Category: Uncategorized

  • Gun Buy Back Program in Hudson and Union Counties

    The Attorney General’s office in Trenton has announced a gun buy back program for residents of Hudson and Union Counties. The program will take place on July 12th and 13th from 8am to 8pm at a six locations.

    The buy pack program is the same as seven previous programs held throughout the state. It is a cooperative effort involving the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General, Hudson and Union County Prosecutor’s Offices, and the Bayonne, Elizabeth, Jersey City, Linden, Plainfield and Union City Police Departments.

    The six church locations participating in the program are:
    Bayonne: Mount Carmel Roman Catholic Church, Parish Center, John Paul Room
    39 East 22nd Street
    Jersey City: Evangelismos Greek Orthodox Church
    661 Montgomery Street
    Union City: Saint Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church
    615 8th Street
    Elizabeth: New Zion Baptist Church
    800 Flora Street
    Linden: Morning Star Christian
    1009 Chandler Avenue
    Plainfield: Shiloh Baptist Church Annex
    525 West Fourth Street

    For more information visit www.nj.gov/guns or call 609-984-5828. The official
    press release from the Attorney General’s office is also online.

  • Power Station Crippled By Cyber Attack

    Last Sunday 100 million television viewers became aware of a power surge at a stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana. Very few Americans on the other hand are aware of dangers facing our electric grid and power plants. The danger comes to us with new coined terms such as cyber warfare, cyberstrikes, and cyber attack. In a speech today to a Georgetown University audience, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta warned his audience with the following, “I believe that it is very possible the next Pearl Harbor could be a cyber attack… [that] would have one hell of an impact on the United States of America. That is something we have to worry about and protect against.” For details read the Defense Department new release titled, “Panetta Warns Cyber Threat Growing Quickly”.

    What is just as alarming as the threat is the lack of news coverage about the current state of preparedness against computer attacks from either foreign terrorists or foreign countries. In a news article published in the New York Times, “Broad Powers Seen for Obama in Cyberstrikes” reporters David E. Sanger and Thom Shanker write the following, “The Department of Homeland Security recently announced that an American power station, which it did not name, was crippled for weeks by cyberattacks.” The incident was reported in a one sentence entry in paragraph 13 of the February 4th edition. Perhaps it is time John Q. Public be given more information by both the press and our elected officials.

    There are things each American can do to protect themselves against computer hackers and computer threats, even in their own home. You can become aware of actions you can take to protect your home computer. The Department of Homeland Security’s United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) has issued a Securing Your Web Browser report. Read it, study it, pass it on to your organization IT Department, but don’t think that computer security is someone else’s job.

  • Environmental Christmas List

    For the past year or more there has been a renewed sense of purpose in my household. Perhaps it had something to do with the presidential election, the odd weather, or a change in food habits. Put them all together and I have a list of wishes for the coming year.
    1. Buy local.
    2. Raise awareness of climate change, previously known as global warming.
    3. Support for family farmers.
    4. Reduction in the cost of organic food.
    5. Reduction in the influence of the special interests – nationally, state, even local.
    6. Elimination of poverty.
    7. Support for mass transit.
    8. Energy independence. A positive approach includes solar and wind power, energy conservation. Not “drill, baby, drill”.
    9. Green power.
    10. A continuation of the efforts started by Occupy Wall Street.
    11. Making CSA a household name.
    12. Parks available for all children.

    Suggested reading material
    1. Why Buy Locally Owned?
    2. Climate Change and Global Warming
    Chasing Ice documentary film
    3. Family Farms, why family farms important
    Farm Aid, more than just an annual concert
    4. Why is organic food more expensive than conventional food?, U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
    10 reasons organic food is so expensive, Fox News/The Daily Meal
    5. Center for Responsive Politics
    U.S. PIRG
    6. Half in Ten
    Anti-Poverty Network of New Jersey
    7. PublicTransportation.org
    Tri-State Transportation Campaign
    8. National Center for Appropriate Technology
    9. Energy Savers Guide, U.S. Department of Energy
    New Jersey’s Clean Energy Program, Office of Clean Energy
    10. Occupy Wall Street
    11. CSA = Community Supported Agriculture. CSA – LocalHarvest
    Bloomfield-Montclair CSA
    12. How Cities Use Parks to Help Children Learn