Codey’s NJ bill would give corporate business tax credits to waste digesters

hunger package

By The New Jersey Senate Democrats

 The Senate Environment and Energy Committee has advanced legislation sponsored by Senator Richard Codey that would provide corporation business tax (CBT) credits to taxpayers who develop and construct anaerobic digestion facilities that process food waste.

Anaerobic digestion facilities convert food waste to biogas and solid digestate, with the former having the capability to power and heat homes and the latter being a useful material if applied as a fertilizer. The bill, S-3185, would specifically provide tax credits up to $250,000 or 50 percent of the costs incurred to construct the facility, whichever amount is less. The total amount of the credits provided to eligible entities would not exceed $15 million.

“In the United States each year, around a third of food is wasted and only a minuscule amount of it is diverted away from landfills and incinerators for composting,” said Senator Codey (D-Essex/Morris). “When food waste builds up and continues to rot, it creates methane gas which is extremely harmful for the environment. Food should never be wasted, however, it is an unfortunate reality of our world and at least with this bill in place, we can convert this waste into eco-friendly solutions for our everyday needs.”

Under the bill, the tax credits would be available starting on January 1st following the effective date of the bill and for the next six years thereafter.

The bill was released from the committee by a vote of 4-0.

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Legislation in NJ would take a new approach to regulating toxic ‘forever chemicals’

Bill says chemicals should be regulated as a class, not individually, to better protect public health

By JON HURDLE, NJ Spotlight

New Jersey lawmakers are working to set strict health limits on so-called forever chemicals as a class rather than regulating them one by one, as now happens.

Since there are thousands of the chemicals and only three subject to health limits in New Jersey’s drinking water, it would make sense to subject all of them to state regulation to reduce public exposure to substances that are linked to some cancers, immune impairment, developmental problems in young children and other serious health conditions, supporters say.

A bill (S-3176) that cleared a Senate committee would require the Department of Environmental Protection to examine the feasibility of regulating the chemicals as a group and to work with scientists at the state’s Drinking Water Quality Institute and report back to lawmakers within two years.

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The measure is one of five bills introduced by Sens. Bob Smith (D-Middlesex) and Linda Greenstein (D-Mercer) in early October that would strengthen the state’s efforts to protect public health from the chemicals, which are formally known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).
The other four bills have yet to go before their first legislative panel, the Senate’s Environment and Energy Committee, which is chaired by Smith.

‘We in New Jersey have a huge problem with PFAS chemicals.’ — Sen. Bob Smith

Smith and other advocates for tighter regulation of the chemicals say New Jersey’s current limits on three of the most found types of PFAS chemicals don’t come close to shielding consumers from the class as a whole because there are so many of them, and that New Jersey has a higher rate of PFAS contamination than many other states because of its long industrial history.

Mass action?

In the last eight years, New Jersey has set strict limits on the presence of PFOA, PFOS, and PFNA in drinking water, becoming a national leader in efforts to curb the chemicals. But those efforts aren’t enough to fully protect public health, advocates say.

Read the full story here

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Gannett reporters launch one-day strike

Walkout at six N.J. daily newspapers staged in protest of layoffs, cost-cutting measures, bad-faith union negotiations

By David WildsteinNew Jersey Globe, November 04 2022 10:19 am

Four days before Election Day, employees at Gannett newspapers across New Jersey and other states went on strike Friday to protest cost-cutting measures at the national newspaper chain that have resulted in layoffs, furloughs, and a decision not to fill key vacant positions.

NJ Reporters Walk Off Job Amid Nationwide Gannett Newsroom Strike (Patch)

The one-day walkout affected reporters at The (Bergen) Record,  Asbury Park Press, Courier-News, Home News Tribune, Daily Record, and the New Jersey Herald, as well as employees of the Atlantic Digital Optimization Team.

“Gannett is actively sabotaging our democracy by attacking its own journalists,” said Jon Schluss, the NewsGuild-CWA president.  “The company has the money to invest in journalists and it should start doing that immediately instead of fighting them.

Reporters planned to continue to cover news, but to post their work on their strike paper, the Gannett Union Press.

Gannett reported losing $54.1 million during the third quarter of 2022, despite cost-cutting measures that included over 400 layoffs nationally in recent months.  The company lost $53.8 million in the second quarters.

The union said that the decision to strike was not an easy one.

“It runs counter to our passion for journalism and the communities we serve,” a statement posted on Gannett Union Press stated.   Those very communities recognize our value and the need for the work we do, but, sadly, Gannett does not.”

The union website cited “the most recent draconian measures,” of forced furloughs next month, additional layoffs, and a suspension of funding retirement plan matches, as “the latest example of Gannett’s disregard for our passion, our work, and our commitment.”

“I’m walking off the job today along with my unionized colleagues in New Jersey, New York, Arizona, and California to protest Gannett’s cost-cutting including layoffs, furloughs, 401k cuts, and bargaining in bad faith,” said Scott Fallon, a reporter at the Bergen Record.  “We’re tired of it.”

The union slammed Gannett CEO Mike Reed for taking an $8 million annual salary, which they say is 160 times the median salary of a Gannett employee.

Another Bergen Record reporter, Colleen Wilson, said she and about 200 other Gannett journalists “walked off the job today to protest wide-ranging cuts to our newsrooms and to fight for a fair contract.”

“I’m walking out to support my colleagues in our efforts to get living wages that will allow us to stay in the communities we cover, job security, and the resources we need to deliver the best local news coverage to our readers,” said Jean Mikle, a reporter for the Asbury Park Press.

The Wall Street Journal first reported Gannett’s one-day strike.

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Bill outlawing confinement of breeding pigs and calves advances in NJ Senate

From the Senate Democrats

 TRENTON – Legislation sponsored by Senator Vin Gopal and Senate President Nick Scutari prohibiting the inhumane confinement of breeding pigs and calves raised for veal in a manner that unduly restricts movement or provides inadequate space was released from the Senate Environment and Energy Committee.

     “The confinement of mother pigs and calves raised for veal, a common practice among factory farms, constitutes a most savage form of animal cruelty, and should not be tolerated in New Jersey,” said Senator Gopal (D-Monmouth). “While we are assured the majority of our hog farmers do not use this barbaric method of confinement for these sentient beings, our state needs to stand with other states and several countries in making sure this uncivilized practice is banned once and for all.”

     Typically, in factory farm settings, a mother pig will spend the entirety of her pregnancies and nursing periods confined in a metal cage, called a gestation crate or sow stall. Gestation crates enclose pigs in a space of about seven feet by two feet — an area barely larger than the pig’s body. A few days before giving birth, sows are moved to farrowing crates where they are able to lie down with an attached crate where their piglets can nurse.

     Specifically, the bill would prohibit a farm owner or operator from knowingly confining a breeding pig or calf raised for veal:

     * in a manner that prevents the animal from lying down, standing up, fully extending the animal’s limbs, or turning around freely;

     * in the case of a calf raised for veal, in a manner that prevents the animal from grooming itself naturally or having visual contact with other calves.

     The State Board of Agriculture and Department of Agriculture would establish penalties for violations of the provisions of the bill.

     The bill, S1298, was released from the committee by a vote of 4-0.

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‘On the brink of a new civil war’: New national survey highlights fragility of American democracy

Newswise — A new nationally representative survey released by the University of Notre Dame’s Rooney Center for the Study of American Democracy reveals areas of grave concern for the state of American democracy, including more than half of Republicans and one-third of Democrats believing the United States to be on the brink of a new civil war.

The results also show strikingly low support for some core democratic values and the number of Republicans who continue to doubt the integrity of both past and future elections.

Matthew Hall, the Rooney Center’s director, said the survey’s results indicate the threats to American democracy have never been more serious. Although the 2022 midterm elections will not be where America loses its democracy, he said, they could very well set the stage for its downfall.

“Is it really as bad as it seems? The answer is yes,” said Hall, the David A. Potenziani Memorial Professor of Constitutional Studies. “The key is not that what happens in the midterm elections will be inherently anti-democratic — it’s that they may put in place officials who could then undermine our democracy in 2024. We’ve already seen members of Congress willing to overthrow perfectly legitimate election results, and we may see a lot more of that in 2024 if Republicans take the House and the Senate.”

The comprehensive survey, which was conducted from Oct. 20 to 26 using a scientific sample that was representative of the American population, showed that many Americans question basic democratic principles — though there are strong partisan differences in these attitudes.

Democrats are more likely to be skeptical of free speech rights, with 44.7 percent agreeing that the government should be allowed to shut down media outlets that spread disinformation. Republicans, however, are more likely to favor voting limitations, with 37.9 percent disagreeing with the statement that “everyone should be allowed to vote,” while just 6.7 percent of Democrats and 13 percent of independents disagreed.

Many Republicans also remain skeptical of the results of both the 2020 presidential election and upcoming elections — and question the stability of the U.S. system of government. Nearly half of Republican respondents believe that “Joe Biden and the Democrats stole the 2020 presidential election,” and just over half agreed that there will be a substantial amount of election fraud across the country in the midterm elections.

Notably, 22 percent of Democrats and 44 percent of Republicans surveyed also agreed that the “true American way of life” is disappearing so fast that “we may have to use force to save it.” 

Slightly more than half of Republicans (51.5 percent), over a third of Democrats (35.1 percent), and nearly a quarter of independents (23 percent) believe the United States is on the brink of a new civil war.

Read the full story here

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A total lunar eclipse will turn the moon red (not blue) on Election Day

By Amudalat Ajasa, Washington Post

Hours before citizens across the country cast their votes in a contentious midterm election, a sinister red moon will loom in the sky. The last total lunar eclipse of 2022 is set to stain the moon red during the wee hours of Tuesday morning. Residents across both coasts will be able to watch the spectacle for just under 90 minutes.

Total lunar eclipses, commonly known as “blood moons,” happen only during full moons when the Earth completely shields the moon from the sun. Once the sun, Earth, and moon are exactly aligned, light from simultaneous sunrises and sunsets around the Earth projects onto the moon, briefly causing a coppery red coat on the moon’s surface. The more dust or clouds in the Earth’s atmosphere during the eclipse, the redder the moon will appear, according to NASA.

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