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From YouTube: 2.12.19 Freeholder Meeting
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A
The
meeting
of
the
Atlantic
County's
freeholders
has
called
to
order
and
compliance
with
the
open
public
meetings
act
of
the
state
of
New
Jersey.
Adequate
notice
of
the
meeting
of
the
Atlantic
County
Board
of
Chosen
Freeholders
was
provided
in
the
following
manner
published
in
the
press
of
Atlantic,
City
and
mailed
to
the
current
from
daily
journal.
B
Love
you
God.
We
give
thanks
to
the
dream
of
what
America
could
be
for
the
freedom
to
think,
speak
and
worship
as
we
choose.
We
give
you
thanks
for
the
human
endeavor
that
enables
us
to
share
rights
with
others,
even
though
we
may
disagree.
We
give
thanks
for
rich
means
now,
in
this
land
of
prosperity
and
of
others
may
be
continue
to
share
your
blessings
with
others
to
all
the
world.
In
the
suf
dream.
C
D
D
E
A
Next,
we
will
go
into
agenda
before
we
start
off
with
our
first
presentation.
I
just
want
to
welcome
them.
They
have
two
students
here
from
oppressed,
high
school
age
and
yon
are
back
there
from
the
media
department
and
their
teacher.
Chuck
Lockwood
is
a
gentleman
on
the
side
here
they
are
doing
story
owing
real
orders
and
I'm
gonna
lung,
so
I
get
to
be
featured,
that's
pretty
exciting.
So
thank
you
guys
for
coming.
We
appreciate
it.
A
F
F
Besides,
introducing
myself
I'd
like
to
introduce
Jennifer
peel,
how
Jennifer
is
the
new
Alliance
coordinator
and
as
the
Alliance
coordinator
will
be
spearheading
the
re-entry
into
the
narcan
naloxone
training
program
for
the
opiate
overdose
recovery.
Also
with
us
is
George
Danny,
Danon,
Howard
then,
and
how
are
I?
Am
I
mixing
it
up
all
the
time
George
just
came
to
us
recently.
He
was
with
the
Triad
program,
which
lost
its
funding,
and
the
county
was
nice
enough
to
find
a
place
for
him.
F
A
D
Not
at
all
glad
you
make
time
to
get
here,
and
all
I
could
say
is
that
it's
become
quite
apparent.
How
important
this
is
our
coordination
with
the
county
and
fighting
opioid
addiction
and
treatment,
and
it's
sometime
in
the
future
I
would
like
for
the
whole
board
to
take
the
full
training
so
that
will
qualify
understand.
You
should
also
have
a
training
in
CPR
because
a
lot
of
times
after
it's
administered
system,
you
still
gotta
get
them
going.
So
that
would
be
great.
We
would
all
like
to
do
that.
F
F
The
first
thing
is
the
summary
of
the
New
Jersey
overdose
prevention
Act,
which
was
signed
by
Governor
Christie
in
May
of
2013,
and
basically
just
of
the
whole
thing
is
that
anyone
who
is
taking
the
training
can
administer
narcan
for
an
over
opiate
overdose
recovery
and
there
is
no
civil
or
criminal
liability
attached
to
it.
It's
similar
to
the
Good
Samaritan
Act.
F
That
was
also
enacted,
whereby,
if
an
individual
is
that
a
party
somewhere
and
someone
overdoses,
they
can
call
for
help
and
they're
not
going
to
be
held
even
if
they're
part
of
that
party
and
possibly
using
it's
more
important
to
get
the
help
there.
That's
the
Good
Samaritan.
This
is
similar,
but,
as
I
said,
basically,
anyone
administering
narcan,
who
has
not
always
had
the
training,
rather
is
not
liable
civilly
or
criminally
first
with
any
actions.
F
F
You
never
want
to
leave
them
alone,
you
don't
throw
ice
or
water
on
them,
inject
them
with
anything
put
them
in
a
shower
force
them
to
eat
or
drink
attempt
to
make
them
vomit
or
let
them
sleep
it
off.
Those
kinds
of
things
are
going
nowhere
because,
usually
with
an
opiate
overdose,
if
you
go
to
the
the
next
page,
which
would
be
a
mental
blocks
on
fact
sheet,
basically,
an
opiate
can
slow
or
stop
a
person's
breathing
and
the
naloxone
or
the
narcan
is
what
helps
the
person
to
wake
up
and
continue
breathing.
F
So
you
know
no
locks
on
is
a
prescription
medication.
That's
used
to
reverse
an
opiate
overdose.
Opiates
include
heroin
and
prescription
pain.
Medications
such
as
such
as
morphine,
hydrocodone
and
oxycodone
no
locks
on
is
safe
and
effective.
Medical
professionals
have
used
it
for
doubt
decades,
and
the
locks
on
also
goes
by
the
brand
names
of
narcan
or
VZ.
Oh
okay,
so
this
you
know,
tells
you
a
little
bit
about
the
locks
on
itself.
Most
people
have
no
idea
what,
in
our
cannon
the
locks
on
his
do.
F
I
included
it
in
the
packet
and
I
know
that
each
of
the
freeholders
have
a
packet.
There
are
also
extra
packets
out
on
the
table
with
the
agenda.
If
anyone
is
interested
the
next
page
is
you
know?
How
do
you
administer-
and
this
is
where
we
talk
about?
The
main
thing
is
usually
when
you
come
upon
these
people
are
either
unconscious
and
or
not
breathing.
So
the
first
thing
you
want
to
do
is
administer
two
rescue.
Breaths
rescue
breaths
are
like
two
normal
breasts
every
5
to
7
seconds
5
to
10
seconds.
F
You
want
to
do
that
if
they
do
not
respond,
then
at
that
point
you
administered
in
logs
on
the
naloxone
should
or
the
narcan
as
we
more
commonly
know
it
should
respond.
The
person
should
respond
within
5
minutes.
Okay,
if
they
do
not
respond
in
five
minutes,
you
administer
again
the
rescue
breathing,
and
if
available,
you
give
them
a
second
dose
of
more.
Can
you
stay
with
them?
You
continue
to
rescue
breathing
until
the
emergency
personnel
get
there.
So
this
is
just
a
brief,
quick
and
easy.
F
You
know
on
the
guidelines
for
the
administration
within
the
locks
on
a
very
easy
process
and
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
it
later.
One
of
the
other
things
that
I
have
in
the
package.
The
freeholder
board
was
extremely
extremely
helpful
in
encouraging
us
to
include
narcan
gifts
in
all
of
the
AED
AED
stations
in
the
county
that
came
along
with
the
county,
executive
and
administration,
giving
us
the
okay.
You
have
a
complete
list
of
all
of
the
facilities
in
the
county
that
currently
have
narcan
kits
in
them
all
right.
F
The
funny
thing
about
it
was
when
we
this
program,
we
were
so
excited
about
doing
it.
We
got
those
kids
out
there
immediately
and
then
realized
that
we
had
to
pull
them
out
because
we
hadn't
trained
anyone.
You
have
to
use
them,
so
we
got
the
training
done
pretty
quickly,
flipping
things
back
and
they've
been
there
every
since
we
checked
them
periodically,
but
we
now
also
have
Vince
Jones
who's
out
there,
who's
our
guy
out
in
emergency
management,
who's
checking
them
for
us
and
lets
us
know.
F
F
One
of
the
other
things
that
I
have
there
and
you
haven't-
you
see
it
up
here.
We
did
this
just
in
case
program.
We
actually
got
a
intern
from
Stockton
University
who
came
on
board
and
along
with
Charlie,
curry,
Curley
or
a
form
of
Alliance
coordinator.
They
put
together
this
program
just
in
case
or
you
or
someone
you
love
at
risk
of
a
heroin
opium
overdose.
We
have.
This
is
actually
in
much
nicer
colors.
F
We
have
a
color,
we're
sure
that
we
put
out
a
one
side
in
which
one
side
Spanish,
but
again
the
naloxone
kit
that
you
see
here,
which
would
be
orange
in
color
I'll,
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that
as
we
go
on,
because
it's
much
bigger
than
the
kiss
that
we're
using
right
now
and
the
last
thing
that
I
have
in
the
packet
basically
is
governor.
Murphy
came
on
board
and
decided.
F
You
know
this
is
a
major
epidemic
needs
continual
addressing
and
you
have
a
list
of
all
the
initiatives
or
all
the
programs
that
Governor
Murphy
has
either
brought
on
board
or
is
continued
through
his
administration.
So
again,
I
just
put
the
packet
together
for
our
information
purposes,
so
you
know
a
little
bit
about
the
locks
on
a
little
bit
about
the
program
and
what's
going
on
what
I'd
like
to
do
is
basically
tell
you,
you
know
how
did
we
get
started
and
what
happened?
F
The
original
grant
the
opium
overdose
Recovery
Act
program
rather
Atlantic
County
John,
Brooks
Recovery
Center
had
the
original
grant
through
the
state
when
John
Brooks
made
all
their
plans
to
move
into
a
new
building
and
whatnot,
they
decided
not
to
new
urban
treatment
of
Camden
County
then
got
the
state
grant
for
southern
New
Jersey
through
urban
treatment.
We
get
15
trainings
a
year
with
a
maximum
of
20
people
for
training.
That's
300
people
max
that
we
can
train
during
the
course
of
the
year.
We
decided
that
that
wasn't
enough.
F
So
basically
we
went
to
the
Governor's
Council
on
alcoholism
and
drug
abuse,
which
is
our
prevention
grant
and
said
we'd
like
to
use
some
of
the
countywide
programming
money
to
expand
this
program.
They
came
back
to
me
and
they
say
what
does
that
have
to
do
with
prevention.
I
said
we're
preventing
people
from
dying
and.
E
F
And
behold
they
turned
around
and
said
we
agree,
so
we
got
to
use
some
of
the
monies
from
the
countywide
portion
of
the
municipal
alliance
grant
to
purchase
narcan
and
to
expand
the
program
and
only
give
you
an
idea
of
just
what
we
did.
That
happened.
We
what
happened
in
2016,
we
got
the
okay
in
2017.
F
In
2017,
we
work
jointly
with
our
treatments,
provide
17,
direct
narcan
trainees,
230
individuals
throughout
the
county,
received
the
training
we
ourselves
provide.
An
initial
22
trainings
were
in
285,
individuals
were
trained
and
through
these
trainings
over
255
people
actually
received.
You
know
we
overdose
kits
some
of
the
trainings
we
did
like
at
schools,
or
we
did
at
you,
know
lifeguards
or
places
like
that,
where
maybe
we
gave
them,
we
trained
10
12
15
people,
but
we
only
gave
them
two
or
three
of
the
kits
to
place.
F
We
provided
for
trainings
in
coordination
with
them
whereby
45
individuals
were
trained,
but
we
also
provided
ourselves
16
additional
narcan
trainings,
where
an
additional
199
people
were
trained,
overdose
reversal
kits
were
distributed
to
individual
school
district
personnel,
county
offices,
local
police
departments,
the
Sheriff's
Department
and
believe
it
or
not
the
New
Jersey
State
Police,
who
came
to
us
and
we
trained
some
of
their
people.
So
basically
that's
how
we
got
started,
but
I
wanted
to
talk
also
a
little
bit
and
you'll.
F
Excuse
me:
if
I'm
rushing
through
I,
don't
want
to
take
a
lot
of
your
time.
I
know:
you've
got
a
full
agenda
here
in
the
county.
We've
also
been
involved.
We
we
have
the
opiate
task
force,
which
is
run
jointly
through
the
prosecutor's
office
and
jtech,
which
is
doing
lana
county
our
prevention
coalition,
and
we
have
members
who
sit
on
that
board.
We
actually
train
the
people
at
the
Sheriff's
Department
for
the
hope.
One
van
they
now
have
narcan
on
the
band.
They
can
respond
directly
while
they're
out
in
the
communities.
F
If
there
happens
to
be
an
overdose
situation,
they
can
respond.
The
other
thing
about
it
is:
the
prosecutor
is
now
charged
to
the
Attorney
General
with
training
the
police
departments.
They
didn't
have
a
prescription
for
narcan.
They
came
to
us.
We
had
this
standing
prescription,
which
we
got
through
Ocean
County
through
a
physician
in
Ocean
County,
and
we
were
able
to
get
them
the
narcan
to
get
their
program
started
for
training
in
the
police
departments.
F
One
of
the
things
that
I
really
want
to
talk
about,
though,
and
one
of
the
things
that
kind
of
halves
us
right
now
in
applying
we're.
Looking
now
at
expanding
the
amount
of
money
that
we're
getting
from
the
Governor's
Council,
we
found
that
we
are
not
expending
the
total
amount
allowed
for
countywide
programming,
so
we
may
have
another
four
to
five
thousand
dollars
they're.
F
Also,
the
Licata
this
past
week
voted
to
set
aside
ten
thousand
dollars
of
the
chapter
51
funding
for
an
arc
locks
in
the
ARP,
and
so
we
may
have
between
ten
and
fifteen
thousand
dollars
to
go
out
and
purchase.
Additional
narcan,
where
we
are
right
now,
is
since
Charlie
left,
we've
kind
of
put
things
on
hold,
but
we
also
right
now
only
have
35
kits
available.
One
of
the
biggest
problems
is
the
cost
of
the
narcan,
and
it's
not
training
the
new
people.
It's
replacing
dark
can
that's
either
expired
or
has
been
used
by
someone.
F
F
The
narcan
itself
create
two
dopes
to
package.
It
cost
us
$75,
but
I
want
you
to
know
that
the
not
at
last
opiate
task
force
meeting
the
pharmacist
out
there
who
can
prescribe
the
narcan
are
paying
$150
for
the
same
two
dose
package.
Well,
there
are
one
of
the
initiatives
that
governor
Murphy
has
is
making
the
narcan
more
readily
available,
so
we'll
be
exploring
that
as
well
to
see
exactly
what
they're
talking
about
and
what's
going
on
the
thing
is,
we
definitely
want
to
get
the
program
back
up
and
running.
F
F
E
F
The
reason
being
this
quite
often
today
with
the
heroin
that
we
have
out
there,
the
purest
and
cheapest
anywhere
in
country
that,
coupled
with
the
fentanyl
a
lot
of
times,
people
do
not
respond
to
one
single
dose
and
if
it
takes
that
EMT
or
that
emergency
personal
emergency
person
to
get
there
yeah
a
little
bit
of
time
to
get
there,
we
may
have
to
you
know,
administer
that
second
dose.
So
ideally
I'd
love
to
be
able
to
put
two
doses
in
each
jet.
F
If
there
is
no
response,
then
you
administer
it's
one
simple
shot
in
the
nostril
all
right.
It's
nothing
that
used
to
be
able
to
use
to
have
to
put
the
Machine
together,
which
some
people
find
confusing.
Now
simple
little
thing
you
just
push
it
and
it
administers
the
dose.
All
right
now
again
should
respond
within
5
minutes.
If
they
don't,
they
suggest,
and
the
EMTs
are
not
there.
F
They
suggest
the
second
dose
I've
heard
horror
stories
out
there
that
some
people
it'll
take
three
four,
maybe
five
doses
to
respond
just
because
of
the
types
of
drugs
that
are
out
there
on
the
street.
It's
a
horror
story.
It
is
an
epidemic.
It
is
something
that
we
need
to
address.
If
you
look
at
that
first
thing
on
there,
you
see
that
we
go
back
to
2013
when
Governor
Christie
first,
you
know
address
the
issue.
So
we've
been
fighting
this
fight
now
for
five
or
six
years,
we'll
continue
to
fight
the
fight.
F
F
One
of
the
things
that
I
know
the
freehold
of
the
one
that
talked
about
is
being
trained.
I
can't
do
a
training
with
you
altogether,
because
if
I
have
five
or
more
of
you
together,
it's
a
form
and,
of
course,
we'd
have
to
advertise
it
before
we
did,
but
we're
more
than
happy
to
do.
Trainings
if
I
have
four
or
less
people
and
you're
going
to
have
to
do
two
or
three
trainings.
F
The
only
thing
about
this
that
makes
it
nice
fit
your
pocket
fit
your
coat
fit
your
purse
whatever,
but
right
now
it's
single
dose.
If
we're
able
to
get
more
money
of
it
able
to
buy
more
narcan,
we
certainly
would
expand
the
size
of
this
pouch
and
include
a
second
dose
so
short
sweet
to
the
point.
I
hope
that
when
I
present,
it
made
some
sense
I'm
open
to
any
questions
at
all
that
you
have
and
again
I.
Thank
you
very
much
for
inviting
us
because
I.
A
F
G
F
F
F
F
A
F
Thank
you
very
much.
I,
certainly
appreciate
it
and
I.
Thank
you
for
having
us
here
and,
as
I
said,
I
wanted
to
do
interviews
by
new
people.
So
you
know
them,
and
hopefully
we'll
get
this
thing.
I,
Pat
diamond
is
also
here.
Our
department,
head
and
I
told
her
I
want
to
definitely
try
and
get
things
back
up
and
running
by
the
end
of
March.
A
G
I'm
gonna,
first
of
all,
I
want
flawed,
Carolyn
and
Mary
Beth
for
their
efforts
here.
What
they're
doing
is
there's
a
program
called
dementia
friendly
America
that
they
are
bringing
to
our
County.
They
had
their
first
meeting
and
to
let
them
speak
about
that.
Had
quite
a
few
people
from
police
departments
throughout
the
county,
26
to
30
people
actually
tend
to
the
first
one.
They
needed.
Support
from
local
leadership
is
one
of
the
criteria
in
order
to
use
a
lot
of
the
information.
J
J
I
am
a
facilitator,
facilitate
memory,
cafes,
I
see
more
and
more
people
with
younger
onset
who
can't
work,
but
they
can't
really
do
anything
and
going
to
a
simple
gym.
You,
maybe
you
hear
stories,
you
don't
think
about
whether
you're
going
to
a
gym
during
an
exercise
class-
and
you
know
the
instructor-
is
correcting
them
and
you
know
trying
to
tell
them
that
you
know
to
do
this.
J
Do
that
and
it's
frustrating
because
they
don't
want
to
have
to
tell
everyone
what
their
disease
is,
and
we
just
thought
that
training,
people
and
training
the
community
across
sectors
and
bringing
more
awareness
to
this
disease
would
be
great,
a
great
benefit,
especially
to
new
jersey.
So
dfa
is
a
national
network
of
communities.
It's
organizations
and
individuals
seeking
to
ensure
that
communities
across
the
u.s.
are
equipped
to
support
people
living
with
dementia.
It
was
started
in
2015
I've
got
a
White
House
Conference
on
Aging.
It
was
based
on
Minnesota's
statewide
initiative
act
on
Alzheimer's.
J
J
You
know
some
statistics,
there's
PI
over
5
million
people
in
the
United
States
with
some
type
of
dementia,
one
in
ten
people
over
the
age
of
65
have
dementia
one-third
of
people
over
85
have
dementia
and
60%
of
those
live
in
our
community
in
their
homes,
one
in
seven
women,
littleman,
South,
Jersey,
okay,
the
South
Jersey
County.
We
have
over
85
thousand
people
with
some
type
of
memory
issue,
whether
it's
dementia,
cognitive
impairment,
so
Mary,
Beth
and
I
coordinated
a
task
force.
J
We
had
her
first
task
force
meeting
a
few
weeks
ago
and
that's
where
insanity
had
26
people
in
attendance
across
sectors.
We
had
legal.
We
had
banking
bankers,
we
had
four
police
departments,
we
had
health
care
stewards,
so
we
thought
people
from
all
different
sectors
with
community
to
come
together
to
talk
about
the
issues
to
talk
about
how
we
can
educate
their
employees,
how
we
can
make
one
of
them
a
model
so
that
all
of
also
more
dementia
friendly.
G
You
thank
you.
Thank
you,
I
think
it's
interesting
because
the
way
you
talk
about
restaurants
now
I
think
you've
mentioned
to
me.
You
had
a
relative
that
was
a
very
honorable
going
out
to
a
restaurant
after
a
while,
they
just
didn't
know
how
long
we'll
take
her
to
country
end
and
take
something
information,
even
in
trying
to
order
the
same
thing
to
a
police
officer.
She
went
through
the
one
with
thousands
up
to
ninety
to.
J
G
D
D
J
J
People
will
be
trained
on
symptom
signs
of
infants,
communications
and
media
peers,
and
then
we
also
have
an
immersion
where
the
virtual
dementia
tour
I
don't
know.
If
anyone
has
ever
done
that,
if
you
haven't
I
would
suggest
that
you
do
it
where
you
actually
needs
12
minutes
and
you
are
barbed
and
you
go
into
a
room
as
if
you
have
dementia,
it's
it's
an
unbelievable
experience,
but
it's
really
eye-opening.
J
E
J
J
E
J
J
A
C
D
A
A
C
A
H
A
A
C
E
C
C
H
A
C
C
C
A
E
A
A
A
A
B
B
K
C
D
D
Admittedly,
there
is
a
lack
of
equipment,
which
means
there
is
a
lack
of
running
engines.
Some
cars
still
need
to
be
modified
in
our
area,
carrying
passengers
and
there's
a
lack
of
engineers
and
maintenance
workers.
So
my
question
was:
what
happened
to
the
engineer?
Is
maintenance
workers
and
cars
and
then
just
were
here
before
we
got
the
federal
mandate
and
there.
D
D
Fitzpatrick
can
tell
us
better
that
the
gates
are
suffering
because
people
will
come
down
to
the
beer
festival
on
the
train
are
not
there,
which
means
there's
less
ticket
sold
the
gates,
which
means
that
there's
less
success
by
the
promoters,
which
means
they're
not
going
to
come
back.
So
it's
affected
our
convention
business,
along
with
the
inconvenience
to
local
54.
D
A
Thank
you
for
an
order.
Nor'easter
Nick
Pittman
is:
has
a
bus
going
up
to
Trenton
tomorrow
or
I.
Think
it's
the
transportation
subcommittee
meeting,
which
is
the
audio
that
we
heard
of
them
saying
a
couple
weeks
ago,
but
it's
not
coming
back
until
the
second
quarter,
so
you
can
find
all
that
information
right
on
his
Oh
pages.
If
you're
interested
in
going
up
with
him
tomorrow
to
degree
the
humor,
we
need
be
louder
and
louder
and
louder,
I,
don't
know
why
this
isn't
blowing
up
more.
I
A
A
A
I
We
should
do
and
don't
put
too
much
info
you
understand,
but
maybe
we
need
to
take
a
copy
of
this
resolution
and
send
to
each
miss
appalling
and
planned
unboxing
the
urge
and
that
governing
body
to
do
something
similar
to
this
and
then
suddenly
in
appearance.
They
did.
If
all
the
disabilities
are
sending
letters
and
resolutions,
they
got
somebody
Frank's
been
there
you've
been
happy.
We've
sit
around
the
train
station
yeah.
A
A
I
A
H
What's
frustrating
about
this
is
that
you
know
they
know
exactly
what
it's
doing.
I
mean
a
child
could
figure
this
out.
You
know
why
should
we
have
to
write
stuff?
This
is
so
obvious.
Yes,
yes,
it's
just
frustrating
it's
obvious
that
Fitness
is
going
to
be
hurt
in
Atlantic
City.
It's
obvious
people
are
going
to
be
a
missing
work.
It's
obvious
that
sales
are
going
to
drop.
It's
it's
so
obvious,
and
yet
we
have
to
you
know,
write
little
letters
and
missing
that,
and
it's
just
it's
just
disgusting.
H
A
E
L
Us
like
we
were
annoying
yeah
because
we
want
what's
coming
to
us
as
taxpayers
in
this
state
and
that's
DC
public
transportation,
which
we
do
not
have.
The
Train
was
the
minimum
that
we
could
possibly
get
violet.
We
don't
have
sufficient
bus
service,
the
Train
didn't
run
enough
and
they
now
they
are
just
not
only
ignoring
us
but
telling
us
things
that
they
know
are
not
so
great.
And
that's
it's
just
incredible
to
me
that
public
officials
can
get
away
yeah.
H
K
Thank
you,
madam
chair
I.
Don't
want
to
belabor
this
I,
don't
know
if
this
is
insulting
work.
It's
an
opportunity,
but
on
February
7th,
the
Senate
Transportation
Committee,
chaired
by
18th
district
senator
Patrick,
Dean
and
I
think
it
is
passed.
The
Senate
Transportation
Committee
edited
an
image.
Sorry
development
commissioned
the
Gateway
Development
Commission,
which
expressed
purpose
was
to
increase
New
Jersey
rail
transit
commuter
castanet
capacity
from
Penn
Station
into
New
Jersey.
The
Morrison
Essex
lines
were
used
as
examples
as
a
major
reason:
downtown's
like
Mars,
Town,
Madison
and
South
Orange
are
now
thriving.
F
K
And
if
this
is
in
fact,
an
opportunity,
this
would
be
either
Minority.
Leader
Kaine
is
the
ranking
member
sitting
on
the
committee
and,
as
I
mentioned,
that
the
senator
is
the
from
the
18th
is
that
he
is
the
Chairman
if
you
wanted
to
use
their
own
words
against
them
or
to
encourage
them
coax
them.
However,
you
want
to
characterize
it.
This
is
exactly
what
we're
talking
about.
They
get
the
picture
up
there.
Mr.
K
originally
is
absolutely
correct
that
they
are
using
the
resources
for
their
own
purposes
up
north,
and
there
is
no
reason
that,
after
spending,
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
trying
to
rescue
Atlantic
City
in
Atlantic
County
that
the
same
theories
shouldn't
be
used
down
here.
So
if,
in
fact,
there
is
a
joint
resolution
that
needs
to
come
out
of
the
General
Assembly
I,
don't
know
whether
that
has
been
good
in
the
hopper
yet
come
together
before
it
gets
to
the
governor's
desk.
A
G
They're
talking
about
two
programs
that
they
have
there
again,
you
know
jobs,
jobs,
jobs,
and
this
is
a
great
program.
One
is
for
people
with
disabilities,
some
people
even
for
mental
health.
They
find
that
they're
feeling
better
and
if
you
go
back
to
work-
and
this
is
a
way
that
they
can
get
in
get
back
to
work,
they
also
have
the
youth
program,
which
is
comes
to
us
in
the
county,
with
the
one-stop,
so
the
ones
called
to
get
to
work
for
people
with
mental
health
and
then
the
youth
program,
and
they
certify
them.
G
They
don't
just
you
know
they
go
to
training
that
first
of
all,
they
try
to
get
them
their
GED
and
they'll
help
them
with
transportation.
To
these
programs
will
certify
them
in
you
know:
job
security,
things
with
restaurants
and
hospitality,
so
they
try
to
make
them
better
in
global
job,
so
we
hope
people
they
use
these
and
again
it's
a
miracle
works
of
New
Jersey
and
the
office
here
is
on
the
Black
Horse
Pike
in
west
atlantic
city.
So
we
ever
want
this
right
here
that
really
awesome
individuals
at
any.
A
Others,
of
course,
special
committees,
I
just
I,
attended.
The
amenities
Commission
has
a
very
fascinating
conversation
on
human
trafficking.
The
meeting
prior
they
had
talked
about
it
from
the
I
guess
the
prosecution
side.
This
meeting
they
talked
about
it
from
the
bedside,
which
was
very
interesting,
had
a
defense
attorney
there.
So
it
really
gives
you
a
lot
of
different
perspectives,
but
not
great
work
happening
there.
We
have
some
things
in
the
works
for
when
the
testing
month,
that
will
we'll
talk
about.
I
This
conversation
with
a
couple
of
times
also
but
I,
think
we
need
it
very
clearly.
You
said
it's
the
chin,
you
know
Malika
turning
to
their
dog
and
pony
show.
We
thought
we
were
going
to
go
to
committee
first
to
discuss
some
of
the
issues
and,
at
some
point
Roderick
said
I
hope
we
stay
on
that
course
and
we
go
in
to
the
committee.
Then
we
discussed
well.
I
Be
a
commitment
if
that
means
we
pressure
him
and
then
I
heard
his
suit
a
young
man.
When
you
was
chair,
I
made
a
very
clear.
Then
we
should
have
him
come
before
the
committee
first
and
then
we
could
discuss
it
in
a
public
said
it,
and
you
would
agree
to
that.
I
think
we
should
still
keep
that
same
month
of
charity.
I
I
You
know
I,
think
John,
Rosalee
and
I've
said
this
before
I
keep
raised
to
some
good
point,
there's
something
that's
still
not
comfortable
with
I
think
it
was
you
who
mentioned
that
he
went
up
to
the
committee
meeting
and
we
were
hoping
that
he
was
going
to
court,
but
he
didn't
in
the
meantime.
You
know
he
agreed
that
he
would
come
before
the
committee
and
I
think
you.
I
A
All
right,
what
are
the
orders?
Good
I
got
two
things.
First,
our
government.
First
of
all
that
your
810
was
the
99th
anniversary
of
New
Jersey's
ratification
of
the
19th
amendment.
It's
very
exciting
time
for
I.
Think
us
as
women
going
into
this
next
band,
where
we
get
to
the
hundred
year
long
and
there's
a
very
proud
milestone
to
continue
to
celebrate
and
the
next
one
is
it's
Black,
History
Month
and
just
want
to
remind
everybody.
You
can
continue
to
take
the
opportunity
for
the
many
things
that
are
going
on
across
the
county.
A
I
E
A
B
Of
that
dr.
hunter,
the
South
Jersey
agricultural
heritage
news-
you
visited
my
school
last
week
with
David
traveling
action,
two
traveling
programs,
but
with
on
the
Stockton
University,
they
have
a
whole
new
program
that
focuses
on
Atlantic,
City,
South,
Jersey
and
New
Jersey
history.
It
comes
to
the
african-americans
in
our
area
and
the
posters
were
impressive,
I
mean
it
was
I
mean
it
was.
Education
was
enlightening,
I
mean
our
administrators
came
through
and
we're
just
shocked
at
the
role
that
even
a
well-managed
City,
the
first
Miss
black
America
contests
in
Atlantic
City.