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Injured Newark firefighter's condition upgraded to stable

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Paul Leber suffered burns to his face and airway from heat and smoke inhalation. Watch video

A Newark firefighter who suffered serious injuries Saturday battling a blaze at a tire shop has been upgraded from critical to stable condition, officials said.

Paul Leber, 38, gave a thumbs up Monday to Mayor Ras Baraka, Public Safety Director Anthony F. Ambrose and Fire Chief Rufus Jackson when they visited him at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, Ambrose said.

File photo of Paul LeberNewark firefighter Paul Leber, left, is shown with Bill Bishop, a city employee and fellow veteran, during a 2010 Memorial Day event. (File photo courtesy of the City of Newark) 

Leber responded with other members of Engine 7 -- including a probationary firefighter -- at 9:12 p.m. to a two-alarm fire at Velez Tire and Auto on Park Avenue.

When conditions worsened and they were ordered out of the building, Leber became disoriented. Other members of Engine 7, Rescue 1, went back into the building to rescue him.

The fire remains under investigation by the Newark Arson Unit, Ambrose said. 

Leber suffered burns to his face and airway from heat and smoke inhalation, Ambrose said Monday. 

"He has improved," Ambrose said. "He is sedated. He has a long road to recovery. We need to keep praying."

Leber, a graduate of the Bergen County Fire Academy who was born in Passaic, joined the department after serving in the U.S. Navy aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt, a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier. 

Allison Pries may be reached at apries@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @AllisonPries. Find NJ.com on Facebook 


Wrestling Top 20: Movement in first in-season rankings

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There was a shakeup from our preseason selections

NJ.com boys basketball Top 20: Holiday-tourney statements

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Where is your favorite team in NJ.com's latest rankings?

Shooting suspect nabbed by fugitive squad, police say

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Police said he shot another man following a dispute.

Newark police detectives arrested a 41-year-old man wanted in a shooting in the city in December, authorities said Tuesday.

Mug of William JohnsonWilliam Johnson. (Newark Department of Public Safety)
 

William Johnson had been sought in the Dec. 12 shooting of another man on the 200 block of Renner Avenue after a dispute, Public Safety Director Anthony F. Ambrose said in a statement.

The wounded man was taken to Newark Beth Israel Hospital for treatment, police said. Johnson also shot at another person who was not injured, police said.

After developing evidence linking him to the shooting, members of the department's Fugitive Apprehension Team on Tuesday arrested Johnson on charges of aggravated assault and weapons offenses, police said.

Johnson had not yet been booked into the Essex County Correctional Facility as of late Tuesday morning, according to jail records.

Thomas Moriarty may be reached at tmoriarty@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ThomasDMoriarty. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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Individual wrestler rankings for Jan. 2: New year, new opportunities

2 slain in New Year's Day shooting, authorities say

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Law enforcement officials said the two men were discovered by police officers responding to a report of shots fired.

Two men were fatally shot Monday night in Orange in what authorities are investigating as a double homicide, the Essex County Prosecutor's Office said.

Police discovered Randall Price and Rodney Cheryl, both of Orange, suffering from apparent gunshot wounds in the 100 block of Taylor Street when they responded around 7 p.m. to a report of shots fired, according to a joint statement from Acting County Prosecutor Robert D. Laurino and township Police Director Todd R. Warren.

Authorities said Price, 50, was pronounced dead at the scene at 7:44 p.m., while Cheryl, 41, was pronounced dead at University Hospital in Newark just under three hours later after undergoing surgery.

The prosecutor's office said the investigation is active and ongoing.

Follow him on Twitter at @ThomasDMoriarty. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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NJ.com boys ice hockey Top 20, Jan. 3: New year, 2 new teams

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The first boys ice hockey Top 20 of 2018 is here.

Trial begins for day laborer accused in brutal murder of contractor

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Much of the trial revolves around the question of when Adison Trigueno's boss' died.

Opening statements began Tuesday in the trial of an Irvington day laborer accused of stabbing his boss at least 40 times in a home being renovated in Carteret in 2015, and then calling 911 to report the man's death.

Adison Trigueno has been charged with murder in the death of Colonia contractor Tony Mocci, as well as unlawful possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, theft and two counts of forgery.

Prosecutors argued Tuesday in Middlesex County Superior Court that Trigueno actually murdered Mocci the evening before that 911 call, and that days later Trigueno forged a check for $4,300 to pay four months' back rent that Trigueno owed.

"He believed he was going to get away with murder. Just like on the TV show, 'How to Get Away With Murder'," Middlesex County's Deputy First Assistant Prosecutor Christie Bevacqua told he jury during opening statements Tuesday. "You see, after he brutally murdered Tony Mocci he began an elaborate cover up."

Screen Shot 2018-01-03 at 12.37.14 AM.png 

Trigueno's attorney, Joseph Mazraani, set out to dismantle the prosecution's timeline of events leading to Mocci's death, arguing that Mocci was murdered only hours before Trigueno made that 911 call, and that Trigueno was home at the time of Mocci's death. Mazraani said he would use science to prove his case.

The call came into 911 came at 8:15 a.m. on Jan. 30, 2015. Trigueno, then 25, told the dispatcher he had found his 50-year-old boss laying in a puddle of blood at a job site. Trigueno spoke excitedly, and the dispatcher tried to calm him several times.

Days after the killing, Mocci 's wife of 26 years, Lisa, discovered money missing from their bank account. Police discovered a $4,300 check deposited in Trigueno's name and soon went to his Irvington studio apartment to arrest him for forgery and theft and while also searching for evidence of murder, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors, however, said police did not find any fingerprints or DNA evidence at the scene of the crime or in Trigueno's home. Police did find a tape measure in Trigueno's vehicle with Tony Mocci's blood on it. Neither police not prosecutors have described the murder weapon. 

The prosecution opened its case by describing Mocci as a father, husband and tough boss. His wife, Lisa served as president of Superior Choice LLC and Mocci was a general contractor. Mocci hired Trigueno in September 2014.

The jury also heard a number of recordings, including the 911 tape and a number of calls Trigueno made from jail, in which he said, "I have nothing to worry about," and "I'm going to get away with it." Mazraani countered that his client's statements were taken out of context.

In his openings, Mazraani told the jury that if Mocci was killed at 7 p.m., and it was 12 degrees outside that day. He said investigators reported that the body's temperature was 74.8 degrees when police arrived at the scene. Mazraani argued that Mocci's body would have been much colder if he had been killed the previous night. 

"The best thing about science is that it doesn't lie. It doesn't feel. It doesn't have motives," Mazraani told the jury. "Science will tell you that when Mr. Mocci was killed, Adison was home in bed, fast asleep."

The prosecutor's first witness attacked Mazraani's assumption. Mocci's physician testified that she diagnosed Mocci with the flu hours before the prosecution says he was killed, and that his temperature was 100.4 degrees.

The trial is expected to continue Wednesday morning.

Taylor Tiamoyo Harris may be reached at tharris@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @ladytiamoyo.

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Hackensack Meridian acquires another hospital and is now N.J.'s largest chain

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Hackensack Meridian now encompasses 12 acute care hospitals in six counties, from Bergen County to the shore in Ocean County.

Hackensack Meridian Health Wednesday announced it now owns JFK Medical Center in Edison, a deal that creates the largest hospital chain in New Jersey.

In what has become a race to amass the most sprawling health care network in the state, Hackensack Meridian now owns 12 acute care hospitals from Bergen to Ocean counties. It employs a staff of 33,000 and 6,500 doctors, and maintains 4,520 in-patient beds, which include children's and specialty hospitals.

The deal dethrones RWJ Barnabas Health, owner of 11 full-service hospitals valued at $5.4 billion, as the largest hospital and health care provider in the state. Robert Wood Johnson University Health and Barnabas Health merged in 2016.

Hackensack Meridian and JFK executives emphatically said the winners in this turf war are their patients. More people will benefit from JFK's nationally recognized neurological care and rehabilitation services. JFK's patient base will have a larger network of outpatient, home care, and other patient care options to choose from -- 160 locations in all.

"In a rapidly changing health care environment, this merger strengthens and aligns our services to maximize options for everyone, from newborns to our geriatric population," JFK President and CEO Raymond Fredericks said.  

Hackensack Meridian also announced Wednesday it will spend $12 million to expand JFK's cardiac catheterization lab, where artery-clearing angioplasty procedures are performed.

Hospital merger-mania in N.J.

"JFK is already an outstanding provider of cardiac services in central New Jersey and with this investment, we will not only maintain but expand this leadership role in serving the region," Robert C. Garrett, co-CEO of Hackensack Meridian said in a statement.

Hackensack Meridian and JFK announced they were exploring a merger in November 2016, and in May, confirmed a deal had been reached pending government approvals. Hospital executive said Wednesday that regulators had signed off, allowing the deal to be completed.

JFK, a 50-year-old 499-bed hospital located in Edison, assures its future by assimilating into the Hackensack Meridian network, with its vast bargaining power with insurers and protection from market instability.  There are 72 acute-care hospitals in New Jersey but only about a dozen are independently operated. 

Academic studies on mergers say patients and communities do not always come out ahead.

An often-cited Robert Wood Johnson Foundation study in 2012, found "Hospital consolidation generally results in higher prices." But mergers can improve the quality of care if patients are given a choice over which hospital they use, and competition remains strong, according to the study.

In addition to JFK, Hackensack Meridian hospitals include:

Hackensack University Medical Center;

Jersey Shore University Medical Center, Neptune;

Ocean Medical Center, Brick;

Riverview Medical Center, Red Bank;

Southern Ocean Medical Center, Manahawkin;

Bayshore Community Hospital, Holmdel;

Mountainside Medical Center in Montclair;

Pascack Valley Medical Center in Westwood;

Raritan Bay Medical Center in Old Bridge and Perth Amboy;

Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen.

Susan K. Livio may be reached at slivio@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @SusanKLivio. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

 

Soup's on, thanks to Green Hill residents

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WEST ORANGE -- Green Hill Senior Living Senior Service Club members Margaret Hollister, Dolly Levine and Sarah Wight display the soup collected for the Holy Trinity Church in West Orange as part of their holiday giving project. Holy Trinity operates a food bank that works with local agencies and the Community Food Bank of Hillside to provide groceries for local...

ex0107senior.jpgFrom left, Green Hill Senior Living Service Club members Margaret Hollister, Dolly Levine and Sarah Wight. 

WEST ORANGE -- Green Hill Senior Living Senior Service Club members Margaret Hollister, Dolly Levine and Sarah Wight display the soup collected for the Holy Trinity Church in West Orange as part of their holiday giving project.

Holy Trinity operates a food bank that works with local agencies and the Community Food Bank of Hillside to provide groceries for local families in need.

The Green Hill group also collected "Toys For Tots," which were then donated to the West Orange Armory toy drive.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.

Statewide standouts: 50 girls basketball players getting the job done

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Here are the players standing out through the first two weeks of the season.

More than 1,500 flights cancelled as monster storm approaches

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Newark Liberty International Airport is among the airports around the nation cancelling flights as a massive snowstorm approaches the East Coast.

More than 1,500 flights scheduled for Thursday have been cancelled nationwide as the Northeast braces for a large and unpredictable snowstorm moving up the coast.

Newark Liberty International Airport listed 315 cancellations -- or about 26 percent of all incoming and outgoing flights scheduled for Thursday -- as of 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, according to FlightAware, a flight tracking service.

There were hundreds of additional flight cancellations for Thursday at other area airports, including John F. Kennedy International Airport (171 flights cancelled), LaGuardia Airport (201 flights cancelled) and Philadelphia International Airport (57 flights cancelled), according to FlightAware. 

Additional cancellations are expected as New Jersey prepares for the storm that is expected to bring between 3 and 4 inches of snow to Newark and as much as a foot to the Jersey Shore.

Several airlines, including United Airlines, are allowing passengers with flights scheduled for Thursday and Friday to rebook their trips for free.

"The change fee and any difference in fare will be waived for new United flights departing on or before Jan. 8," United Airlines said in an alert.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the bi-state agency that oversees the area airports, warned passengers to check with their airlines before attempting to go to the airport.

Even if the storm tracks out to sea and New Jersey is spared a major blow, the storm's impact on other parts of the country may affect flights, Port Authority officials warned.

It is unclear how easy it will be for passengers to reschedule flights for Friday, after the storm passes. Nationwide, about 85 flights scheduled for Friday had already been cancelled by early Wednesday afternoon, according to FlightAware.

Kelly Heyboer may be reached at kheyboer@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KellyHeyboer. Find her at KellyHeyboerReporter on Facebook.
 

‘Unprecedented’ N.J. bill could open door for high school sports ‘super teams’

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A pair of bills set forth by New Jersey legislation could dramatically alter the landscape of high school sports.

Get ready, New Jersey — a high school “super team” could soon be coming to a district near you.

A pair of companion bills that critics say could dramatically alter the landscape of high school sports in the Garden State are on the brink of final passage by the state legislature this week and next.

The bill would allow public high schools in the same district facing low participation numbers, financial constraints or safety concerns — regardless of sport or enrollment size — to merge teams at the varsity level without any oversight or review by the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.

The change would instantly give multi-school districts a potential advantage over single-school districts, and potentially shift the balance of power by providing the chance for multi-school districts to build “super teams” comprised of athletes from multiple schools.

Supporters of the bill say it’s a necessary change during a time when some sports are facing declining participation numbers and districts are facing greater financial constraints.

NJSIAA member schools typically vote on significant rule changes, but the current movement in the legislature is believed to be the first time lawmakers have attempted to pass to a bill that directly impacts NJSIAA bylaws.

“For a hundred years the member schools have written the rules,” NJSIAA assistant director Kim DeGraw-Cole said Wednesday. “This would be the first time — unprecedented — where the legislature would actually change those rules, alter those rules and then we’d be left to deal with them without any input or conversation.”

As currently constituted by the NJSIAA, cooperative sports programs — combined teams from different schools — are prohibited in basketball, baseball, softball and outdoor track. New Jersey currently has 116 schools that are involved in a co-op program, with some even being tri-ops, according to NJSIAA officials.

“We have had co-ops and have had them for 30 years,” DeGraw-Cole said. “We have tri-ops in ice hockey. So, it’s an evolution that have met the needs. Why do we need to have basically someone else tell our member schools how to write the rules and regulations when we’re already expanding opportunities for kids?”

The bills, already passed 30-0 by the Senate committee and 11-0 by the Assembly committee, are expected to be placed before a vote of the full Assembly and full Senate this week and could potentially be signed into law by Gov. Chris Christie before Jan. 16. The bills were sponsored by Daniel R. Benson and Annette Quijano in the Assembly, and Shirley Turner and Linda Greenstein in the Senate.

More than 20 school districts in New Jersey have more than a single high school, with Newark having 12 high schools, NJSIAA officials said.

The creation of the bill can be traced to last year, when several voting bodies denied a request from the West Windsor-Plainsboro district to merge its two high school football programs due to low participation numbers. Group 4 West Windsor-Plainsboro North High ended up playing a junior varsity schedule, while neighboring Group 4 West Windsor-Plainsboro South High finished with a 1-8 varsity record.

NJSIAA officials believed the issue was resolved last month when member schools approved a proposal from West Windsor-Plainsboro that allows larger schools to enter co-op programs in football under specified conditions. DeGraw-Cole and NJSIAA project manager Mike Zapicchi were critical of the legislature for pushing a state law without more discussion with the association or member schools.

“Any member school could propose this exact legislation and then it would be debated, examined and voted on and it could pass in the same fashion,” Zapicchi said. “This way, it takes the decision making of the member schools completely out of the situation. What they’re saying is, they know best.”

Assemblyman John Burzichelli (D-Gloucester) — a past critic of the NJSIAA — said the legislation was necessary after the West Windsor-Plainsboro situation “didn’t get resolved fast enough through their process.”

“There’s a growing sense of frustration of members of both chambers with the NJSIAA and these kinds of issues that keep rising up from time to time,” Burzichelli said. “The state legislature is about to act. That’s what happens when lawmakers get involved. It becomes a different process.”

The NJSIAA issued a press release recently expressing fear over the impact the new law could have on the state’s sports scene.

“Fewer teams means fewer opportunities for students to experience education-based athletics,” incoming NJSIAA Executive Director Larry White said. “Removing any oversight or review will give districts the green light to create all-star teams from a combined school district talent pool.

“Every student, parent, administrator and coach should be very, very concerned.”

Meanwhile, the bill is receiving mixed reviews from across the state. Many athletic officials are skeptical that so-called “super teams” would ever come to fruition. West Windsor-Plainsboro superintendent Dave Aderhold said he doesn’t think districts will ever merge sports programs simply for competitive advantage should the new bill pass.

The NJSIAA is “just spewing nonsense to try and cloud the conversation,” Aderhold said. “Super teams will not happen at big schools. You think a big school in a big district will stand up to the community and say, even with three teams, three quarterbacks, 15 linemen, that we’re going to make one team now because we want a state title? No way. What will happen is when there’s a budgetary crisis that maybe schools will consolidate. When the reality is a lack of enrollment and there are safety concerns is when teams will go co-op.”

Demarest athletic director Greg Butler operates in a multi-school district in Northern Valley with Old Tappan -- a state champion football team in 2017 -- and agrees that districts will be wary of purposely creating a super team due to the reaction it would generate in the community.

“Any district looking to combine teams simply for a competitive edge would get backlash from parents,” said Butler, whose ice hockey team already does co-op with Old Tappan due to low participation numbers at Demarest. “No one wants to lose a program or the identity associated with a program. That said, with our ice hockey, there weren’t enough participants for our athletes to compete, so co-oping with Old Tappan was a no-brainer. Now we have Northern Valley ice hockey. At least it gives those kids an opportunity to play.”

Still, NJSIAA officials see potential trouble looming down the road should these bills be turned into law.

“Successful programs [in multi-school districts] will continue to flourish, but what’s to say the program or two where the sports aren’t flourishing, ‘You know what? We can save a little money here or there and let’s just have one softball team because we haven’t been successful, it’s not a big sport here,’” DeGraw-Cole said. “And again, your freshman, your JV at both schools — all of that wanes and goes by the wayside. The biggest key is it gets an unfair advantage because now those single-school districts don’t have the opportunities that these multiple school districts have.”

Aderhold, however, still disagrees with the NJSIAA’s stance that the newly proposed bills are bad for high school sports.

“You have an athletic association saying they are trying to save sports… by restricting students from participating in sports,” Aderhold said. “They are absolutely blind to the fact that this is already being allowed in other districts. Look at Elizabeth. How many high schools do they have? Six. How many football teams do they have? One. That’s 5,400 students, and that’s allowed under the academy concept. Tell me anywhere in code how that is defined.

“The hypocrisy is they turn a blind eye when it’s convenient for them, but when a district is trying to keep a program alive, they shut down and turn a blind eye. This is their own doing. … We went to them asking for consideration under their own rules for exemption and they said no, and they’re surprised at the movement that took place to change the rules. … Now they’re scrambling and sending out press releases all in this effort to ‘save sports.’ But what was the reason it even started? Because they excluded kids. They brought this upon themselves."

JJ Conrad may be reached at jconrad@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @jj_conrad. Like NJ.com High School Sports on Facebook.

NJ Advance Media's Matthew Stanmyre contributed to this report.

Newark man gets prison time for $700K check scam

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A Newark resident was sentenced to six years in prison Tuesday for carrying out a fraudulent check scheme that netted him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Robert D. Laurino said. Karif Hyder, 36, previously pleaded guilty to money laundering, forgery, possession of forgery devices and trafficking in personal information. Hyder created fake checks he used...

A Newark resident was sentenced to six years in prison Tuesday for carrying out a fraudulent check scheme that netted him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Acting Essex County Prosecutor Robert D. Laurino said.

Photo of Karif Hyder.jpgKarif Hyder (Essex County Prosecutor's Office)  

Karif Hyder, 36, previously pleaded guilty to money laundering, forgery, possession of forgery devices and trafficking in personal information.

Hyder created fake checks he used with the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, the East Orange public employee payroll, Essex County WorkFirst, New Jersey Family Support Payment Center, YouthBuild Newark and other agencies.

Altogether 50 accounts were compromised and more than $767,000 in phony checks negotiated.

Paul Milo may be reached at pmilo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter@PaulMilo2. Find NJ.com on Facebook.  

 

 

More than 3K flights cancelled as snowstorm promises travel nightmare

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Hundreds of flights are cancelled at Newark Liberty International Airport. All Spirit Airlines flights are cancelled at Atlantic City International Thursday.

The powerful snowstorm barreling up the East Coast is disrupting the travel plans of tens of thousands of travelers trying to get flights in and out of area airports.

More than 3,008 flights scheduled for Thursday and Friday have been cancelled nationwide as airlines ground and reroute planes in anticipation of the storm hitting the Northeast, according to FlightAware, a flight tracking service.

Newark Liberty International Airport listed 817 flight cancellations for Thursday and Friday as of 7 p.m. Wednesday, according to FlightAware. That is the most scratched flights in the country and includes nearly two-thirds of Newark's incoming and outgoing flights on Thursday.

The numbers are expected to rise as the exact track of the storm becomes clear. In addition to snow, the storm is expected to bring winds topping 50 mph in some parts of New Jersey.

Other area airports had similar mass cancellations for Thursday and Friday, according to FlightAware. There were 120 cancelled flights at Philadelphia International Airport, 275 at John F. Kennedy International Airport and 507 at LaGuardia Airport as of 7 p.m. Wednesday.

Airlines also scrapped flights at the area's smaller airports. Atlantic City International Airport had 12 cancellations on Thursday, including all incoming and outgoing Spirit Airlines flights. Trenton-Mercer Airport listed 10 cancellations on Thursday, according to FlightAware.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the area airports, warned passengers to check with their airlines before heading to the airport. Some passengers will likely have to spend the night in terminals.

"If warranted, the Port Authority also is prepared to accommodate ticketed passengers who may become stranded at the airports," Port Authority officials said in a statement.

United Airlines, the largest carrier at Newark Airport, is among the airlines waiving fees for passengers who want to reschedule their flights in regions affected by the storm. Anyone with a United ticket for Thursday and Friday can reschedule their flights for any day through Monday for free, airline officials said.

It is unclear how long it will take airlines to get their aircraft back at the right airports to resume their regular schedules after the storm.

Port Authority officials said they have 524 pieces of snow equipment at area airports, including plows and snow melters, to quickly clear the snow.

They also have "hundreds of thousands of gallons of liquid anti-icer chemicals at the airports, which prevent snow and ice from bonding to runways and taxiways, plus thousands of tons of solid de-icers, which break up snow and ice already on the ground," the Port Authority's statement said.

Kelly Heyboer may be reached at kheyboer@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KellyHeyboer. Find her at KellyHeyboerReporteron Facebook.

 

Essex County school closings Thursday, Jan. 4, 2018

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Some local districts in Essex County have announced delayed start times and closings.

With the National Weather Service calling for up to 7 inches of snow in parts of New Jersey, local towns have announced delayed openings and closings for Thursday.

Many districts in Essex County are closed Thursday. 

Here's a list of schools that have already made announcements. This list will be continually updated as delays and closures are announced. Continue to check for updates.

CLOSED

  • Belleville 
  • Bloomfield College
  • Bloomfield Township
  • Caldwell-West Caldwell
  • Cedar Grove
  • East Orange
  • Essex County College
  • Essex County Public Schools
  • Irvington
  • JCC MetroWest Early Childhood Center
  • Livingston
  • Montclair
  • Millburn
  • Newark
  • Newark Legacy Charter
  • Achieve Community Charter School, Newark
  • Nutley 
  • Orange 
  • Our Lady of Help, East Orange
  • South Orange-Maplewood
  • St. Joseph School
  • Lacordaire Academy, Montclair  
  • Mount Carmel Guild Academy, West Orange
  • Verona
  • West Essex Regional School District

Vintage photos of winter scenes in N.J.

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Making money off wintery white stuff isn't confined to snow removal..

Although snow blowers have put plenty of kids out of business, there are still some industrious youngsters who trudge door-to-door through freshly fallen snow, shovels over their shoulders, looking to make a little money clearing people's walks and driveways.

Many contractors who make the lion's share of their income when it's warm in New Jersey hook plows to their construction vehicles when the forecast calls for snow to make the most of the slow season. These guys work long hours to clear roads, driveways and parking lots so guys like me aren't snowed in. They earn every penny they make, I'd say.

But making money off the wintery white stuff isn't confined to snow removal.

I have written about the invention of the Flexible Flyer by Samuel Leeds Allen of Cinnaminson (click here). Once Allen began marketing his sled to toy stores around 1915, sales took off and he and his family made quite a bit of money for years to come. Just so you know, the family sold the S.L. Allen Co. in 1968; rights to the sled changed hands several times, and as of 2012, Flexible Flyers are mostly made in China and some are made in South Paris, Maine, by Paricon Inc.

As noted on geek.com, "If you look at the 8,011,991th U.S. Patent, you will see the "Apparatus for Facilitating the Construction of a Snow Man/Woman," granted to inventor Ignacio Marc Asperas of Melville, N.Y. The patent was filed on Jan. 31, 2006, and was granted on Sept. 6, 2011.

MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey

And U.S. Patent #5,497,974A is for a "Geodesic Igloo Constructor," which, according to its abstract, consists of "a pair of molds or forms for constructing a geodesic igloo. One of the molds forms a hexagonal

block of snow; the other, a pentagonal block. An icosahedron igloo with frequency 3 or 6 is constructed by shoveling snow into the molds, compacting such snow, and then carefully placing the compacted block of snow onto the igloo being constructed."

This gallery is for those who make money when it snows, those who hop on a Flexible Flyer and enjoy it and even the folks who prefer to watch it fall from the comfort of their living room.

Here's a gallery of winter scenes in New Jersey. And here are links to more galleries on the same theme.

Vintage photos of N.J. in the wintertime

More vintage photos of N.J. in the wintertime

Vintage photos of winter in N.J.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.

Will any flights get out today? Latest info from N.J., N.Y., Philly airports

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More than 4,000 flights have been cancelled nationwide as a massive snow and wind storm hits the East Coast.

NJ.com girls basketball Top 20, Jan. 4: New look after holiday tourney chaos

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The new girls basketball Top 20 has three new teams in and a new look near the top.

Boys Basketball: Top 26 individual performances from December

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Who had the top performances from December?

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