Here are Mary Lee’s recordings since 2012. Every time her dorsal fin rises above the water’s surface, OCEARCH receives a “ping”.
May 26,2014
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, Thinking of going to the beach this summer , meet the newest member of the New Jersey shore community , no its not Snooki 2, her name is Mary Lee, and she is 3,456 pound great white shark .
Mary Lee was originally tagged off of the coast of Cape May back in 2012. Well this summer Mary Lee is back and the great white’s tracker was recorded around 8am only 10 miles off of Wildwood. Then at 1:04 p.m., Mary Lee pinged again about 12 miles off the coast a little further north, right on the border of Avalon and Sea Isle City. (https://1057thehawk.com/3400-pound-great-white-shark-recorded-in-wildwood-today/?trackback=fbshare_top )
Lincoln Park teen who sued parents returns home; family issues will be settled in private
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY MARCH 12, 2014, 11:27 PM
BY CHRISTOPHER MAAG AND STEFANIE DAZIO
STAFF WRITERS
THE RECORD
It was a case that struck fear in the hearts of parents around the world. If a teenager does not like her parents’ rules, can she move out of their house and then sue them for hundreds of thousands of dollars in financial support?
Rachel Canning, the 18-year-old senior at Morris Catholic High School, may never know for sure. She’s moved back into her family’s home in Lincoln Park, a lawyer for her parents announced at a news conference Wednesday, possibly ending a lawsuit that landed her troubled family in the middle of a global media firestorm.
“The bottom line is it’s over. She’s home,” said Angelo Sarno, the lawyer for Rachel’s parents, Sean and Elizabeth Canning. “You can’t address family grievances in a courtroom.”
Family law experts around North Jersey agreed.
“There really was no need for this family’s situation to become a public matter in the first place,” said Bari Weinberger, a family law attorney in Paramus. “These are parents with a child in need of counseling and help behind closed doors, not a legal battle in open court. It’s a relief to see that cooler heads prevailed.”
Editors : the Record put together some lower-cost alternatives to alleviate area flooding , focusing a many new technologies and some old fashion common sense ideas , oddly omitting any discussion about all the run off from turf fields
Could low-cost options reduce flooding from Passaic, Hackensack rivers?
Sunday January 27, 2013, 11:20 PM
BY JAMES M. O’NEILL
STAFF WRITER
The Record
In the decades-old debate over how to reduce chronic flooding along the Passaic and Hackensack rivers, proposals have often involved huge, expensive infrastructure projects, such as a larger sewers or a $2.7 billion tunnel to carry the water out to sea. Now, there is a growing push for radically different, lower-cost alternatives — planting gardens on rooftops, installing grassy swales or depressions in highway medians and parking lots, adding rain gardens on front lawns and attaching rain barrels to residential gutters.
These varying strategies, collectively called green infrastructure, are all designed to do the same thing — capture rainwater before it ever reaches the storm drains, reducing the risk of flooding.
While many environmental initiatives are inherently controversial because they look to prohibit development or limit growth, there are generally few vocal opponents of green infrastructure. The principal obstacle remains the upfront cost to individual homeowners or developers who might consider embracing the strategy.
Proponents say those costs often cause people to overlook real long-term savings, since green roofs can better insulate a building, making it more energy-efficient, and the captured water can be used to irrigate lawns and run toilets, cutting operational costs. Green infrastructure can also increase property values and lower the huge costs many communities face to upgrade or replace aging sewer and water infrastructure.
Morristown NJ, Strange lights were seen hovering over Morris County in New Jersey. According to CBS people are asking ,was it a UFO or is there an explanation for it?
Strange, red, blinking lights could be seen across Morris County on Monday night, and officials thought they had figured out what caused them. Some suggested and aircraft or balloons.