Mobile Census in Parsippany This Sunday

PARSIPPANY — As part of the final Get Out The Count effort to ensure that every resident is counted, Census employees will be in Parsippany this Sunday, August 23. This is a great opportunity to complete the Census with assistance from Census Takers. Filling out the census only takes a few minutes, but the impact can last a lifetime.

Census Takers will be in Parsippany this Sunday at the following locations:

  • 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Parsippany Library, 449 Halsey Road
  • 2:45 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Parsippany Town Hall, 1001 Parsippany Boulevard

Who are Census Takers? They are you!

  • Census Takers are members of your community, your neighbors, working to make sure everyone is counted so your community can get its fair share of federal funding and be properly represented.
  • They will offer to help you complete the Census, using an electronic device.

Census Takers will follow COVID-19 safety protocols:

  • Census takers will wear masks and follow local public health guidelines.
  • All Census takers completed a virtual COVID-19 training on social distancing and other health and safety protocols before beginning their work in neighborhoods.

Don’t want an in-person visit? Complete the Census by phone or online!

  • If you’d rather not have your door knocked on just Complete the Census here or over the phone at 844-330-2020 (English), 844-468-2020 (Spanish), or any of the other language numbers listed here.

Arbor Terrace Communities holding “Virtual Wine Tasting”

MORRIS PLAINS — The New Jersey Arbor Terrace Communities have partnered with Alzheimer’s New Jersey to host a unique Virtual Wine Tasting experience!  Join them on Thursday, September 10 at 7:00 p.m. for this fundraiser to help support the important programs that provide respite to NJ caregivers.

Learn how to register by clicking here.

Please note registration ends on Monday, August 24 in order to have time to ship three bottles of specially chosen wine to your door.

For questions, contact Mary Beth Kane at marybeth.kane@arborccompany.com

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Electrical Box Blew at Parsippany’s Best Pizza

PARSIPPANY  — Parsippany’s Best Pizza employees called 911 for a strong odor of electrical burning on Friday evening, August 21. Parsippany’s Best Pizza is located at 756 Route 46, Arlington Shopping Plaza.

The electrical box was smoking and was extinguished by Parsippany-Troy Hills Volunteer Fire District 5 and Lake Hiawatha Volunteer Fire Department District 4.

Firemen at the scene of Parsippany’s Best Pizza
Firemen at the scene of Parsippany’s Best Pizza

Whippany Fire Department and Boonton Fire Department also responded to the scene.

JCP&L was called to the scene to turn off the power. It is reported the business will be closed until repairs are made.

Rockaway Neck Volunteer Ambulance was also at the scene, and Parsippany Rescue and Recovery were on stand by. Parsippany-Troy Hills Volunteer Fire Department District 6 was on stand by.

Target is out, Amazon in as Toys R Us Fulfillment Partner

PARSIPPANY — Toys”R”Us® has ended an e-commerce partnership with Target launched ten months ago in favor of fulfillment through Amazon.

Toys”R”Us is now using Amazon to power its eCommerce operations as it quietly ends its partnership with rival Target.

Toys”R”Us, corporate entity, Tru Kids, Inc., is headquartered at 5 Wood Hollow Road.

Mastrangelo Joins Trump Administration in Challenging Legality of Governor Murphy’s Election Free-for-All

MORRIS COUNTY —  “Today we got just a taste of what Murphy’s illegal free-for-all election will mean to the legitimacy of this year’s general election. A Passaic County judge has ordered an expensive do-over in Paterson, our state’s third-largest city, a city that disenfranchised thousands of voters in May when 20 percent of mail-in ballots were ruled invalid and candidates were charged with fraud by the state Attorney General’s Office. Looking at the mayhem that happened in Paterson, only a knucklehead would force the entire state to vote by mail.

“The state constitution clearly states that general elections are to be scheduled the first Tuesday of November, and that date may only be altered by state law. The Governor, however, thinks the virus gives him near-unlimited powers to disregard the law and decide for himself when and how the state will conduct its elections. That is why today the Trump administration, along with the Republican National Committee and New Jersey State GOP, decided to sue the governor, a lawsuit I support, and am seeking to have the Morris County GOP join.

“Morris County has a duly elected and highly capable county clerk that is charged with overseeing our election process and ultimately certifying the results. In light of the legal challenges, I am asking the Clerk to prepare to hold in-person elections, with appropriate safeguards in place, to include the possibility of outdoor, staggered voting. I would personally work with our Clerk as well as the Secretary of State, who is responsible for elections, to ensure proper social distancing protocols are followed while not infringing on our fundamental right to vote. And for those who are at-risk or feel it’s unsafe, they may request an absentee ballot, a controlled, alternative way of voting by mail that already exists.

“Morris County can handle its own fair and open elections, in accordance with the law, and does not wish to be under the thumb of our would-be dictator. However, if the lawsuit should fail, I am going further and would ask the county clerk to refuse to certify the all-mail election, as the legality of the election would be in question as would the validity of the ballots.

“There are few rights as precious as the right to vote, an exercise in citizenship Americans hold in high regard. And here in Morris County, the Crossroads of the American Revolution, we especially value the franchise given the high costs that were paid to secure that right.”

Morris County Freeholder Tom Mastrangelo

Pennacchio Continues to Challenge Department of Health on Nursing Home COVID Response

MORRIS COUNTY — Senator Joe Pennacchio continued his efforts for more information on the policies and decisions that affected resident care at State-run long-term care facilities during the pandemic. In a follow-up letter (Click here) to New Jersey Department of Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli, the Senator again sought answers from the state’s top health official.

“We keep asking questions but we don’t get answers. The Administration seems to find it easier to ignore inquiries than to face the harsh reality of what happened, and could happen again, in our nursing homes,” said Pennacchio (R-26). “The victims and their families deserve answers. Seven thousand people died and nothing is being done. Why? Doesn’t anybody care?”

Pennacchio first wrote to the commissioner on May 13 and has yet to receive a written response to his concerns.

In the recent letter, Pennacchio said the chilling commentary heard by the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee and the Assembly Aging and Senior Services Committee on August 13 made it clear the situation in the nursing homes may have been worse than first feared.

The testimony was “horrifying and heartbreaking,” Pennacchio wrote in his letter. “None of us are comfortable with the notion that elderly residents of state-run facilities may remain in jeopardy and vulnerable to another outbreak of coronavirus or some other dangerous pathogen.

“Public policy, especially when it involves the deaths of 7,000 of our seniors, demands transparency and public scrutiny,” Pennacchio’s letter concluded.

The full text of the letter is below:

August 20, 2020

Honorable Judith Persichilli
Commissioner, Department of Health
P.O. Box 360
Trenton, NJ 08625-0360

Dear Commissioner Persichilli,

It has been three months since my letter requesting clarity on how deaths of long-term care facility residents and staff due to COVID-19 are accounted for on the state’s dashboard and in other reporting.

This letter is a follow up to that correspondence of May 13. We have never received the written response that was requested.

Today, I once again seek answers and clarification as the Legislature considers action to prevent any repeat of the calamity that has already taken the lives of 7,000 seniors trusted to the care of state the state’s long-term care facilities and veterans’ homes.

The testimony provided by witnesses during the joint meeting of the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee and the Assembly Aging and Senior Services Committee was horrifying and heartbreaking.

As an elected legislator, my requests to you for information reflect the questions and concerns of thousands of New Jersey families who lost loved ones to this crisis or who want to ensure that the facilities are safe for the residents that remain.

None of us are comfortable with the notion that elderly residents of state-run facilities may remain in jeopardy and vulnerable to another outbreak of coronavirus or some other dangerous pathogen.

New Jersey state residents, many of whom were prohibited from visiting their loved ones while COVID-positive patients were quietly being introduced into unprepared and understaffed facilities.

The lack of transparency throughout the now five-month-long pandemic further contributes to the distrust and worry.

Please provide my office, on behalf of the residents of New Jersey, responses to the following:

1)      Provide clarification of how COVID deaths are calculated and attributed to LTC facilities.

2)      Explain why nursing home patients who contracted the virus in isolation and became so sick they required hospitalization and died were not included in nursing home totals.

3)      Did the State provide financial incentives to nursing homes to accept COVID patients into confined buildings full of medically fragile elderly residents?

4)   Clarify why a closed, confined space like prison was regarded as a danger to prisoners and a confined space in a nursing home, with a more frail and vulnerable population, was not.

5)   LTC staff who contracted the virus and died were not counted as LTC COVID casualties. Why not?

6)   Although the USS Comfort, the Javits Center, and other field hospitals were available, New Jersey chose not to use them. Why? Why didn’t New Jersey utilize their medical professionals?

This information will help me, as a legislator, to better understand the problems faced by health care workers and your department, and legislative options that could help save lives and ensure the health of our senior citizens.

Commissioner, public policy, especially when it involves the deaths of 7,000 of our seniors, demands transparency and public scrutiny. I would hope you agree. The question, of course, is when?

I look forward to and welcome your written response.

Sincerely,

Senator Joe Pennacchio
26th Legislative District

John Bruggeman – Acoustic Rock

JB Live from the Dungeon!

Posted by John Bruggeman – Acoustic Rock on Friday, August 21, 2020

 

Kiwanis Club Donates School Supplies to the Needy

PARSIPPANY — Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany Community Director Carol Tiesi, Kiwanis Club member Nicolas Limanov and President Frank Cahill visited Parsippany Health and Human Services and donated backpacks filled with school supplies. Each backpack is valued at $100.00.

Normally each year Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany members purchase and donate school supplies that are given to Health and Human Services to be distributed to families in need.  But due to COVID-19, and our meetings have been virtual so Ms. Tiesi decided to purchase the backpacks filled with supplies to keep up with the Kiwanis tradition.

Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany is the largest Kiwanis Club in the State of New Jersey with 80 members. New members are always welcome. (Click here for more information on Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany). Kiwanis members dedicate more than 6 million volunteer hours and invest more than $100 million in service projects that strengthen communities and serve children every year. Kiwanis Club of Greater Parsippany ensures that all children have the opportunity to lead healthy, successful lives. They believe that by helping one child, you help the world.

If you are interested in learning about our club, we currently meet weekly on Thursday at 7:30 a.m. via Zoom. (Join us by clicking here). For more information click here.

Parsippany Food Pantry is located at Parsippany Community Center, 1130 Knoll Road
Lake Hiawatha, NJ 07034. Phone: (973) 263-7163; Monday – Friday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

 

 

Riverdale Coach Charged With Sexual Assault

MORRIS COUNTY — Morris County Prosecutor Fredric M. Knapp, Acting Chief of Investigations Christoph Kimker, and Riverdale Police Department Chief Kevin Smith announce the arrest of Alejandro Almazan, 33, Pompton Lakes.

Almazan has been charged with two counts of Sexual Assault, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2b, crimes of the second degree; Endangering the Welfare of Children, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4a(1), a crime of the third degree; and Lewdness, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:14-4b(1), a crime of the fourth degree.

It is alleged that on August 9, 2020, the 11-year-old female victim had a private soccer lesson with the defendant.

The defendant is known to the victim as he is her coach through the Ramapo Youth Soccer Association.

During the lesson, the defendant had the victim jog with him to a private area within Independence Field in Riverdale. During this time, the defendant contacted the child’s intimate body parts over her clothing.

The victim also disclosed that the defendant pulled up his shorts and exposed his penis to her.

Prosecutor Knapp would like to thank the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office Sex Crimes/Child Endangerment Unit and the Riverdale Police Department, whose efforts contributed to the investigation of the matter. Anyone with information relating to this incident is encouraged to call Det. Lydia Negron of the Morris County Prosecutor’s Office at (973) 285-6213 or the Riverdale Police Department at (973) 835-0034.