Gyms Can Reopen in New Jersey September 1

MORRIS COUNTY — New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy says gyms can reopen September 1 at 25 percent capacity. Masks will be required, among other COVID precautions.

Murphy is expected to detail more on New Jersey gym protocol at his scheduled COVID briefing later Wednesday. According to NJ.com, the protocol will include:

  • Size restrictions for indoor classes to one person for every 200 square feet of space in the room; equipment must also be kept at least 6 feet apart
  • Mandatory facial coverings at all times
  • Gym goers must sign forms upon entry that they will adhere to safety guidelines
  • Gyms have to keep a log of clients and workers, including names and phone numbers, to assist contact tracers in the event of an outbreak

Gyms and indoor dining had been perhaps the two last and largest components of New Jersey’s economy that remained shut. Gyms were allowed to hold workouts outdoors and could hold one-on-one appointments with clients.

Kings Food Markets Filed Voluntary Chapter 11

PARSIPPANY — KB US Holdings, Inc., parent company of the Kings Food Markets and Balducci’s Food Lover’s Market subsidiary banners, announced it has accepted a stalking horse bid from TLI Bedrock to purchase the Company for $75 million. To facilitate an orderly sale, KB and its subsidiaries have commenced voluntary Chapter 11 proceedings in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

Kings is located in Boonton, Florham Park, Morristown, and other locations throughout New Jersey.

“We are pleased to be moving forward with a sale so we can position Kings and Balducci’s for even greater long-term success.  During this COVID crisis, our Associates and communities have demonstrated not only the viability but absolute necessity of our markets in their communities.  Our sales and service have never been stronger; we are confident we will emerge from this process without missing a beat, well-positioned for future stability and success,” said Judith Spires, CEO of KB US Holdings, Inc.

In conjunction with the sale process, KB has obtained a commitment for approximately $20 million in debtor-in-possession financing from its existing secured lender.  Upon Court approval, the new financing, combined with cash generated from the Company’s ongoing operations, will be used to support the business throughout the sale process. KB has sufficient liquidity to meet its go-forward business obligations and will operate its business as usual and pay its business partners for goods and services provided on or after August 23, 2020, the Chapter 11 filing date.

As part of the Chapter 11 filing, the Company has filed a number of customary “first-day” motions seeking authorization to maintain its operations during the court-supervised process, including the authority to continue payment of employee wages and benefits, as well as post-petition obligations to its vendor community.

As part of the process, higher and better bids will be solicited, following the approval of bidding procedures under Section 363 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

Proskauer Rose LLP is serving as legal counsel, Ankura Consulting Group is serving as restructuring advisor and PJ Solomon is serving as investment banker to KB US Holdings, Inc.

For additional information including access to Court filings and other documents related to the court-supervised process, click here.

Parsippany Community Update August 25, 2020

PARSIPPANY — As always, you can keep up with the day-to-day numbers on the Morris County coronavirus tracker page by clicking here.

Murphy Announces New Modifications for General Election

MORRIS COUNTY — Governor Phil Murphy signed an executive order to make modifications to this year’s primarily vote-by-mail (VBM) General Election. The order clarifies Executive Order No. 177.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has caused us to reevaluate the way we typically hold our elections,” said Governor Murphy. “With today’s executive order, we are implementing revised requirements to alleviate concerns and provide clarity to voters as they cast their votes.”

Effective immediately, Executive Order No. 179 makes the following modifications:

  • Requires county clerks to publish a notice reflecting this year’s primarily vote-by-mail process;
  • Permits county boards of elections to continue counting ballots every day until counting is completed; and
  • Requires election audits to be completed by December 4, 2020.

Click here for a copy of Executive Order No. 179

Parsippany Resident Charged with CDS in a Hanover Park

HANOVER TOWNSHIP — Hanover Township Police Officer Daniel Foesel arrested Mr. Aqif Mahmudi, 18, from Parsippany, for possession of CDS, on August 11.

Officer Foesel was conducting checks of the parks in town when he observed two males in Black Brook Park. Upon approaching them, he detected the odor of marijuana. After a brief investigation, Mr. Mahmudi was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. He was processed and released with a court date.

Editor’s Note: An arrest or the signing of a criminal complaint is merely an accusation.  Despite this accusation, the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until he or she has been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

 

Second Largest Lottery Jackpot in History Sold in Parsippany

PARSIPPANY — The second-largest Jersey Cash 5 Jackpot ever won was awarded to a ticket sold in Parsippany.  The one single winner is entitled to $1,813,783.

The lucky ticket matched all five numbers drawn in the Jersey Cash 5 jackpot from Friday, August 21, drawing. The winning numbers were: 12, 14, 31, 37, and 41 and the XTRA number was: 04. The retailer will receive a bonus check for $2,000 for the winning ticket sold.

That ticket was sold at Krausers Food Store, 182 Halsey Road, Lake Parsippany.

Murphy Unveils Budget Proposal: “Stronger, Fairer, and More Resilient: Building New Jersey’s Post-COVID Future”

MORRIS COUNTY — Governor Phil Murphy released his revised budget proposal for the Fiscal Year 2021 (FY 2021), including targeted cuts across State government, fair and equitable revenue raisers, an emergency borrowing proposal, and additional plans to invest federal funding received to date to help close what would have been a nearly $6 billion budget hole as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Besides setting off an unprecedented public health crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic also unleashed an economic crisis that can only be rivaled by two other times in our state’s entire 244-year history – the Great Depression and the Civil War,” said Governor Murphy. “Over the past few months, we have learned hard lessons, but also important lessons: that the old answers won’t fix the new problems and that the old status quo didn’t work for too many New Jerseyans.  We must now have the unavoidable conversation about what it means to not only see our state through this emergency but what we will look like when we emerge from it.”

“This budget proposal is not simply about getting New Jersey back to where it used to be, but moving forward to where we need to be by building a new economy that grows our middle class and works for every single family while asking the wealthiest among us to pay their fair share in taxes,” said Governor Murphy.

The revised budget was proposed six months to the day after the Governor originally laid out his FY 2021 budget proposal.  Since then, COVID-19 has ravaged New Jersey from both public health and an economic standpoint, prompting the State to move important April tax filing deadlines to July and extend the fiscal year from the traditional June 30th ending to September 30th. As a result, the revised budget unveiled today addresses spending for only the nine-month period from October 1, 2020, through June 30, 2021.

For the traditional 12-month fiscal year, decreased revenue collections left the state facing a $5.7 billion shortfall over what was projected during the Governor’s Budget Message (GBM) in February. The Governor’s proposed budget relies on a series of solutions to help close this gap and protect many shared priorities.

As a result, the Governor’s revised budget overwhelmingly preserves many-core state programs:

  • It does not cut K-12 aid, post-secondary tuition assistance, or operating aid for senior public colleges and universities;
  • It restores funding for the Homestead Benefit and Senior Freeze property tax relief programs and does not decrease core municipal aid; and
  • It does not impose new burdens on Medicaid recipients or curb the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC).

The Covid-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted low-income communities and communities of color.  The Governor’s budget recognizes those impacts and protects core programs to aid those communities in their recovery.  The revised budget proposal also includes targeted growth to address long-standing disparities and ensure that the recovery includes all New Jerseyans.

Notably, the budget includes a new proposal – advanced at the federal level by Senator Cory Booker and prominent economists – to launch a statewide Baby Bonds initiative, which will provide a $1,000 deposit for the approximately 72,000 babies born in 2021 into families whose income is less than 500 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, or $131,000 for a family of four. When these residents turn 18, they can withdraw these funds to help them pursue higher education, buy a home, start a business, or pursue other wealth-generating activities. This will assist three of four children born in New Jersey.

In addition, the budget invests $60 million into the Clean Water and Drinking Water programs to ensure safe and modern water infrastructure statewide and increases the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to 40 percent while proposing to expand EITC eligibility to assist tens of thousands more young adults.

The budget also includes a nearly $4.9 billion contribution to bolstering the state pension system, which equals 80 percent of the Actuarially Determined Contribution (ADC) and represents the largest percentage of the ADC contributed in 25 years.  Additionally, it includes a robust $2.2 billion surplus, which represents 5.59 percent of appropriations over the 12-month period.  The Governor is committed to maintaining this surplus to address the very real possibility of another shutdown due to a resurgence of the novel coronavirus.

The Administration was able to protect these priorities, in part, by tightening state spending while making sure budget cuts were targeted, and not draconian in nature, in order to avoid the same pitfalls that stymied recovery during the Great Recession.  Governor Murphy’s revised budget proposal includes $1.25 billion in spending reductions and solutions across all executive state departments, including Medicaid solutions proposed by DHS totaling $336 million; DOC’s inmate population management initiative and other reductions totaling $59 million; and $66 million in solutions proposed by DCF, which will help fund the increased investment in the Children’s System of Care.

In order to curtail painful budget cuts, and limit the size of emergency borrowing, the Governor is also proposing a selection of progressive tax policy changes that are estimated to yield just over a billion dollars for the nine-month FY 2021 period, including:

  • Imposing the millionaire’s tax on all income above $1 million;
  • Permanently incorporating the 2.5 percent corporation surcharge;
  • Restoring the sales tax on limousines;
  • Removing the tax cap on boats; and
  • Applying a 5 percent surcharge to high-income individuals with federally Qualified Business Income (QBI) who have benefited from a regressive new deduction for pass-through entities created under the 2017 federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

The Governor remains committed to tax fairness and ensuring that most fortunate among us—millionaires and large corporations—pay their fair share.

The Governor’s revised budget also proposes to borrow $4 billion to help address the massive economic fallout created by COVID-19 and better position the State to weather any future public health and economic uncertainties.  The proposed borrowing amount must first be approved by the legislative Select Commission on Emergency COVID-19 Borrowing.

Additionally, the Governor’s revised budget proposal details the major recovery efforts the Administration has launched using a combination of federal and state funds.

Additional details on spending plans for the full $2.39 billion in CRF funding, as well as the other components of the Governor’s revised FY 2021 budget proposal, may be found online here.

For a one-page summary of the Governor’s budget proposal, please click here.

Parsippany’s Construction of New Monopole Tower Begins Final Phase of Modernizing Emergency Communication

PARSIPPANY — Police, Office of Emergency Management, and telecommunications specialists from Motorola were on hand at Volunteers Park to begin the final construction of a new monopole communication tower to modernize the township’s emergency dispatch and communication systems.

The monopole will be 183 feet tall, 3 feet wide at the base, and 18 inches wide at the top.

The project is four years in the making and will be owned and operated by the township.

The tower will be operational by the third week in September, fully functional and tested by early December, and will go live on January 1, 2021.

The monopole construction marks the final phase of the township’s upgraded communication capabilities, connecting antennas at Pomeroy Road, The Parsippany Water Tank, Police Headquarters, and at Powder Mill.

These locations and heights were all chosen due to the changes in typography throughout the township, and to eliminate any possible “dead zones” in radio communication. With the new system in place, the Township will assume management of all local emergency dispatch, cutting costs, and reducing response time.

“This is a higher quality communication system than what we have, both for signal strength and coverage,” said Police Chief Andrew Miller. “In the past, we’d have separate communication of EMS and Fire Departments, which would be relayed through dispatch in Morris County. Now everybody can speak directly. There’s no relaying necessary, no delays or complications, the signal is shorter and clearer, which will improve response time and coordination efforts.”

When completed the project will create revenue-generating potential for the township, thanks to numerous unused and open frequency ranges that could be leased to other towns and emergency dispatches in the region.

Workers Lay Concrete at Veterans Park for New Monopole Antenna in Parsippany

Parsippany currently pays The Morris County Communication Center over $200,000 per year to manage the township’s emergency dispatch, which will cease at the end of this year.

The project began seven years ago when The Police Department determined that there were unknown interference and dead zones that could compromise the integrity of emergency communication in town and be a potential safety issue for residents.

After working with the Federal Communications Commission, it was determined that the system needed major upgrades and replacement. “This project started with public safety in mind,” said Mayor Michael Soriano. “When we have an emergency in Parsippany, we must have the ability to connect all departments – Department of Public Works, Police, Fire, Emergency Medical Services, and so forth – on one emergency frequency. This is a tremendous benefit to facilitate communication and response, quickly and effectively.”

PACC Welcomes New Member: Glenn Hickok – Northwestern Mutual

PARSIPPANY — Parsippany Area Chamber of Commerce welcomes new member Glenn Hickok – Northwestern Mutual.

With life as busy as ever, the complexity of addressing our finances and risk management is often the last thing we choose to work on in our free time. Their team is designed to bring clarity and simplicity to the complex nature of tax, insurance, and investments – Empowering our clients to live a full life today, while being mindful of tomorrow.

They have intentionally designed our team to address changing client needs and the ever-changing economic and tax environment through the utilization of financial planning. This can prevent common disruptions clients often face when working with an individual advisor.

Backed by Northwestern Mutual, who for over 160 years has honored their clients with a commitment to mutuality and excellence, they are excited to help you and your family.

Inspiring, empowering, and achieving your financial independence.

Contact Glenn at (973) 531-2173.

Parsippany Area Chamber of Commerce is a service organization for businesses, merchants, residents, and volunteers that provides education, information, and networking opportunities to the Parsippany area. For more information call (973) 402-6400 or click here.

Parsippany Road Scheduled to be Paved

PARSIPPANY —Between Tuesday, August 25, and Friday, September 4,  Parsippany Road will be milled and paved between Littleton Road and Freneau Road.

Construction will take place on weekdays between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. During this construction, you can expect heavy delays, rough roads, and detours. Please plan an alternate route.