As September quickly approaches our Ward E council office, in conjunction with Freeholder Bill O’Dea, Councilman Donnelly, and several key community leaders, will be pushing a new program to provide back to school supplies for Jersey City children. We have arranged via private donations to provide 3,000 new book bags, supplies, and notebooks for Jersey [...]
As September quickly approaches our Ward E council office, in conjunction with Freeholder Bill O’Dea, Councilman Donnelly, and several key community leaders, will be pushing a new program to provide back to school supplies for Jersey City children. We have arranged via private donations to provide 3,000 new book bags, supplies, and notebooks for Jersey City children. I have included information at the bottom of this email with regards to locations.
Pre-registration, while not required, is always helpful so if you are interested in participating please click onhttp://www.stevenfulop.com/backpack to complete the registration form.
Steven Fulop
Citywide Back-to-School
Book Bag & School Supply Giveaway
12:00 PM until 2:00 PM
JERSEY CITY Residents
Audubon Park (Kennedy Boulevard & Audubon Avenue,
Hank Gallo Center (inside Lincoln Park at the playground near West Side Avenue),
Hudson County School of Technology (525 Montgomery St.).
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Premiere Sponsors:
United Way of Hudson County
Barclays Capital Learn it Systems LLC
ISU First Hudson Insurance
HCIA
Catapult
CFG Health
Liberty Savings
Walgreens
PNC Bank
Metrovest Equities
Provident Bank
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Thank you to our sponsors!
Trenton, NJ – Governor Chris Christie today conditionally vetoed legislation that would have removed the ability of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development to evaluate instances of unemployment benefits overpayment and make waiver determinations for the liability of recipients repaying those funds. The provision would have effectively removed all liability for any unemployment benefit [...]
Trenton, NJ – Governor Chris Christie today conditionally vetoed legislation that would have removed the ability of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development to evaluate instances of unemployment benefits overpayment and make waiver determinations for the liability of recipients repaying those funds. The provision would have effectively removed all liability for any unemployment benefit overpayment, except those resultant from fraud, knowing nondisclosure or misrepresentation or ineligibility, from the recipient of the overpayment.
“With the unemployment insurance fund $1.75 billion in debt, it is our responsibility to ensure that every State dollar spent on benefits is done correctly, lawfully and that any waste – whatever the cause – is rooted out,” said Governor Christie. “It would be fiscally imprudent, and possibly in conflict with federal law, to take away the Department’s ability to evaluate instances where an overpayment of benefits has occurred and make a case-by-case determination of whether a hardship waiver is in order.”
If the provision were included in the law, approximately $28 million would be annually exempted from any evaluation or scrutiny by the Department of Labor where an overpayment of benefits has occurred.
The conditional veto retains the goals of the legislation to prevent abuses in the Unemployment Insurance system, including improper delay or denial of benefits and increasing the number of days for a benefit determination to be appealed from the current 10 to 20 days.
A copy of the conditional veto [pdf 120kB] is attached.

