U.S. Department of Transportation Office of Inspector General, FAA, and Salisbury Township Police Department worked on the case, which was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Robert Schopf and Special Assistant United States Attorney Marie Miller.
What we don’t know:
Authorities have not released further details about the circumstances leading up to the crash.
The Source: Information from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
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