New Jersey
These Jersey Shore Towns Need To Create Pedestrian Plazas Just Like Red Bank
Image this: you may have a recent iced mocha latte in your hand as you stroll the streets of the Jersey Shore.
Oh! Wait….maintain up. That costume on that out of doors show is attractive! Let’s cease and have a look.
Find it irresistible! Now that we are carried out procuring, let’s cease for a glass of wine and a fast appetizer.
Think about if this might be our actuality up and down the Jersey Shore. Possibly it may be…
Let me clarify:
You realize that Broadwalk Pedestrian-Solely Plaza in Crimson Financial institution?
If not, here’s a little refresher: Based on RedBankPulse.com, it’s being described as, “a sprawling pedestrian plaza that mimicked the type and attract of many European previous cities.”
It is type of cool.
There are little retailers, eating places with accompanying out of doors tables and the whole space is blocked off from visitors. It’s like Crimson Financial institution created their very own boardwalk regardless of their location.
Proper now, the city of Crimson Financial institution is within the strategy of deciding on whether or not or to not deliver this outdoor-friendly attraction again for the Summer time of 2022.
Proper now, it’s wanting fairly good however nothing is 100% simply but.
However then I requested myself: “Why is not this being carried out in additional Jersey Shore cities?”
Even with out COVID-19 being an element, there are a variety of cities that don’t get the advantages of getting its personal boardwalk or seashores.
To not point out, these pedestrian plazas could be an superior alternative to indicate some help to the native companies in every particular person metropolis.
And relying in town, every plaza might be individualized so that they every change into often known as their very own attraction!
I may so see different New Jerseyans taking a day journey for cool experiences like this.
I’m not saying that these areas would ever be capable of substitute the great thing about a shore city with a boardwalk.
BUT, it might be a good way for varied cities to assist pull in further income and may make the Jersey Shore that rather more iconic of a vacation spot.
I put collectively an inventory of some Jersey Shore cities that I believe would profit and I’m type of curious in the event you agree.
Plus, if there’s a city that you just assume ought to be included on this record, e mail me at Nicole.Murray@townsquaremedia.
I am telling you. This might be the subsequent huge factor.
So with out additional ado:
The Jersey Shore Cities That Ought to Implement Pedestrian-Solely Plazas
Would not this be an incredible concept?
I’ll preserve you posted on Crimson Financial institution’s Broadwalk as a result of as of now, an “unofficial approval” is all I’ve heard.
However preserve your fingers, eyes, ears, toes, legs and arms crossed till I let you know to do in any other case.
I thanks.
*Curtsy*
Whereas we’re at it, have you ever ever heard of those tiny New Jersey cities?
A Broadwalk may assist these little guys as effectively, do not you assume:
Have You Even Heard of the 30 Tiniest Cities in[carbongallery id=
New Jersey?”]
These Are New Jersey’s Finest Choose Your Personal Orchards And Farms
Seize a bag, bucket, or bushel and decide your individual scrumptious fruits and pumpkins from these New Jersey companies, listed alphabetically.
The 25 Most Harmful Cities in New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey removes bald eagles from endangered species list as populations soar
This story is part of the WHYY News Climate Desk, bringing you news and solutions for our changing region.
From the Poconos to the Jersey Shore to the mouth of the Delaware Bay, what do you want to know about climate change? What would you like us to cover? Get in touch.
In the early 1980s, New Jersey was on the brink of losing its last remaining bald eagles. Only one nesting pair existed in the state, and their eggs weren’t hatching because of the lingering effects of the insecticide DDT, which was banned in 1972.
Following decades of restoration work, bald eagles now nest in every New Jersey county. This week, the state removed the bald eagle off its endangered species list — more than 17 years after the majestic bird was federally delisted.
“I’ve been around a long time and have not seen very many species delisted. So, it really is a very special thing,” said Kathy Clark, chief of the endangered and nongame species program at New Jersey Fish and Wildlife.
In 2024, New Jersey surveyed a record 293 nesting pairs of bald eagles, of which 264 laid eggs. Their highest numbers are found along the Delaware Bay, where protected marshlands and coastal creeks provide ideal habitats. The state was able to delist the species because their reproductive rate over multiple years reached sustainable levels.
The success story follows years of artificially incubating eggs, introducing eagle chicks from Canada, monitoring nests and educating the public.
“What this really shows is that big picture conservation is possible. It starts with an inspirational spark that causes a wide swath of people to care deeply, and then the work requires learning, effort and perseverance over the long term,” said Alex Ireland, president and CEO of the environmental group New Jersey Audubon. “It’s very important that we think about this proactively as we go forward. It is much better to conserve species before listing is ever required.”
Following the nationwide recovery of the bald eagle, starting in the Chesapeake Bay, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service delisted the predatory bird in 2007.
The national ban on DDT, as well as policies aiming to protect birds of prey, played a role in the eagles’ recovery, said Jason Weckstein, an ornithologist at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University.
“Eagles are an amazing success story. They went from being pretty rare — it was not something that you saw in the suburbs — and now, here in my neighborhood in Wynnewood, I see bald eagles all the time,” he said. “Look up, because there’s a good chance you’ll be able to see an eagle.”
However, several states did not immediately remove bald eagles from their own endangered species lists. For example, Pennsylvania made the move in 2014.
New Jersey
Burlington County, New Jersey, congregation raising historic church to avoid flooding
Doris Priest, a lifelong Burlington County resident, has watched countless landmarks in her community fade into the past.
But there’s one place she prays will endure: her beloved church.
“It’s a small church. It’s just quaint,” said Priest, who is the vice president of the Lumberton Historical Society.
That quaint church is Trinity Episcopal in Vincentown, New Jersey.
It was built in 1871 near the banks of the Rancocas Creek, where it’s stood firm ever since.
However, the growing threats of climate change could soon uproot it.
Priest said each year brings stronger storms and worsening flooding.
“I think it was 2003 we had 5 feet of water in the church,” Priest said. “We get very scared. It was devastating to walk in and everything was gone.”
According to climate risk data from Firststreet.org, more than 37,000 properties in Burlington County are at risk of major flooding over the next 30 years.
That’s why Trinity Episcopal Church is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to replace and raise the 154-year-old foundation. The plan is to elevate it 4 feet in hopes of preventing future damage.
“In this country, we lose a lot of our history and that upsets me,” Priest said. “We’re trying to save history.”
The church will remain closed during construction, which is expected to be completed by Easter Sunday.
New Jersey
Crime continues to steadily drop in Camden, NJ, according to the data
Officials in Camden County let data back up their claims that crime in the area is at the lowest its been in five decades.
“We had 17 documented murders in 2024. The last time we were that low was in 1985, 40 years ago,” Camden County Police Department Chief Gabriel Rodriguez said.
Back in 2012, the Camden City’s mayor agreed to reform the police department which led to the creation of the Camden County Police Department in 2013.
Since then, commissioners note that crime in all areas have steadily declined.
“We dissolved a failing police department. One that was not serving its community. And constructed and rose up a police department that is now second to none in this nation,” Camden County Commissioner Louis Cappelli explained.
According to the Uniform Crime Report between 2014 and 2024, violent crime is down 50% with homicides, robberies and burglaries down about 72%. Other crime rates, including rape and arson, have also dropped.
Officials say that in addition to restructuring the police department, state and local funding allocated to public safety and educational investments are what helped improve the quality of life in many areas hit by crime.
Some schools were renovated and others were rebuilt. Many of the area parks were beautified and gave the youth safe places to learn and play.
“Our students not only deserve a quality education, but also facilities that make them feel seen, and valued,” Giana Campbell, of the Camden Education Fund, said.
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