Wednesday, June 26, 2024
Home Blog Page 224

Seton Hall University Announces Fall 2020 Dean’s List

0

MORRIS COUNTY — Seton Hall University is pleased to announce the following local students who qualified for the Fall 2020 Dean’s list and to congratulate them for their outstanding academic achievements. After the close of every semester, undergraduate students completing all courses with a GPA of .4, with no grades lower than “C”, qualify for the Dean’s List.

Glory Akoh of Florham Park

Erin Beik of East Hanover

Shawn Berry of Morris Plains

Kylie Brda of Parsippany

Alexa Bursese of East Hanover

Caroline Cahill of Florham Park

Carlo Capurso of East Hanover

Alexandra Cerasiello of Parsippany

Saadet Ceynek of Boonton

Ishani Chowatia of Parsippany

Nicholas Da Cruz of East Hanover

Morgan Dangler of Boonton

Mia Deluca of Florham Park

Rujuta Deo of Parsippany

Kavan Desai of Morris Plains

Corinne Diaz of Morris Plains

Jenna Eoga of Boonton

Ryan Falkowski of Morris Plains

Cristina Fernandez of Parsippany

Antonieta Ferrou of Parsippany

Erney Fertile of Morris Plains

Jaclyn Fiorenza of East Hanover

Camren Fitzsimmons of Parsippany-Troy Hills

Leyla Gasparro of Parsippany

Kyle Gaydo of Boonton

Kayla Genoese of Florham Park

Joshua George of East Hanover

Amanda Grabowiecki of Parsippany

Katherine Grytsayenko of Parsippany

Alia Hakimi of Parsippany

Ehsan Huq of Florham Park

Li-Hsuan Inn of Lake Hiawatha

Jordyn Iuso of Florham Park

Angelina Marie Jerez of Lake Hiawatha

Anne Marielle Jerez of Lake Hiawatha

Nicholas John of Florham Park

Brett Leech of Lake Hiawatha

Joshua Logan of Morris Plains

Harshitha Madhavan of Morris Plains

Joseph Manno of East Hanover

Justin Mao of Boonton

Stephanie Martinez of Parsippany

Brianna Masiello of Madison

Kevin Mathew of East Hanover

Mary McGlone of Boonton

Peter Mitrakos of Morris Plains

Saajan Modi of Morris Plains

Rani Mody of Parsippany

Valentina Orejarena of Florham Park

Alexandra Papadopoulos of Morris Plains

Antonios Papayianis of Parsippany

Rocco Pascale of Parsippany

Piyush Patel of Lake Hiawatha

Shivani Patel of Parsippany

Joseph Paul of East Hanover

Rachelle Philip of Boonton

Arthur Pluciennik of Morris Plains

Samantha Quiceno of Morris Plains

Neyha Ramani of Morris Plains

Christopher Regan of Florham Park

Nicole Ribeiro of East Hanover

Philip Rispoli III of East Hanover

Victoria Rossi of East Hanover

Sabino Ruta of East Hanover

Lani Sabeh of East Hanover

Nicole Salvemini of East Hanover

Matthew Seely of Florham Park

Richard Sevilla of Lake Hiawatha

Rishi Shah of East Hanover

Ryan Sheppard of Florham Park

Natalie Sliwowski of Boonton

Kaitlyn Spitzer of Parsippany

Kaitlyn Tanskey of Cedar Knolls

Kaitlen Telepko of Parsippany

Carlos Vargas of Madison

Lauren Vuolo of Lake Hiawatha

Katherine Walsh of Morris Plains

One of the country’s leading Catholic universities, Seton Hall University has been a catalyst for leadership – developing students in mind, heart and spirit – since 1856. Home to nearly 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students and offering more than 80 rigorous majors, Seton Hall’s academic excellence has been singled out for distinction by The Princeton Review, US News & World Report and Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Seton Hall, which embraces students of all religions, prepares its graduates to be exemplary servant leaders and caring global citizens. Its attractive main campus is located in suburban South Orange, New Jersey, and is only 14 miles by train, bus or car to New York City, offering a wealth of employment, internship, cultural and entertainment opportunities. The university’s nationally recognized School of Law is prominently located in downtown Newark. For more information click here.





The University of Tampa Honors Dean’s List Students for the Fall 2020 Semester

0

MORRIS COUNTY — The University of Tampa has honored 1,762 students who were named to the dean’s list for the Fall 2020 semester. Students must maintain a GPA of 3.75 or higher to be eligible for the dean’s list.

The following local students were named to the dean’s list:

Nicole Parisi of Madison, Senior majoring in Education-Elementary (K-6)

Ashley Patterson of Boonton, Senior majoring in Film and Media Arts

Sarah Plott of Morris Plains, Senior majoring in Nursing

Olivia Stelletell of Morris Plains, Freshman majoring in Biology

The University of Tampa is a private, comprehensive university located on 110 acres on the riverfront in downtown Tampa. Known for academic excellence, personal attention and real-world experience in its undergraduate and graduate programs, the University serves approximately 10,000 students from 50 states and about 130 countries. The majority of full-time students live on campus, and about half of UT students are from Florida.





Overdose Fatality Review Team Launched in Morris County

0

MORRIS COUNTY — An Overdose Fatality Review Team (OFRT) is being launched in Morris County through a partnership between Prevention is Key (PIK) and the Morris County Division of Public Health to combat the rise in overdose deaths.

The OFRT has enlisted the support of multiple agencies and organizations to begin analyzing data, identifying regional trends, and evaluating strategies to address opioid overdose deaths in Morris County. The initiative is being funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the New Jersey Department of Health under a successful model program developed in Maryland.

OFRTs consist of local, multi-agency, multi-disciplinary teams of professionals in a position to conduct comprehensive, yet confidential reviews of overdose deaths to ultimately improve response, prevention, treatment and public awareness services.  By fully understanding more about overdose deaths in the county, local health officials can more effectively direct policies, practices, and partnerships to prevent future overdoses and allocate prevention resources and services where they are most effective.

“The idea of gathering a group of individuals from diverse professions to share their perspectives and experiences, and to learn from one another in order to make a recommendation on how to prevent future overdose deaths feels like a massive step in the right direction, and I’m happy to be part of that process,” said Samantha Neville of PIK, who will serve as the coordinator of the Morris County OFRT.

“Opioid overdose fatalities continue to be a serious public health crisis affecting individuals and families from all walks of life. The Morris County OFRT will play a critical and integral role in the development of critical interventions for the prevention of opioid misuse and fatalities,” said Morris County Health Officer Carlos Perez, Jr. Ph.D.

In offering $100,000 grants to cities and counties throughout New Jersey last year, the NJDOH explained that the review teams can uncover the individual and population factors and characteristics of potential overdose victims. Knowing the who, what, when, where, and how of fatal overdoses provides a better sense of the strategies and coordination needed to prevent future overdoses and results in the better allocation of overdose prevention resources and services, according to the NJDOH.

“The Department recognizes the importance of local solutions to bring about a larger change that is needed to address the overdose crisis,” said New Jersey Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli when the grant opportunity was rolled out last year. “The power of Overdose Fatality Review Teams is that they combine robust data with local partnerships, which is the perfect public health recipe for success. These teams will bring about innovation to help end the overdose epidemic.”

According to the NJDOH, the Maryland project improved the quality of referral systems, enhanced outreach to families to provide overdose prevention and treatment services by local health departments and other providers; identified new audiences for its naloxone training, and amplified overdose awareness.

The NJDOH summarized the responsibilities of all OFRTs in the state:

  • Conduct multi-agency/multi-disciplinary reviews of all available information on an individual who dies from an overdose; promote cooperation and coordination across agencies involved in overdose investigations;
  • Establish policies and procedures for pooling all available information on overdose deaths from local, county, and state government agencies, law enforcement, private entities that maintain privacy and confidentiality and comply with all applicable State and Federal privacy and confidentiality legal requirements;
  • Identify points of contact between deceased individuals and healthcare, social services, criminal justice, and other systems involved;
  • Identify the risk factors that put individuals at risk for drug overdose within their jurisdiction; and
  • Recommend how to improve local partnerships, policies, and practices to prevent overdose deaths.

Morris County and Prevention is Key are pursuing partnerships with the following agencies and organizations to form an Overdose Fatality Review Team.  Partners may include, but are not limited to:

The Municipal Alliances network in Morris County
Morris County Stigma-Free Communities Initiative
Morris County Mental Health Addictions Services Advisory Board
Catholic Charities
Hope House
Daytop New Jersey
Grace Counseling Center
Morris County Aftercare Center
New Bridge Services.
Hope One
Various public schools
Morris County Department of Human Services
Morris County Prosecutor’s Office
Morris County Sheriff’s Office and Correctional Facility
Morris County Emergency Medical Services
Morris County Medical Examiner
Atlantic Health System
Saint Clare’s Health System





Rep. Sherrill Named to Higher Education and Workforce Investment Subcommittee

0
Congresswoman Mikie Sherrill

MORRIS COUNTY — Representative Mikie Sherrill (NJ-11) was named this week to the Higher Education and Workforce Investment Subcommittee on the House Education and Labor Committee. The subcommittee has jurisdiction over education and workforce development beyond the high school level, including the Higher Education Act, adult education, postsecondary career and technical education, apprenticeship programs, science, and technology programs, domestic volunteer programs, and national service programs.

“Focus on and investment in our students and our workforce is absolutely essential to help our country get to the other side of this crisis,” said Rep. Sherrill. “Programs that build and support a strong workforce pipeline, connect students with the jobs of today, and ensure Americans have the training they need to adapt to the jobs of tomorrow will help to jumpstart our employment recovery from this pandemic and provide long-term benefits. I am excited to work with my colleagues on the Higher Education and Workforce Investment subcommittee as we get past this pandemic and support getting Americans back to work and our economy back on track.”

Rep. Sherrill is also a member of the House Armed Services Committee and the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee.





Decroce, Dimaso And Simonsen Underscore Urgency to Get Kids Back in Classrooms as Critical Questions Remain Unanswered

0
Assemblywoman BettyLou DeCroce (File Photo)

MORRIS COUNTY —  Today’s Joint Committee on the Public Schools remote meeting highlighted the importance of getting teachers and children back in the classroom for full in-person learning, said the committee’s Assembly Republican members.

Legislators, state officials, education advocates, and concerned parents discussed how New Jersey can successfully reopen schools while addressing the learning loss and the social-emotional impact the pandemic has had on the students and teachers of New Jersey.

“I think everyone agrees that in-person learning is crucial, especially for children from our underserved communities that don’t have equitable access to the Internet and rely on school breakfast and lunch for their nutrition,” said Assemblywoman BettyLou DeCroce (R-Morris). “But since kids are still not in the classroom, it is evident that the key players are not prioritizing our families most in need. It is time to fully fund schools so that they have what they need to reopen.”

Education spending for this school year is the same as last. Murphy’s plan to increase funding by $335 million was scrapped because of revenue concerns due to the coronavirus. How the federal Covid-19 relief funding the state receives for K-12 education is being spent remains unknown.

“We can’t wait until March to reconvene another meeting,” stressed Assemblywoman Serena DiMaso (R-Monmouth). “The subject matter is just too important to put it off another month. It is imperative that the Department of Health be on our next call to discuss how we can safely get kids and teachers back to school as soon as possible. The learning loss and subpar education they are receiving are totally unacceptable and as we heard today not everyone is getting the same opportunities – our disadvantaged children are disproportionately suffering.”

On Monday, Gov. Phil Murphy announced that 190 school districts out of more than 600 remain remote only, while 95 have moved to in-person instruction. Twenty-one districts are offering a hybrid format that combines both remote and in-classroom learning and 35 have some combination of the formats. Districts like Newark, Trenton, Camden, Paterson, Pleasantville, and Jersey City have yet to return to in-person instruction. All are among the poorest districts in the state and part of what was formerly known as Abbott districts.

“Teachers are front-line workers and as such, should be able to receive the Covid vaccine,” said Assemblyman Erik Simonsen (R-Cape May), who is also the athletic director of Lower Cape May Regional High School. “Schools are important to children’s mental health, emotional well-being and provide the support that cannot be replicated online. It’s time we move teachers up in the queue to be vaccinated – whether we use existing nursing staff and hold clinics at schools or ensure they can receive appointments at other vaccination sites – we need to make a plan and put it into action now. There are only a few more months of the school year left.”

Health care personnel, long-term care residents and staff, first responders, and individuals deemed high risk for severe illness because of certain medical conditions are currently the only ones eligible to receive the vaccine.

Despite New Jersey Acting Commissioner of Education Angelica Allen-McMillan speaking during the joint meeting, she did not take questions from legislators. As such, the Republican Assembly members are submitting a list of questions to the commissioner. They are looking for answers concerning statewide guidelines for reopening schools, mental health services for students, meeting the needs of special education students, the distribution of federal Covid-19 funding for K-12 education, and more.





Member of Murphy’s Family Tested Positive for COVID-19

0
Governor Phil Murphy. Photo by Rich Hundley III, Trentonian

MORRIS COUNTY — “A member of the Governor’s family recently tested positive for COVID-19. Per guidance from public health officials, the contact tracing process has begun to notify everyone who may have come into contact with the Governor’s family member during the potential infection window.

“After careful review, the Governor does not qualify as an exposed close contact. However, out of an abundance of caution and in line with the highest levels of commitment to protecting public health, the Governor will be canceling in-person events and voluntarily quarantining before resuming any in-person engagements. The Governor received a coronavirus test earlier today as part of his regularly-scheduled testing regime, which came back negative.

“From the beginning, the Governor has taken every precaution to limit the spread of COVID-19. Today’s exceedingly cautious steps are part of that ongoing commitment.”





Acting Morris County Prosecutor and Chief of Detectives Hold Promotion Ceremony for Investigators

0
Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Lieutenant Susan Johnson and Chief of Detectives Chris Kimker.

MORRIS COUNTY — Acting Morris County Prosecutor Robert J. Carroll and Chief of Detectives Christoph Kimker announce the promotion of several members of the investigative team within the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office. The following investigative members will be promoted and assigned as indicated:

Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Captain Jan Michael Monrad, and Chief of Detectives Chris Kimker.

Lieutenant Jan-Michael Monrad will be promoted to the rank of captain and will command the Special Operations Division. Captain Monrad has been a member of the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office since April of 2002 when he was hired as a Detective. Prior to joining the MCPO, Captain Monrad worked as a Patrolman with the Boonton Township Police Department. During his tenure with the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Captain Monrad has served in the General Investigations Unit, the Domestic Violence Unit, and the Special Enforcement Unit, High Tech Crimes Unit, and Intelligence/Homeland Security Unit, within the Special Operations Division. A Certified Forensic Computer Examiner by the International Association of Computer Investigative Specialists and a Tactical Emergency Medical Technician, Captain Monrad is a member of the Tactical Narcotics Team and Rapid Deployment Team.

Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Captain Jan Michael Monrad, Lieutenant Susan Johnson, Sergeant Leah Atterbury, Sergeant Patrick LaGuerre, Detective Supervisor Stephen Gangi, Chief of Detectives Christoph Kimker, and Morris County Sheriff James Gannon.

Sergeant Susan E. Johnson will be promoted to the rank of lieutenant and will continue to be assigned to the General Investigations Unit within the Courts & Administration Division. Lieutenant Johnson has been a member of the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office since 2002. Prior to joining the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Lieutenant Johnson served as Patrol Officer and Detective for the Town of Boonton Police Department. During her tenure with the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Lieutenant Johnson has served in the Domestic Violence/Missing Persons Units, Sex Crimes/Child Endangerment Unit, Megan’s Law Unit, Internet Crimes Against Children Unit, General Investigations Unit, Pretrial Services Unit, and the Fraud and Professional Standards Units. Lieutenant Johnson has attended numerous leadership courses and received the FBI LEEDA (Law Enforcement Executive Development Association) Trilogy Award after completely the Supervisor, Command, and Executive Leadership Institute courses.

Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Sergeant Leah Atterbury, and Chief of Detectives Chris Kimker.

Detective Supervisor Leah Atterbury will be promoted to the rank of sergeant and will be reassigned to the Pre-Trial Services Unit within the Courts & Administration Division. Sergeant Atterbury has been a member of the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office since April 2004. Prior to joining the MCPO, Sergeant Atterbury served the New Jersey Transit Police Department and New Jersey Office of the Attorney General Division of Criminal Justice, assigned to the Organized Crime and Racketeering Bureau. Sergeant Atterbury has served on the Professional Standards Unit, General Investigations Unit, Domestic Violence Unit, Fraud/Insurance Fraud Unit, Megan’s Law Unit, and the Juvenile and Missing Persons Unit. Sergeant Atterbury has received many awards during her law enforcement career, including a Meritorious Services Award and an Honor Award for the apprehension of an armed robber, and a commendation for her investigation which resulted in the safe recovery of a 15-year-old missing juvenile.

Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Sergeant Patrick LaGuerre, and Chief of Detectives Chris Kimker

Detective Supervisor Patrick J. LaGuerre will be promoted to the rank of sergeant and will continue to be assigned to the Bias Crimes Unit and Community Outreach & Recruitment within the Specialized Crimes Division. Sergeant LaGuerre joined the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office in 2013 as a Detective in the General Investigations Unit. Prior to joining the MCPO, Sergeant LaGuerre served with the East Orange Police Department in the patrol division, narcotics unit, Executive Protection Unit, and Enhanced Community Safety Team, and with the Newark Police Department and Essex County Auto Theft initiative. During his tenure with the MCPO, he has served in the Professional Standards Unit, CARE Unit, Juvenile Unit, and Missing Persons Unit. Sergeant LaGuerre has received commendations during his law enforcement career, and holds certifications in Emergency Management Administration and Global Security and Terrorism Studies, and is a Certified Behavioral Specialist and certified Train the Trainor for Mental Health, Implicit Bias, Bias Crimes, and Resiliency.

Acting Prosecutor Robert Carroll, Detective Supervisor Stephen Gangi, and Chief of Detectives Chris Kimker

Detective Stephen J. Gangi will be promoted to the rank of detective supervisor and will continue to be assigned to the Major Crimes Unit within the Tactical Division. Detective Supervisor Gangi joined the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office in 2017. Prior to joining the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Detective Supervisor Gangi served as a Corrections Officer with the Essex County Correctional Facility and Detective with the East Orange Police Department, where he was assigned to the Street Gang Unit, Criminal Investigation Bureau, and Violent Crime Task Force. During his tenure with the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office, Detective Supervisor Gangi has served in the Major Crimes Unit, where he has successfully investigated and arrested suspects in numerous homicides, and successfully investigated numerous bank robberies, aggravated assaults, and has several strict liability arrests for drug-related deaths.

A formal promotion ceremony was held on February 8, 2021. Acting Prosecutor Carroll said, “I am pleased to make these well-deserved promotions to individuals who have been recognized for providing dedicated and skilled services to the citizens’ Morris County. I am highly confident that they will provide skillful and ethical leadership to our office and to the law enforcement community when needed most in such historically challenging times. We also wish to honor their families, who often must make the sacrifices to enable our officers to serve the public on a 24/7 on-call basis.”





There are more Important Things than Marijuana, says Bergen

0
Assemblyman Brian Bergen

MORRIS COUNTY — On Friday, Speaker Craig Coughlin announced the postponement of all Assembly business for 10 days, a move designed to allow the governor and Senate more time to come to an agreement on the details of marijuana legislation.

“An internal political feud is not more important than providing funding to help businesses, keep renters in their homes and guarantee people don’t lose their full earned income tax credit,” said Bergen (R-Morris).

Gov. Phil Murphy has refused to sign legislation regulating the legal sale of marijuana until there are clear punishments for users below the age of 21. The Assembly Community Development and Affairs Committee passed a bill on Jan. 29 establishing those penalties, but the Senate remains firm that the legislation on Murphy’s desk achieves their social justice and criminal justice goals.

“Suspending all business because of one bill is completely unnecessary. We have more than 5,000 bills in the queue for consideration addressing a wide breadth of issues in our state. We should meet and do our jobs. To ignore all of the other important issues awaiting action because establishment Democrats have become myopic about everything other than their political needs is ridiculous.”

Bergen has been advocating to provide $300 million to help small-businesses (A5085) that are at risk of going out of business because of Murphy’s executive orders in response to Covid-19.

He also wants to help renters at-risk of eviction by increasing their property tax deduction to 30 percent of rent from 18 percent (A3928) – saving struggling renters thousands to help them keep a roof over their head, and guarantee that EITC recipients don’t receive a lower credit because they aren’t aware of needing to refile 2019 tax information (A5090).

“I hate to admit this, but I think even Congress is less dysfunctional than the state legislature right now,” exclaimed Bergen. “At least they meet in person and conduct their business. We are skipping meetings and having conference calls to vote on bills while letting Governor Murphy make unilateral decisions affecting the entire state without our input. What is going on here?”

The Morris County assemblyman was the first to introduce legislation requiring the legislature to review executive orders within 14 days after they are issued. Both houses would have to approve the orders or they expire on the fifteenth day after enactment.





Rocco’s Pizzeria-Trattoria Holds Grand Opening Celebration

0
Robbin Salmeri, Peter Daniele, Deb Starker, Christian Iossa, Salvatore Minardi, Gino Iossa, John Hoover, Rocco Iossa, Maureen Byrne, Mayor Robert Conley, John Morris, Sue Whitehorn

MADISON — Mayor Robert Conley, joined by representatives from Council, the Downtown Development Commission, and the Madison Area Chamber of Commerce cut the ribbon at the Grand Opening of Rocco’s Pizzeria-Trattoria, 36 Main Street, on Friday, January 29.

The Iossa Family has owned pizzerias and restaurants in Madison since 1960. Rocco’s Pizzeria-Trattoria offers a modern and unique dining experience offering authentic Italian food and Neapolitan and classic style pizza.

For more information please visit their website by clicking here.





Centenary University Announces Dean’s List

0

MORRIS COUNTY — Centenary University President Bruce Murphy, Ed.D., has announced the Dean’s List for the Fall 2020 semester. To achieve this honor, full-time students must achieve a semester grade point average of 3.8 or above and complete a minimum of 12-semester credits.

Area residents who earned Dean’s List honors are:

East Hanover—Jenna Glinko

Morris Plains—Hannah Cocurullo

Parsippany—Sarah Sturges

Founded in 1867 by the Newark Conference of the United Methodist Church, Centenary University’s academic program integrates a solid liberal arts foundation with a strong career orientation. This mix provides an educational experience that prepares students to succeed in the increasingly global and interdependent world. The University’s main campus is located in Hackettstown, N.J., with its equestrian facility in Washington Township. The Centenary University School of Professional Studies offers degree programs in Parsippany, as well as online and at corporate sites throughout New Jersey.

 





Translate »