News

A new study ranks Louisiana as the most dangerous state for families, while New Jersey shines as the second safest, thanks to ...
The Lower Passaic River has a history of pollution that stretches back into the 1950s. According to the National Oceanic and ...
New Jersey laws banning gun silencers and short-barreled rifles are unconstitutional, according to two separate federal ...
Two North Jersey cities showed up at opposite ends of the spectrum in a recent study that ranked the stress levels of ...
In a letter to Congress, 21 attorneys general are urging legislation to stop ICE’s “now-routine practice" of arrests carried ...
TOMS RIVER, NJ – Ocean County Sheriff Mike Mastronardy, a Republican who once publicly expressed his “revulsion” for Donald ...
Attention in Washington this June was heavily focused on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the GOP’s flagship policy bill that ...
Douglas McIntyre, Editor-in-Chief at Climate Crisis 24/7, reports on the rising health threat of wildfires in New Jersey — a state not traditionally affected by them. As climate change ...
New Jersey health experts are studying respiratory impacts from wildfire smoke after the Jones Road fire burned 15,300 acres in the Pine Barrens and Canadian smoke events.
New Jersey public health experts now are trying to understand what, if any, health risks are hidden in the smoke from wildfires, whether they originate at home or faraway forests.
About this issue Abstract National crime rates in most urban areas have fallen considerably since the 1990s, but some cities have experienced greater improvements in public safety than others. One of ...