Bank note reporter12/25/2023 ![]() Coughlin said that it would include helping minority-owned businesses receive government contracts, building the state’s film and manufacturing industries and boosting the state’s Neighborhood Revitalization Tax Credit Program. The speaker’s small business goals are expected to be unveiled in greater detail later Monday. ‘GREAT SUCCESS!’ - CRAIG COUGHLIN - BORAT SAGDIYEV - Coughlin eyes small business legislation, plans out fall legislative priorities by POLITICO’s Daniel Han: Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin is doubling down on a commitment to small business legislation, as the state’s second most powerful lawmaker declared “great success” on much of his chamber's legislative agenda. With our portfolio of Boardwalk projects, Anbaric is ready to deliver a clean energy future. Our shovel-ready project is the result of years of community outreach, engineering, and investment. We started laying the groundwork required for our Boardwalk Power Link Project nearly a decade ago. New Jersey is at the precipice of a nation-leading award in the BPU’s historic offshore wind transmission solicitation-and Anbaric’s project is ready to go on day one. QUOTE OF THE DAY: “It would be nice just to be forgotten - and forgiven.” - Former Hudson County Executive Robert Janiszewski in an interview with Jim McQueeny WHERE’S MURPHY? In Atlantic City for a noon speech at the Clean Energy Conference, then Camden County College in Blackwood at 2 p.m. HAPPY BIRTHDAY - Campbell’s Jennifer Lehman, former House candidate Josh Welle But if this type of thing was as common as McQueeny suggests - or even if it was just more common than today (See Harry Karafin as one example elsewhere) - it shows how nostalgia about the "golden age of journalism" can smooth out those rough edges of history.ĭAYS SINCE MURPHY REFUSED TO SAY WHETHER HIS WIFE’S NON-PROFIT SHOULD DISCLOSE DONORS: 239 So yes, it’s a tough time for journalism. I think most of my colleagues would as well. And if I had, I wouldn’t have shown any professional courtesy about it. And most news organizations still pay reporters a “pittance,” but in my 15 years reporting on New Jersey politics, I’ve never even caught a hint of reporters taking bribes. To be fair, several people on my Twitter timeline - two of whom worked at the Hudson Dispatch a- said to their knowledge this wasn’t the case. “When I refused the first of many such offers to come (in West New York), the agent of the mayor (who was later indicted) roughed me up in a stairwell.” “The paper deliberately paid their reporters a pittance with the tacit understanding that they would take weekly cash envelopes from the ‘public relations’ agents for local pols for ‘publicity.’” McQueeny wrote. McQueeny described being a reporter for The Hudson Dispatch in the 1970s. ![]() But take a look at this passage deep in a column by PR man Jim McQueeny about his interview with disgraced former Hudson County Executive Robert Janiszewski. There’s also no question, at least in my mind, that the trend has been detrimental to civic society, especially at the local level, where county and municipal governments usually get bare-bones coverage at best. There’s no question newspapers are a shell of what they used to be. So I’ve heard a lot of lamenting from Boomers - often politicians and former reporters - about just how much the press has eroded. I began my journalism career just as newspapers were beginning their long decline. ![]() Presented by Anbaric Development Partners
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