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From YouTube: 3.26.19 Freeholder Meeting
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A
In
compliance
with
the
open
public
meeting,
facts
of
the
state
of
New
Jersey
not
include
notice
in
this
meeting
of
the
Atlantic
County
Board
of
Chosen
Freeholders
was
provided
in
the
following
manner,
published
in
the
front
of
the
Linux
City
and
mailed
to
the
current,
a
daily
journal.
That
happened
to
give
that
the
habits
in
news
and
has
been
posted
on
the
bulletin
boards
in
the
county
office.
Building
in
Atlantic
City.
B
A
A
A
B
A
A
A
So
there
I
know
you
have
been
first
of
all
such
an
asset
to
us.
Since
you
came
to
us
and
I
know
it's
a
little
bit
of
a
bittersweet
decision,
but
you're
gonna
go
spend
time
with
family,
which
is
very
important
and
we're
sad
to
see
you
go
but
happy
for
the
next
chapter
in
your
life,
and
we
appreciate
everything
and
we
know
you've
been
working
so
diligently
even
on
vacation,
to
make
this
transition
as
easy
as
possible
for
us,
which
is
really
over
and
above
so
we
appreciate
you
so
much.
C
A
E
There
has
been
a
great
asset
to
the
county.
We've
worked
our
way
through
some
tough
situations
recently
and
year
has
been
a
trouper
all
the
way
through
and
she's
spent
a
lot
of
time
with
with
Miss
Belle
and
Regina.
You
know
is
our
next
library
director,
so
I
figure,
two
of
them
have
done
a
great
job
together,
and
this
transition.
A
F
So
mr.
oyster
contacted
me
in
regards
to
this
resolution
and
I
was
very
happy
to
sponsor
it.
We've
had
a
number
of
different
tragedies
within
our
community
I
think
we
need
to
think
about
our
victims
as
well
as
continue
to
lift
up
the
families
and
provide
them
the
resources,
and
so
I
was
having
a
song
for
this
and
he's
going
to
come
and
tell
us
a
little
bit
more
about
National
Crime
Victims
Rights
week
and
all
of
the.
A
G
You
very
much
thank
you
very
much
for
the
opportunity
to
address
you
all.
My
name
is
Ray
Marissa
I'm,
the
coordinator
for
the
victim
with
this
program,
the
Atlantic
County
Prosecutor's
Office,
so
on
tasks
to
supervise
the
unit
that
works
with
all
the
victims
of
all
major
crimes
throughout
the
county,
including,
but
not
limited
to
homicides,
robberies,
assaults,
kidnapping,
assault
in
domestic
sexual
assault,
human
trafficking
and
all
problems
against
children.
So
we
work
with
roughly
6,000
persons
per
year
that
come
throughout
the
county
that
are
affected
by
different
crops.
G
My
unit
works
directly
with
each
individual
victim
and
walks
them
through
the
entire
criminal
justice
process.
I
supervise
that
unit,
as
well
as
coordinate
community
events
on
behalf
of
the
prosecutor
and
the
office
of
the
Attorney
General,
so
crime
victims
rights
week
this
year
will
be
held
from
April
7th
through
the
13th.
G
That
week
was
developed
by
President
Reagan
several
years
ago
to
really
highlight
the
adverse
effects
all
victims
feel
during
their
criminal
justice
experience.
It's
one
thing
to
be
victimized
by
a
perpetrator.
It's
another
thing
to
be
victimized
by
the
criminal
justice
system
by
having
to
navigate
that
system
and
not
really
understand.
What's
going
on,
what's
happening
next,
why
there's
so
many
meetings?
You
know
what
does
arraignment
mean?
What's
the
first
appearance,
what
happens
at
the
sentencing?
G
All
those
different
things
I
have
an
advocate
dedicated
to
work
directly
with
the
victim
through
that
entire
process
and
as
all
thanks
to
the
efforts
of
presidents.
So
this
week
we
are
this
year,
we're
going
to
start
off
the
week
by
having
the
town
hall
meeting
that's
going
to
address
the
citizens
of
this
community
directly,
so
they
can
really
have
opportunity
to
meet
with
the
heads
of
their
respective
police
departments.
G
So
they
can
understand
all
the
community
engagement
and
programs
that
are
going
to
be
held
throughout
that
are
already
going
on
they're,
going
to
be
continued
going
on
throughout
the
course
of
the
year.
So
on
April,
8th,
we're
gonna
be
having
our
first
forum.
That's
going
to
have
chief
Henry
white
chief.
B
G
Sean
Regan's
of
Pleasantville,
chief
female
students
of
Galloway,
retired
judge,
James
Jackson,
as
well
as
the
executive
director
for
the
victims
of
crime
compensation
office,
miss
Louise
Lester.
Now
the
VCC
L
pigment
prom
compensation
office
works
directly
with
each
victim
after
they've
been
victimized
to
to
pay
for
funerals
other
medical
expenses.
If
they've
been
out
of
work
or
they've
been
victimized
in
another
way,
we
can
assist
what
that
office
assists
directly
to
the
victim
of
prizefight,
provides
financial
and
other
support
directly
to
the
victims.
G
So
it's
very
important
to
give
you
all
the
heads
of
their
respective
departments,
so
they
can
provide
this.
This
information
directly
to
the
public
and
one
setting
to
have
everybody
work
in
concert
to
talk
about
how
much
they
mean
to
all
to
eat,
to
us
as
citizens
as
neighbors
and
friends,
any
one
of
us
can
be
a
victim
at
any
time.
Unfortunately,
so
benefit
is
going
to
be
held
at
Second,
Baptist
Church
on
or
April
the
8th
at
6
o'clock.
G
I
will
be
moderating
that
program,
so
we
have
an
open
forum,
so
we
can
really
address
everyone
in
the
community
help.
All
people
are
welcome.
This
will
be
posted
on
the
landing
county
prosecutors
website.
I've,
provided
the
flyer
and
I'll
leave
a
couple
other
Flyers
here
all.
If
anyone
has
any
questions,
my
information
is
on
there.
G
The
proclamation
that
we
have
developed
today
will
be
presented
and
used
another
minute
later
that
week
on
that
Wednesday
we're
going
to
be
honoring,
not
just
victims,
all
persons
and
regular
persons
that
have
been
victimized,
but
we're
going
to
honor
first
responders,
who've
been
victimized
while
doing
their
work
and
in
our
community
by
protecting
each
and
every
day,
sometimes
first
responders
end
up
being
the
victims
themselves
officer
Josh
Adele,
who
was
victimized
in
Atlantic
City
not
too
long
ago.
As
a
survivor,
his
family
are
survivors
of
a
horrific
crime.
G
Him
and
his
partner
will
be
honored
all
at
the
Atlantic
County
Justice
facility.
We're
not
the
courthouse
for
justice,
complex
we're
going
to
plant
a
tree.
We've
been
granted
to
plant
a
tree
and
to
honor
all
Josh
and
his
partner.
One
that
day
we're
going
to
have
a
program
that
morning
at
the
courthouse
to
really
honor
the
first
responders,
because
they
also
can
be
victims
as
well.
We
recognize
their
efforts
moving
forward
as
well
later
that
week
on
Friday,
we
will
have
another
program
to
address
the
immigrant
population
because
that's
a
whole
different
conversation.
G
The
immigrant
population,
unfortunately,
is
victimized
in
a
completely
different
way,
where
they
may
feel
that
they
don't
have
rights
or
the
ability
to
speak
to
law
enforcement
because
their
fear
that
they
may
be
victimized
and
not
believe
or
or
treated
differently,
because
of
their
perceived
immigrant
status
office.
Attorney
General
has
issued
new
directives
that
that
really
changed
how
law
enforcement
is
forced
to
act
and
react
with
persons
who
are
perceived
to
have
immigrant
status
through
the
prosecutor's
office.
I
am
the
lead
person
that
handles
all
U
and
T
visas.
G
That's
a
visas
that
are
granted
to
persons
who
have
been
victimized
I,
look
over
those
things
that
assist
people
who
have
been
victimized
by
crime
who
operate
the
law,
enforcement
or
not
criminals
themselves
to
help
them
obtain
a
visa.
So
they
be
able
to
stay
in
this
country
and
continue
persons
in
this
community.
So
those
are
our
three
events
that
we're
going
to
be
having
this
year
for
crime
victims
rights
weeks.
Everyone
is
more
than
welcome
to
attend
any
of
those
events.
G
The
last
event
that's
going
to
be
held
at
our
ladies
here,
the
star
church,
we're
going
to
speak
primarily
to
the
Hispanic
and
Latino
population.
On
that
that
day,
to
start
off,
but
I
will
be
speaking
personally
to
all
demographics,
different
races
of
people
throughout
the
entire
county
community,
the
different
Asian
communities,
the
different
European
communities,
African
Caribbean
communities.
I,
will
be
providing
a
very
open
forum
to
each
one
of
those
respective
communities.
So
everyone
has
a
very
specific
voice,
an
opportunity
to
to
get
this
information
firsthand
and
per
the
directive
of
the
Attorney
General.
G
So
I'm,
one
of
the
lead
persons
that
do
this
throughout
the
on
behalf
of
the
prosecutor,
David
Tina,
so
I'm
very
happy
and
proud
to
be
able
to
do
that
to
work
with
those
persons
because
they're
our
neighbors
they're,
our
friends.
They
work
with
us.
They
play
with
our
children.
They
they
work
in
the
restaurants
and
the
stores,
and
we
see
them
up
and
down
the
street.
We
speak
to
them
and
they
deserve
just
as
much
respect
as
everyone.
G
Everyone
else
that
we
interact
on
a
daily
basis,
so
without
taking
up
too
much
of
your
time
already,
it's
going
to
give
a
brief
overview
of
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
formal
occasion
will
be
sent
out
by
our
all
Pio
dot.
We
move
for
the
next
coming
days
to
really
give
up
overview
of
everything
that
we're
going
to
be
doing.
Thank.
A
H
G
Annoyed
that
we,
the
Attorney
General,
obviously
is
tasked
with
going
throughout
the
see
the
Attorney
General's
convict.
The
price
treatment
program
is
Friday
with
as
well,
so
each
county
and
community
organizations
who
own
their
own
a
different
program.
So
the
Attorney
General,
of
course,
could
not
be
able
to
I'm.
A
I
Good
to
see
everyone,
my
name's
Ruby
from
the
ACA
I
was
asked
to
come
today
and
talk
about
the
changes
in
our
recycling
program
that
we've
done
over
the
last
month's
and
explain
the
reasons
behind
it
and,
as
usual,
I'm
going
to
start
with
a
little
history
lesson.
So
I
brought
some
crops
at
home,
so
approved
you've
been
around
as
long
as
I
have
involved.
In
all
this,
the
mandatory
recycling
wall
in
New
Jersey
was
passed
in
1987
by.
I
It
wasn't
without
some
several
years
of
fighting
Authority
the
administration
of
governor
Kaine,
who
signed
in
the
wall
and
Earth
Day
of
87
it
tasts
it
made
recycling
mandatory
throughout
the
state.
It
gave
the
responsibility
to
counties
to
develop
a
countywide
plan
and
it
required
municipalities
to
implement
a
mandatory
recycling.
The
coordinates
at
the
local
level
in
Atlantic
County,
the
foresight
of
your
predecessors.
I
I
Council,
the
mayor's
Association,
the
Executive
Board
free
builders,
was
that
we
would
not
have
23
separate
recycling
programs
through
that
one
set
for
the
whole
for
the
whole
county
and
it
would
be
assigned
to
the
county
utilities
authority
to
set
up
the
program.
First
have
a
facility
where
materials
would
be
processed.
B
I
K
B
I
First
buckets:
were
these
buckets.
Imagine
so
started
in
1988
through
these
buckets
from
Whitehall
labs.
This
is
actually
a
recycling
story.
These
buckets
contain
five
thousand
twenty
five
thousand
advil
tablets,
shipped
from
Britain
to
to
Whitehall
and
Hamilton,
and
then
boxed
in
package
sold
in
the
United
States
and
I
was
visiting
with
County
Executive
Squires
at
the
time
the
white
hole
labs.
What
are
you
gonna
do
with
all
those.
I
Ideas
that
please
be
distributed,
so
these
were
sufficient
in
the
beginning
quickly.
Within
a
couple
years
it
was
pretty
pretty
clear
that
that
wasn't
going
to
work
and
then
the
ACA
proposed
in
1982
these
buckets
he
distributed
to
to
every
home
in
the
county.
That
actually
some
of
you
might
remember,
was
very
controversial.
Soon.
Mike
Mike
was
pregnant
colleague
and
leader.
How
many
Flyers
didn't
like
that.
I
So
we
had
a
protracted
series
of
elections
in
each
town
to
vote,
whether
they
wanted
buckets
or
not,
and
all
but
three
towns
voted
to
run
budgets,
so
they
were
distributed
so
three
towns
that
didn't
want
them.
God
knows
why
been
there
lower
field
and
then
carpet
town
who
knows,
but
within
a
short
period
of
time
those
towns
wanted
them
all.
So
they
were
distributing
the
program
began
to
grow
was
still
full
stream.
You
can
get
one
free
bucket
every
year.
I
And
what
does
that
do?
It
makes
it
obviously
easier
to
recycle,
but
as
the
program
has
grown
and
now
we're
in
single
stream,
so
we
switched
in
2006
to
single
stream,
which
is
much
more
efficient
in
collection
three
times
us.
Instead
of
those
old
beaver
trucks,
we
call
them,
they
only
hold
about
a
quarter
to
a
third
of
the
material
that
you
can
carry
in
a
trash
truck.
So
the
cost
of
recycling
for
municipalities,
Lamanna,
county
worker
is
the
collection.
That's
the
most
expensive
part
of
the
system
we
built.
I
I
The
program
is
grown
and
now
we
have
these
available
for
purchase,
but
also
a
number
of
municipalities,
Courtin
City,
Buena
Vista
having
to
bring
tea
and
now
that
mer,
pebble,
purchased
these
parts
for
all
of
their
residence
and
the
next
few
months.
Well,
the
program
is
broken
from
recycling.
Material
taken
out
of
the
trash
stream
is
taking
away.
Cost
of
disposal,
cost
disposal
landfill
transportation.
It's
sixty
five
powers.
I
Every
time
it's
recycle,
not
in
the
trash.
There's,
the
town,
the
new
municipality
business,
saving
on
the
disposal
costs
it's
a
cost
avoidance.
Now
the
ups
and
downs
of
the
cycling
commodities
market.
It's
constant!
It's
changed
over
those
since
1988
dramatically
going
up
and
down,
and
that's
part
of
the
risk
of
the
business.
We
don't
recharge
towns
for
collection.
We
do
not
charge
for
taking
it
for
it
to
be
delivered
to
the
recycling
center.
That
is
entirely
different
than
other
places
imagers.
I
So
you
may
have
heard
from
your
colleagues
around
the
state
about
the
current
circumstances
in
the
world.
Commodities
is
likely
the
modern
market
that
the
towns
have
had
to
pay
now,
either
more
or
pay
at
all
and
our
towns
do
not.
So
there
has
been
no
quote
hip
fee
processing
fee
since
1988,
for
our
municipalities
at
the
AC
way
Center.
I
That
money
goes
back
into
the
program,
buy
the
trucks
equipment,
maintaining
the
recycling
center
and
so
forth.
It
doesn't
and
we
use
that
for
those
purposes.
Okay,
up
to
the
current
set
of
circumstances,
we
have
only
added
materials
to
the
recycling
stream
over
the
last
since
1988.
For
the
first
time
we
are
taking
some
away.
What
last
year,
at
the
beginning,
last
year,
2018
China
implemented
a
green
shield.
I
Green
sword
has
a
couple
different
names,
but
basically
they
have
cut
off
accepting
the
world's
recycling
commodities
for
paper
and
plastic
from
taking
previous
to
that
over
the
last
20
years
about
60%
of
the
testing
and
paper
or
fiber
has
gone
to
China.
They
cut
it
off
because
they
do
not
want
to
process
any
more
of
the
world's
recycling
for
being
made
into
new
products.
They
want
to
develop
their
own
system
for
their
own
waste
and
they
are
saying
to
the
rest.
No,
it's
not
a
democracy
there.
I
When
the
government
says
no,
it's
not
what
that
has
done
is
turned
the
world
of
recycling.
That's
developed
over
the
last
five
years,
internationally
upside-down,
all
of
the
sudden
when
60%
of
Prada
or
a
commodity
can't
go
somewhere.
The
price
goes
down,
the
quality
control
goes
up
and
the
places
to
market
it
or
literally
so.
We've
exported
the
processing,
the
further
processing
of
recycling
in
the
North
American
and
Northern
Europe
to
China
over
the
last
speakers.
I
Now
other
countries
initially
were
receiving
its
own,
but
not
enough,
and
the
real
long-term
answer
is
the
processing
of
recycling
beyond
the
initial
processing
that
happens
in
our
recycling
center
here
has
to
be
done
in
North
America.
It
has
to
be
developed
here,
oddly
enough,
some
of
those
entrepreneurs
or
financial
those
companies
in
China.
I
B
I
I
Are
saying
we're
reiterating
what
never
was
acceptable?
Ok,
the
standards
of
the
recycling
markets
now
are
that
we
cannot
have
contamination
rates
over
10%,
so
we
are
now
requiring
and
educating
the
public.
This
is
one
of
those
opportunities
why
we're
changing
we're
changing
it,
because
we
need
to
reduce
the
amount
of
contamination
that
exists
in
these
cams
these
carts.
I
Without
we
have
a
meeting
this
morning
with
some
recycling
coordinators,
it's
the
second
or
third
time
we've
met
with
them
from
each
municipality,
reiterating
that
it's
important,
where
it's
a
partnership
between
the
municipality
and
us
and
it's
important
to
be
working
together.
To
do
this
to
explain
so
one
of
let
me
just
go
through
a
couple
of
other
things.
So
three
through
sevens
we're,
never
a
tremendous
amount
of
the
material
it
might
be
about
2%
of
the
recycling
screen,
but
it's
something
if
you
had
a
yogurt
container
and
the
other
things
affected.
I
You're
upset
about
okay,
but
there's
no
point
in
putting
it
in
because
it's
going
to
be
taken
out
and
it'll
be
trash
or
it
will
contaminate
the
loads
and
the
loads
will
have
less
value.
Also
so
there's
there's
no
point
in
wishful
recycling,
but
I
still
think
this
should
be
there's
no
there's
no
market
forward,
there's
no
point
in
collecting.
I
So
we
also
are
asking
people
not
to
put
shredded
paper
why
certain
payment
is
false
to
the
machine
becomes
traction
anyway.
Traded
material
should
be
done
separately
or
any
number
ways
to
do
that.
Otherwise,
pizza
boxes
was
one
of
those
things.
That's
highly
contaminated.
If
you
had
a
pizza
box
and
it
never
had
a
pizza
in
it,
his
father,
it's
just
perfect.
I
It's,
except
in
most
of
my
presentations
I,
bring
a
piece
of
box
along
to
open
it
up
and
show
people
what
I
wasn't
about
the
grease
and
the
food
and
the
cheese
and
the
pepperoni
are
contaminants
not
only
to
the
paper
they
also
attract
rats
and
so
forth
at
the
recycling
center.
So
there
another
issue
is
food
contamination.
I
Aerosol
cans
are
a
safety
issue.
We
have
accepted
aerosol
Kings
since
1988,
but
we
are
at
this
point
we're
making
a
change,
don't
put
our
sole
hand,
no
caps,
why
no
caps
caps
keep
liquid
in
liquid
is
a
contaminant
when
it
spills
out.
It's
also
attracted
to
plastic
bags.
We
never
accept
the
fact
you
would
go
to
our
recycling
center
and
be
surprised,
and
some
of
the
freeholders
came
when
when
the
center
was.
I
New
configuration
a
few
years
ago,
plastic
bags
come
all
the
time.
Why
are
plastic
bags
fit?
This
doesn't
have
anything
to
do
with
recycled
plastic
contamination
in
the
environment
and
then
waste
and
so
forth.
This
has
to
do
with
it
gums
up
the
machines.
So
no
recycling
program
accepts
the
plastic
bags
through
its
collection
program
from
residents
and
from
commercial
establishments.
You
can
recycle
plastic
bags.
Take
to
the
food
store
the
shop
right
in
there.
They
recycle
it.
It's
clean.
It's
failed!
I
It's
taken
somewhere
made
into
trex
lumber
or
something
like
that,
but
through
a
residential
collection
program,
recycling
bags
are
recycling.
Plastic
bags
are
no
no
and
always
have
that.
So
we're
encouraging
everybody
to
stop
doing
that.
You
can
use
plastic
bags
other
ways.
So
in
our
house
we
use
them
for
Part,
B,
trees
and
14.
You
later
and.
I
So
all
in
all
we're
we're
embarking
have
been
potentially
over
the
next
couple
months.
We
will
be
distributing
these
flyers
in
the
newspapers.
There
will
be
ads
and
take
home
in
all
the
papers
of
the
dead
leaves
and
the
Weasleys
throughout
the
county.
The
filing
papers
that
have
into
papers
to
current
all
the
other
weekly
papers.
Folks
will
forget
that
information
we're
making
these
changes
reluctantly,
particularly
the
values
that
we're
no
longer
accepting
and
one
last
challenge,
is
50%
of
the
traction
in
Atlantic.
County
doesn't
come
from
homes.
I
B
I
Went
through
this
again
today
with
the
recycling
coordinators,
if
the
towns
are
gonna
have
to
beef
up
their
their
enforcement
friendly
enforcement
with
the
commercial
sector,
so
all
of
us
have
been
to
some
facility
office
building
factory,
you
name
it
store.
There
is
no
recycling
containers
there.
So
just
sneak
up
wah-wah-wah
watch
were
initially
opposed.
B
I
B
I
Every
one
of
their
stores
in
New
Jersey,
but
if
you
go
to
7-eleven,
where
you
go
to
Cumberland,
Farms
they're,
not
there.
If
you
go
to
pack
me
or
ask
me
your
shop
right
around
here,
they
also
have
this
but
go
into
a
doctor's
office.
Go
into
the
hospital
go
into
a
casino
and
asked
if
they
have
a
recycling
program
and
if
they're
actually
doing
recycling,
they
are
required
by
every
ordinance
in
this
state
in
this
county
to
have
recycling.
I
We
pick
up
on
behalf
of
municipalities
in
all
the
towns
we
serve
all
of
the
commercial
establishments,
also
as
a
part
of
the
municipal
contract.
They
will
get
a
commercial
cart.
Just
blew
the
green
lid
supplied
to
them.
If
they're
large,
like
a
liquor,
store
or
some
place,
has
a
lot
of
cardboard,
we
give
them
a
dumpster
and
they
get
either
weekly
in
some
cases
they'll
get
by.
We
are
twice
a
week
service
for
that.
There's
really
no
excuse
for
it,
and
it's
requirement
is.
C
There,
in
the
good
thing,
is
there
an
ordinance
requiring
businesses
to
do
not
want
to
be
cycle
to
not
have
their
private
contractor
like
waste
management
tape.
Recorder
one
is
a
return.
It
prohibits
time
from
using
them.
So
I
know.
Businesses
in
my
neighborhood
do
not
want
to
recycle
advance
that
for
years
they
have
either
perfect
earth
tech
or
waste
management,
and
they
just
dump
all
their
card.
They
said
I'm
paying
for.
I
It
I
don't
want
to
be
safe,
that's
against
the
wall
and
that
can
Atlantic
City,
but
all
the
tenders
work
with
up.
It's
required
of
the
you
know
who
places
that
it's
the
responsibility
of
the
local
recycling
coordinator
and
then
mr.
power
I've
actually
met
with
today.
By
and
large,
there
is
very
little
if
any
enforcement
and
we
were
challenging
them
to
do
that
now,
they're
pushed
back.
We
get
it.
Many
of
you
permissible
elected
officials.
You
know
this
is
we're
reluctant
to
neon
you.
B
C
L
I
I
A
service
or
the
letters
on
to
do
that
they're
gonna
be
more
acceptable
than
three
through
seven
right.
We're
trying
to
reduce
the
amount
of
contamination
as
much
as
possible,
so
bails
get
graded
on
contamination
latest
machinery.
There
is
pretty
amazing
and
the
people
that
work
at
the
recycling
center,
but
they're
not
perfect.
So.
B
I
A
L
C
K
D
Two
vodka
body
from
various
2019
capital
improvements
by
and
in
the
county
of
Atlantic
state
of
New
Jersey
appropriating
eleven
million
eight
hundred
sixty
seven
thousand
dollars.
Therefore,
it
authorizing
the
issuance
of
11
million
two
hundred
seventy
three
thousand
dollars
bonds
or
notes
to
finance
part
of
the
cross
they're
a
vital
waiting,
socket.
A
A
D
A
Said
we
reviewed
it
and
we
were
satisfied
with
it
a
couple
things
we
talked
about.
We
made
sure
it's
similar
to
the
way
we
did
the
basic
bag,
ordinance
that
we
put
a
year
in
there
for
kind
of
warnings
to
the
public.
Talk
about
signage,
I
think
the
couple
things
that
are
excluded
from
it
are
things
like
a
meteorology
meteorological
balloons,
hot-air
balloons
that
happened
to
land
in
the
park.
I
need
to
go
back
up
and.
A
C
H
A
D
D
D
A
A
D
B
C
A
D
A
A
C
D
A
E
E
B
A
D
A
H
A
B
B
D
A
D
F
A
D
D
E
F
A
D
A
D
K
And
we
talked
about
the
budget
for
a
CIT
and
the
pledges
of
special
services
school
district,
taking
one
of
the
time
the
please
chime
in
touch
with
my
public
point,
the
hcit
budget.
We
talked
about
that
the
cost
additional
cost
or
county
is
approximately
up
one
percent
on
the
previous
year
when
enrollment
continues
to
grow,
maybe
see
thousand
applications
a
year
and
take
in
450,
so
the
demand
is.
Is
there
the
other
thing
we
talked
about
as
well?
K
Is
the
misconception
that's
out
there
and
I
know
it's
a
misconception
because
I
hear
many
people
coming
up
to
me
and
talk
to
me
about
this
topic
that
somehow
a
CIT
is
closing
out
the
trades,
and
that
is
far
from
the
truth.
There
are
programs
out
there
to
accommodate
16
different
trades,
so
we
have
to
somehow
get
the
word
out
Jerry.
Maybe
we
can
put
something
on
our
County
website.
K
Thinking
that
County
website
to
let
people
know
that
letting
County
Institute
of
Technology
it
does
have
16
different
rates,
heart
rate,
electricity,
cosmetology,
there's
a
number
of
different
trades.
That's
auto,
auto
collision
are
many
different
trades
that
are
available
out
there.
I
think,
because
the
success
of
the
school,
the
fact
that
some
of
my
students
have
gone
there
for
computer
studies
and
media
and
other
things
that
there's
an
identity
situation
there
so
I
get
that
comment
quite
often
Believe
It
or
Not
for
people
around
the
county.
K
Thinking,
though,
the
hdit
just
has
all
these
programs
the
fact
they
do
so
we
will
review
the
a
CIT
budget.
We
also
reviewed
the
special
services
school
budget
in
their
case
enrollments
been
declining
for
the
last
four
years.
Eighty
percent
of
the
budget
is
tuition
based
and
the
reason,
no
doubt
for
that
decline
as
school
districts
are
keeping
as
many
special
needs
students
into
their
own
home
school
district,
there's
a
huge
cost
that
causes
both
our
50,000
here.
K
C
Just
that
I'm,
you
get
a
recommendation
that
they
do
try
to
market.
Both
tech
is
both
tech.
They
changed
the
name
to
a
CIT
that
everybody
thinks
is
just
the
college
prep
stem
school,
which
is
doing
well
on
that,
but
there's
a
lot
of
needs
of
the
communities.
I
think
parents
and
children
would
like
to
know
that
there
is
blue
collar
training
there
and
technical
training
there.
That
would
be
more
traditional.
C
The
other
thing
that
was
surprising
was
on
the
special
services
school
as
fielder
Risley
just
said,
situation
is
49,000
year
because
literally
it's
1
to
1,
when
you
add
up
all
the
staff,
the
teachers,
the
aides
and
transportation,
there's
315
students
to
go
there,
there's
350
staff,
so
49,000,
it's
not
a
ridiculous
amount.
If
anybody
would
like
we're
out
and
see
what
they
do
there,
it's
just
this
short
of
amazing,
because
there
are
these
people,
just
you
know,
you're
starting
autistic
or
just
don't
have
a
little
deformity.
C
Some
of
them
are
in
great
technical
wheelchairs
that
barely
can
get
around.
But
what
was
disturbing
was
that
a
district
will
say
they're
going
to
commit
12
students
and
then
come
time
of
enrollment.
They
make
the
appropriations
work
to
transportation,
the
staff,
the
aides
for
that
student,
then,
instead
of
12,
they
send
six
well
that
is
going
to
cost
$300,000
to
our
budget.
So
there
should
be
a
way
for
their
commitment
to
have
a
little
bit
of
a
deposit
or
a
little
bit
of
a
reserve.
C
A
The
other
thing
I
would
just
make
mention.
We
talked
about
the
increase
in
state
aid
to
a
CIT
and
how
that
did
decrease
the
tuition
to
the
sending
districts.
So
we
did
talk
about
how
that,
because
they
look
about
two
years,
will
help
the
sending
districts,
because
we
know
it's
a
challenge
for
them,
and
we
also
talked
about
some
of
the
capital
improvements
but
they're
working
on
that
they've
basically
been
making
without
County
dollar
assistance,
which
is
which
was
really
great
to
hear
quite
a
good
discussion
and
I.
A
C
C
And
the
last
thing
I
want
to
say
is
that
cost
from
the
districts
to
send
a
student
to
a
CIT
is
6100
a
year,
whereas
most
of
the
municipalities,
it's
18
to
25
thousand
year,
is
what
taxpayers
pay
for
a
high
school
student
by
the
way,
a
kindergarten
student
in
some
places.
So
it's
a
pretty
good
deal,
although
we're
very
sensitive
to
the
sending
districts
losing
their
enrollment
and
we're
going
to
try
to
address
that
as
we
go
along
and.
E
A
H
Last
year
about
the
enrollment,
the
lack
of
enrollment
in
the
yeah
Brigade,
who,
just
because
a
lot
of
0.88
sure
that
is
still
happen,
I'm
just
curious
about
how
do
you
put
a
band-aid
so
to
speak?
Go
to
people
want
to
send
a
kid.
The
ACIP
can't
stop
a
football
school
I
know
that's
a
big
big
problem,
but
no
point
I
think
we
ought
to
try
to
encourage
people
not
to
go
because
ACIP
does
provide
good
services,
as
we
are
talking
about
the
engineering
program,
etc.
H
All
of
that,
it
is
now
moved
what
they
call
coming
in
County,
College,
/
voce.
That's
all
comes
on
young
rolling
universities,
interesting
to
me
and
there's
some
resistance,
but
I
think
it's
going
to
happen
anyway.
How
many
of
you
have
had
an
opportunity
to
tour
Cumberland,
County,
College
/,
both
standing
up
I,
was
about
three
or
four
years
and
I
say
the
all
right,
but
but
I
get
what
you're
saying
I
just
don't
know
how
we
could
put
a
band-aid
or
stop
folks
taking
the
kids
out
of
public
school.
A
The
other
thing
that
we
discussed,
which
I
thought
was
really
interesting,
is
you
know
we
want
to
try
to
offer
more
things
like
more
Welding
classes,
more
automotive
classes,
the
aviation
pieces
that
were
put
together,
but
it
is
really
a
struggle
to
find
teachers
for
those
programs.
A
coating
was
another.
One.
I
was
very
surprised,
it's
hard
to
find
teachers
who
will
leave.
You
know
private
industry,
so
that
was
interesting
too,
but
I
think
what.
H
I
found
out
the
other
day
we
shot
that
tell
you
how
long
I've
been
out
of
the
school
system.
When
I
was
a
student,
we
had.
Oh
man,
mes
shop,
now,
look
at
MLK
school,
Atlantic,
City
I'm.
Looking
up
tell
some
company
things
are
kind
of
shot,
it
took,
got
Oh,
Mac,
I,
don't
even
think
they
even
offered
in
high
school
it.
H
B
K
K
K
J
You
know
I
attended
the
O'bannon
County
mayor's
Association
meeting
on
Friday,
yes,
one
of
their
main
topics,
as
they
are
continuing
the
fight
for
Vidia
on
911
one
system,
you
originals
a
trust
fund,
so
they
brought
that
up
and
asked
how
much
we
were
doing
I
told
Solutions.
They
have
a
resolution
going
now
to
urging
governor
Phil
Murphy
and
the
New
Jersey
State
legislation
to
properly
allocate.
A
N
To
acknowledge
Senate
bill
s,
121
sponsored
by
Senate
Majority
Leader
Loretta
I
heard,
was
signed
by
government
Murphy
on
March
18th
this
bill.
This
law
makes
non-disclosure
agreements
and
employment
contracts
and
settlement
agreements
in
cases
of
discrimination,
retaliation
or
harassment,
including
sexual
assault
and
sexual
harassment,
unenforceable
against
employees.
The
law
prohibits
provisions
and
employment
contracts
that
waive
the
rights
and
victims
and
make
employment
contracts
which
require
employees
to
conceal
details
relating
to
these
types
of
claims,
unenforceable,
state
law
and
applies
to
the
public
as
well
as
private
entities.
O
A
A
M
M
J
O
N
O
O
Is
that
every
employee
has
have
a
way
to
access
their
information
if
we're
not
actually
providing
them
a
copy
of
it?
So
there
are
some
localities
that
don't
have
access
like
some
employees,
don't
have
computers
or
they
don't
have
you
know,
so
you
don't
have
computers,
so
we
have
to
work
with
the
departments
to
set
up
a
computer
that
they
can
access
to
get
the
information
that
they
wanted.
O
So
those
are
some
of
the
intricacies
that
work
worked
out
before
with
that,
but
that
was
my
first
step
is
going
to
be
an
into
a
direct
deposit
and
then
the
second
step.
Obviously
he
found
once
we
have
access
to
all
of
our
employees
to
completely
stop
printing
things
up
school.
That's
a
goal
that
I
like
to
meet
in
2019
great.
A
Yeah,
why
are
we
doing
manager
a
direct
present
I
would
not
believe
when
I
was
in
Hamilton.
We
went
mandatory
the
resistance,
because
a
ton
of
people
let
their
check.
They
want
to
go
cash,
it
some
might
not
even
put
it
in
a
bank
account
or
have
a
bank
account,
wouldn't
it.
So
these
were
like
all
things
that
really
kind
of
blew
my
mind.
M
O
Well,
we
hear
that
from
our
employees,
direct
deposit
that
won't
stop
us
from
moving
forward,
but
what
there
is
is
a
process
that
we
can
use
a
bank.
It's
called
pay
cart
and
the
plea
does
not
want
to
take
account
for
whatever
reason
they
decide.
They
don't
want
to
make
account
their
money
will
go
on
this
pay
part,
regardless
of
whether
they
want
to
participate,
direct
deposit
or
not.
O
That
include
our
option
and
then
in
2019
the
prosecutor's
office
decided
that
they
no
longer
wanted
to
spend
employee,
send
an
employee
to
our
office
to
pick
up
their
paychecks,
so
they
actually
implemented
we're
not
printing
or
delivering
any
paychecks
to
a
majority
of
the
employees
and
the
prosecutor's
office
I
think
they
had
like
two
or
three
holdouts
and
they
had
actually
encouraged
their
employees
to
do
direct
deposit.
So
I
think
we
have
two
or
three
holdouts
that
were
going
to
order
direct
deposit
that
we
are
currently
mailing
their
check.
H
L
However,
you
want
to
look
at
is
that's
not
something
that
a
lot
of
people
are
good
here
and
just
as
far
as
the
just
the
side
of
things
just
to
say,
this
is
a
step,
that's
been
taken
and
that's
been
done
and
I'm
sure
for
County
Council's
officer
you'll
have
it
have
to
be
done.
It
cannot
be
a
major
again
I'm,
assuming
house,
you
hear
consumption,
there's
not
a
bunch
of
these.
L
A
A
L
B
H
L
The
engineer
question
freeholder
no
I'll
be
inside
City
Hall,
because
once
you
get
to
the
parking
lot,
it's
a
nice
little
walk
to
come
in
and
it's
not
that
wooded.
So
you
can
you'll
make
it
fun.
It's
getting
you
from
the
Mays
Landing
area
to
ESCO,
Manor
I
know
you
know,
I
know
you
think
I'm
saying
well,
once
you
get
past
the
park,
people
start
wondering
work
or
go.
A
A
A
A
And
had
the
opportunity
to
attend
the
southern
New
Jersey
Development
Council
breakfast
meeting
on
Friday
morning,
athan
welcome
to
Atlantic
County,
and
there
was
some
very
interesting
panels,
one
of
which
was
about
kind
of
business,
and
you
know
how
people
can
handle
recreational
marijuana.
Should
it
ever
come
to
New
Jersey
is
either
a
hiring
person
or
an
employer,
or
you
know,
essentially
a
business
wanting
to
kind
of
grow
from
that
industry
with
very
interesting
conversation,
and
then
they
also
had
another
panel
on
tax
incentives
that
are
available
to
businesses.