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RCN NE Terrapin Conservation Strategy
The Northern Diamondback Terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin terrapin) in the Northeast United States: A Regional Conservation Strategy Prepared by: Stephanie Egger, Wildlife Biologist Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New Jersey, Inc. with Contributions from the Diamondback Terrapin Working Group Prepared for: Northeast Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies Northeast Regional Conservation Needs Grant Program 2016 Made possible by State Wildlife Grants and funded by the Northeast Regional Conservation Needs Grant Program. REGIONAL CONSERVATION NEEDS GRANT PROGRAM The Northern Diamondback Terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin terrapin) in the Northeastern United States: A Regional Conservation Strategy was supported by State Wildlife Grant funding awarded through the Northeast Regional Conservation Needs (RCN) Grant Program (RCN Grant 2013-02). The RCN Grant Program joins thirteen northeast States, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in a partnership to address landscape-scale, regional wildlife conservation issues. Progress on these regional issues is achieved through combining resources, leveraging funds, and prioritizing conservation actions identified in the State Wildlife Action Plans (SWAPs). See http://RCNGrants.org. COVER IMAGE: Female Northern diamondback terrapin © Brian Tang i STATE AGENCY PROJECT LEADS AND/OR CONTRIBUTORS New Hampshire (for technical support) Michael Marchand, New Hampshire Fish and Game Department, Concord, New Hampshire Massachusetts Dr. Jonathan Regosin, Massachusetts Division of Fisheries -
Borough of Keansburg County of Monmouth, New Jersey
BOROUGH OF KEANSBURG COUNTY OF MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY AUDIT REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2018 BOROUGH OF KEANSBURG COUNTY OF MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2018 Exhibit Page Independent Auditor's Report 1 Independent Auditor's Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting and on Compliance and Other Matters Based on an Audit of Financial Schedules Performed in Accordance with Government Auditing Standards 5 Financial Schedules Current Fund Statements of Assets, Liabilities, Reserves and Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis A 9 Statements of Operations and Changes in Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis A-1 11 Statement of Revenues - Regulatory Basis A-2 12 Statement of Expenditures - Regulatory Basis A-3 14 Trust Fund Statements of Assets, Liabilities, Reserves and Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis B 20 General Capital Fund Statements of Assets, Liabilities, Reserves and Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis C 21 Statement of Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis C-1 22 Water/Sewer Utility Fund Statements of Assets, Liabilities, Reserves and Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis D 23 Statements of Operations and Changes in Fund Balance – Regulatory Basis D-1 25 Statement of Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis D-2 26 Statement of Revenues - Regulatory Basis D-3 27 Statement of Expenditures - Regulatory Basis D-4 28 General Fixed Assets Account Group Statements of Assets, Liabilities, Reserves and Fund Balance - Regulatory Basis E 29 Notes to Financial Schedules 33 BOROUGH OF KEANSBURG COUNTY OF MONMOUTH, NEW JERSEY -
Board ~F Public Utility Commissioners
You Are Viewing an Archived Report from the New Jersey State Library EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Board ~f Public Utility Commissioners FOR THE ST A TE OF NEW JERSEY For the Year 1927 N.J. STATE LIBRARY P.O. BOX 520 rnENTON, NJ 08625--0520 MacCrellish & Quigley Co CPl'inters Trenton, New Jersey 1928 You Are Viewing an Archived Report from the New Jersey State Library • You Are Viewing an Archived Report from the New Jersey State Library REPORT To the Honorable A. Harry Moore, Governor of the State of New Jersey: Sm :-The Board of Public Utility Commissioners respectfully 'submits its report for the year 1927. During the year 580 cases have been formally disposed of. These have included adjustments of rates, formal complaints as to service, applications for approvals of privileges and franchises granted to public utilities by municipalities, elimination of grade crossings, issues of securities, leases and mergers of public utilities, sales of properties, disputes between electric companies as to territories to be served and proceedings involving proposed condemnation of land claimed to be necessary for the construction of power transmission lines. Formal hearings have been held on 172 days. An additional room has been added to the Board's quarters in Newark. This has been equipped for public hearings, and with the rooms previously available makes practicable con current hearings by the three members of the Board without interference with the work of the administrative force. In Trenton, by the courtesy of the State House Commission, court rooms are available for hearings. In addition to hearings in Trenton and Newark, the Board during the year has held hear ings in Jersey City, Camden, Phillipsburg, Bridgeton, Atlantic City, Toms River and Cape May Court House. -
Pinelands Commission Approves SJ Gas Pipeline
April / May 2017 Volume 24 Number 3 Brendan T. Byrne Fund for the Pinelands Reaches $ 4 Million Goal .............. 3 Join us for a Pinelands Adventure in 2017 .... 4 Katie Smith Joins PPA’s staff ................ 6 Residents protest the South Jersey Gas Pipeline during the Pinelands Commission vote on February 24th. Pinelands Events ...... 7 Pinelands Commission Approves SJ Gas Pipeline by Katie Smith, Policy Advocate On February 24, the Pinelands creative signs, including one depicting the Open House Commission voted 9-5-1, over massive Lorax from Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax with the protest, to approve the South Jersey Gas caption “I speak for the Pines.” The public May 21st pipeline that will cross the Forest Area of filled over half of the ballroom, capacity 12 noon to 4 pm the Pinelands- if it is ever built. The 1500 people, reserved for the event. Celebrate the successful Pinelands Preservation Alliance has one pending appeal against the informal When the chair began to make a motion completion of the to take action on the pipeline application, Brendan T. Byrne Fund process the Commission used in its approval, and we filed an appeal on the the crowd began chanting “NO!” After for the Pinelands. Tour several minutes, some Commissioners the newly renovated merits of the February 24th decision. With the support of leaders like former expressed their concerns with the applica- barn, enjoy music, light governors Brendan Byrne, Tom Kean, Jim tion. Voicing concern for the process of refreshments and more! Florio and Christine Todd Whitman, and the public comment period, factual inac- of many thousands of citizens, PPA aims curacies in the application, and limited Location: time to review documents received by the PPA Offices to prevent the pipeline from being built Commissioners the night before the vote, 17 Pemberton Rd. -
Official Statement 2005 Second Sale
NEW ISSUE - BOOK-ENTRY ONLY RATINGS: Fitch: AAA Moody’s: Aaa Standard & Poor’s: AAA In the opinion of Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger & Vecchione, a Professional Corporation, Bond Counsel to the County, assuming continuing compliance by the County with certain tax covenants described herein, under existing law, interest on the Series 2005 Bonds is excluded from the gross income of the owners of the Series 2005 Bonds for federal income tax purposes pursuant to Section 103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”) and interest on the Series 2005 Bonds is not an item of tax preference under Section 57 of the Code for purposes of computing alternative minimum tax. In the case of certain corporate holders of the Series 2005 Bonds, interest on the Series 2005 Bonds will be included in the calculation of the alternative minimum tax as a result of the inclusion of interest on the Series 2005 Bonds in “adjusted current earnings” of certain corporations. See “TAX MATTERS” herein. ______________________ $30,000,000 COUNTY OF MONMOUTH New Jersey General Obligation Bonds, Series 2005 Dated: Date of Delivery Due: As shown below The $30,000,000 General Obligation Bonds, Series 2005 (the “Series 2005 Bonds”) will be issued by the County of Monmouth, New Jersey (the “County”) in fully registered form and, when issued, the Series 2005 Bonds will be registered in the name of Cede & Co., as nominee for The Depository Trust Company, New York, New York (“DTC”), an automated depository for securities and clearing house transactions, which will act as securities depository for the Series 2005 Bonds. -
In the Supreme Court of the United States
NO. 19-114 In the Supreme Court of the United States DOUGLAS CIOLEK, Petitioner, v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, Respondent. On Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the New Jersey Supreme Court BRIEF IN OPPOSITION TO PETITION FOR A WRIT OF CERTIORARI FREDRIC M. KNAPP MORRIS COUNTY PROSECUTOR JOHN K. MCNAMARA, JR. CHIEF ASSISTANT PROSECUTOR COUNSEL OF RECORD MORRIS COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE P.O. BOX 900 – COURT STREET MORRISTOWN, NJ 07963-0900 (973) 285-6200 [email protected] AUGUST 22, 2019 COUNSEL FOR RESPONDENT SUPREME COURT PRESS ♦ (888) 958-5705 ♦ BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS i QUESTIONS PRESENTED Whether the legislative requirement of “justifiable need” for a permit to carry a handgun in public violates the Second Amendment. ii PARTIES TO THE PROCEEDINGS Douglas F. Ciolek is the petitioner, whose appli- cation for a permit to carry a handgun in public was denied, and who was the pro se plaintiff in the proceedings below. Petitioner is an admitted member of the bar of New Jersey. The State of New Jersey was represented in the judicial proceedings below by Prosecutor Fredric M. Knapp, Morris County Prosecutor, in his capacity as Chief Law Enforcement Officer for Morris County. N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:158-5 (West 2019). The Attorney General of New Jersey has been provided proper notice, and the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office continues to represent respon- dent through counsel. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page QUESTIONS PRESENTED ........................................ i PARTIES TO THE PROCEEDINGS ......................... ii TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ...................................... iv OPINIONS BELOW ................................................... 1 JURISDICTION .......................................................... 2 CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS AND STATUTES INVOLVED ............................. 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE ................................... -
Public Hearing Before ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT and ENERGY COMMITTEE
Public Hearing before ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY COMMITTEE ASSEMBLY BILL NO. 70 (The "Green Acres, Farmland and Historic Preservation, and Blue Acres Bond Act of 1995"; authorizes issuance of $350 million in bonds; appropriates $5000) LOCATION: Ocean County Gov't Complex DATE: March 20, 1995 Freeholders Meeting Room 10:00 a.m. Toms River, New Jersey MEMBERS OF COMMITTEE PRESENT: Asse~jlywornan Maureen Ogden, Chair Assemblyman Steve Corodernus AssemDlyman David W. Wolfe AsserJ:: lyman Torn Foley Asser.1blyrnan John c. Gibson ALSO PRESENT: Jeffrey T. Climpson Aide, Assembly Environment and Energy Committee Off ice of Legislative Services Hearing Recorded and Transcribed by The Office of Legislative Services, Public Information Office, Hearing Unit, State House Annex, CN 068, Trenton, New Jersey 08625 MAUREEN OGDEN Choir LEE SOLOMON ~rfn ~ rrsrv ~fafr llrBislafurr STEVE CORODEMUS JOHN E. ROONEY ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY COMMITTEE BARBARA W. WRIGHT LEGISLATIVE OFFICE BUILDING, CN-068 ANTHONY IMPREVEDUTO HARRY A. MCENROE TRENTON, NJ 08625-0068 (609) 292-7676 R E V I S E D P U B L I C H E A R I N G N 0 T I C E TO: MEMBERS OF THE ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT & ENERGY COMMITTEE FROM: ASSEMBLYWOMAN MAUREEN OGDEN, CHAIR SUBJECT: PUBLIC HEARING - March 20, 1995 The public ma.v address comments and questions to Jeffrey T. Climpson or Lucinda TiajolofJ, Committee Aides, or make bill status and scheduling inquiries to Elva Thomas, secretary, at (609) 292-7676. Those persons presenting written testimony should provide 15 copies to the committee on the day of the hearing. The Assembly Environment & Energy Committee will hold a public hearing on Monday, March 20, 1995 at *10:00 AM in the Ocean County Government Complex, Administration Building, Freeholders Meeting Room (Room 119), 101 Hooper Ave., Toms River, NJ, on the following bill: A-70 The ··Green Acres, Farmland and Historic Ogden/Wolfe Preservation, and Blue Acres Bond Act of 1995"; authorizes issuance of 5350 million in bonds: appropriates $5,000. -
The Barnegat Bay Watershed Educational Resource Guide
Barnegat Bay Watershed Educational Resource Guide Prepared by Christine R. Raabe For the Ocean County Soil Conservation District and the Barnegat Bay Watershed Environmental Educators Roundtable Updated: March 2012 by the Barnegat Bay Partnership Table of Contents Introduction How to Use this Guide 1. Organizations and Agencies Involved with Barnegat Bay Watershed Education 2. National Organizations for Additional Resources 3. A Synopsis of Teacher Resources 4. Other Resource Guides and Directories 5. Map Resources 6. Barnegat Bay Watershed Environmental Educators Roundtable Steering Committee Members i Introduction The Ocean County Soil Conservation District and the Barnegat Bay Watershed Environmental Educators Roundtable discovered that educators within the watershed need assistance in finding pertinent information and resources if they are to effectively teach about the Barnegat Bay watershed and the issues that impact it. This guide has been compiled to answer that need. What began as a simple directory has grown into an annotated compendium of resources and organizations offering numerous programs, publications, field trips, and watershed information which educators can incorporate into their lessons and activities. It is a guide that will prove useful to anyone searching for information about the features and functions of the Barnegat Bay watershed. This Educator’s Resource Guide will be updated periodically. Please help us keep the document current by e-mailing Mary Judge at [email protected] with any additions, deletions, or corrections to the entries in this directory. Thank you for your help with this ongoing project. Original funding for this guide was provided by the USEPA and the NJDEP through the Barnegat Bay Partnership (BBP, formerly Barnegat Bay National Estuary Program) and the Partnership for Nonpoint Source Pollution Control in the Barnegat Bay Watershed. -
Legislation and Law Revision Commissions: One Option for the Management and Maintenance of Ever-Increasing Bodies of Statutory Law
THARNEY - MACRO - 8.DOCX (DO NOT DELETE) 9/5/2017 3:30 PM LEGISLATION AND LAW REVISION COMMISSIONS: ONE OPTION FOR THE MANAGEMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF EVER-INCREASING BODIES OF STATUTORY LAW Laura C. Tharney, Esq., Executive Director, New Jersey Law Revision Commission Samuel M. Silver, Esq., Counsel, New Jersey Law Revision Commission “By attempting the impossible, one can attain the highest level of the possible.” - August Strindberg, Swedish playwright, novelist, and painter I. LEGISLATION ............................................................................. 330 II. LEGISLATIVE PROCESSES IN THE STATES .................................. 330 A. Annual vs. Biennial Sessions ........................................ 331 B. Session Length .............................................................. 332 C. Full-Time, Part-Time or “Hybrid” State Legislatures . 333 D. Number of Legislators .................................................. 335 E. Number of Bills Introduced ........................................... 336 III. LAW REVISION COMMISSIONS ................................................. 337 A. Periodic Calls for Law Revision Commissions ............ 337 B. New Jersey’s Law Revision Commission ...................... 342 C. Law Revision Commissions in Other States ................. 353 D. Law Revision Commissions Internationally. ................ 355 IV. CONCLUSION ........................................................................... 359 Laura C. Tharney has been a licensed attorney since 1991 and is admitted to practice -
United States Trust Co. V. New Jersey
No. 75-1687 U.S. United States Trust Co. v. New Jersey 431 U.S. 1 (1977) • 97 S. Ct. 1505 Decided Apr 27, 1977 APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY No. 75-1687. Argued November 10, 1976 Decided April 27, 1977 A 1962 statutory covenant between New Jersey and New York limited the ability of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to subsidize rail passenger transportation from revenues and reserves pledged as security for consolidated bonds issued by the Port Authority. A 1974 New Jersey statute, together with a concurrent and parallel New York statute, retroactively repealed the 1962 covenant. Appellant, both as a trustee for, and as a holder of, Port Authority bonds, brought suit in the New Jersey Superior Court for declaratory relief, claiming that the 1974 New Jersey statute impaired the obligation of the States' contract with the bondholders in violation of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution. The Superior Court dismissed the complaint after trial, holding that the statutory repeal was a reasonable exercise of New Jersey's police power and was not prohibited by the Contract Clause. The New Jersey Supreme Court affirmed. Held: The Contract Clause prohibits the retroactive repeal of the 1962 covenant. Pp. 14-32. (a) The outright repeal of the 1962 covenant totally eliminated an important security provision for the bondholders and thus impaired the obligation of the States' contract. Pp. 17-21. 2 (b) The security provision of the 1962 covenant was purely a financial *2 obligation and thus not necessarily a compromise of the States' reserved powers that cannot be contracted away. -
RAYMOND JAMES the Date of This Official Statement Is June __, 2020
PRELIMINARY OFFICIAL STATEMENT DATED JUNE 18, 2020 OFFICIAL STATEMENT New Issue - Book-Entry-Only Ratings: Moody’s: MIG1 Standard & Poor’s: SP-1+ Fitch: F1+ (see “CREDIT RATINGS” herein) $72,265,000* The Monmouth County Improvement Authority (Monmouth County, New Jersey) Governmental Pooled Loan Project Notes, Series 2020 consisting of: $28,125,000* Governmental Pooled Loan Project Notes, Series 2020A $44,140,000* Governmental Pooled Loan Project Notes, Series 2020B Series 2020A Notes Series 2020B Notes Dated: Date of Delivery Dated: Date of Delivery Due: July 12, 2021 Due: February 15, 2021 Interest Rate: % Interest Rate: % Reoffered to Yield: % Reoffered to Yield: % The Governmental Pooled Loan Project Notes, Series 2020 (the “Series 2020 Notes”) will be issued by The Monmouth County Improvement Authority (the “Authority”) as fully registered notes and, when issued, will be registered in the name of Cede & Co. (“Cede”), as nominee for The Depository Trust Company (“DTC”), an automated depository for securities and clearing house transactions, which will act as securities depository for the Series 2020 Notes. The Series 2020 Notes will consist of the Series 2020A Notes which will be issued in the aggregate amount of $28,125,000* (the “Series 2020A Notes”) and the Series 2020B Notes which will be issued in the aggregate amount of $44,140,000* (the “Series 2020B Notes”). Individual purchases will be made in book-entry form (without certificates) in the principal amount of $5,000 or any integral multiple thereof. The principal of and interest on the Series 2020 Notes is payable at maturity upon presentation and surrender at designated corporate trust office of U.S. -
Environmental Resource Inventory
Environmental Resource Inventory City of Summit Union County, New Jersey Reeves-Reed Arboretum A Collaborative Effort by City of Summit and Passaic River Coalition 2011 Acknowledgements City of Summit City Hall, 512 Springfield Avenue, Summit, NJ 07901 Phone: 908-273-6400, Website: www.cityofsummit.org Jordan Glatt, Mayor Common Council Dave A. Bomgaars, President Ellen K. Dickson Nuris Portunodo Thomas Getzendanner Michael J. Vernotico Richard J. Madden Stephen P. Murphy Environmental Commission Marian G. Glenn, Chair Ervin Bales Marjorie Fox Amy Cairns Harrison John Kilby Christine Lijoi Judith Mandelbaum David Naidu Beth Kinney, Director, Department of Community Services Jin Blades, Administrative Manager, Department of Community Services Passaic River Coalition A nonprofit watershed association created in 1969 to serve as an advisor to the citizens, governments, and businesses of the Passaic River Basin on land and water resource management and public health. www.passaicriver.org Ella F. Filippone, Executive Director Anne L. Kruger, Ph.D., Senior Scientist Allyson Salisbury, Environmental Specialist Jason Chen, Summer Intern Alicja Trzopek, Summer Intern Environmental Resource Inventory City of Summit, Union County, New Jersey 2011 Table of Contents Section Page Preface i Accomplishments of the Summit Environmental Commission ii I. Introduction to Summit, New Jersey 1 II. Geology 4 III. Geography 8 IV. Water Resources 12 Surface Water 12 Ground Water 15 Recharge Areas 17 Flood Plains 19 Riparian Buffers 19 Water Supplies 21 Water Quality 22 Preservation of Water Resources in Summit 27 V. Wetlands 30 Wetlands in Summit 31 VI. Climate and Weather 34 VII. Soils 37 Importance of Soil 37 Soil Characteristics and Properties 37 Soil Erosion 38 Soil Types in Summit 40 VIII.