Dumping (Rain, Outrage Opportunities) – Monday’s Roundup

Dumping
This weekend’s rare July nor’easter dumped loads of rain across South Jersey, and in one Absecon Island town, it also dumped an opportunity for civic outrage. A crowd of about 60 people (the Press of Atlantic City reports) collected on the beach at Delavan Avenue Sunday to demand public officials “Fix our beach!” after stormwater runoff, blocked by the unpopular and probably vindictive dune project, formed a pop-up swamp on their formerly pristine sands. Beachgoers now had to wade through “Lake Margate” as it was being called to get to the ocean. Margate homeowners–many of them–didn’t want the dunes in the first place.

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Schools, Weekend Weather – Friday’s Roundup

Schools
School enrollment across New Jersey is flat, but more than half of the state’s school districts are in decline, particularly in the Northwest and South. We have mapped school district enrollment change in percentage terms from 2010 through the last school year and found some interesting details – read our analysis and check out the interactive map. The story of a shrinking population in Atlantic County since the recession and casino closures is well known. But did you know that districts such as Buena Regional, Avalon, Margate and Ventnor are still declining? It is also interesting to look at how districts such as Haddonfield, with its train station and walkable downtown, are seeing a rise in enrollment.

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Pinelands Pipeline II, Beaches – Thursday’s Roundup

Yesterday the Pinelands Commission heard public comments on (a second) proposal to build a gas pipeline through the northern section of the protected pines. As Joe Hernandez reports for Newsworks, the Commission had previous rubber-stamped the pipeline with no public comment, so this was the first time residents were getting an opportunity to have their say.

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Flood-Area Home Buyouts, Cyberthreats, The Other Dashcam Story – Tuesday’s Roundup

A national environmental group is urging FEMA to create a voluntary buyout program that would help homeowners in flood-prone areas reduce their insurance costs. The current program, which pays out taxpayer funds to rebuild homes, ‘traps’ homeowners, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council. The NRDC proposes buying out homes that have frequently flooded.

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Online Gaming Story, Jewish Farmers – Tuesday’s Roundup

The Brigantine local who won the World Series of Poker on Sunday attributed his success to practice on New Jersey’s legal online gaming sites. “Two weeks ago, I was just a New Jersey online grinder and nothing’s really changed,” Scott Blumstein, a 25-year-old with an accounting degree from Philadelphia’s Temple University, told reporters (the Associated Press).

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Last Week’s Roundup Podcast

Too little time to read our weekday emails? Or stuck in shore traffic and looking to catch up on the local news? Now you can download and find our Route 40 Roundups summarized in a weekly podcast format by our fantastic intern Steve Harrison. Subscribe via iTunes, Soundcloud or your favorite podcast platform.

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Beach Spreading, Foreclosures, Atlantic City Crust – Thursday’s Roundup

We’ve all been on the beach next to the group that just – you know – keeps spreading. Chairs, towels. Maybe tents, and even tables have been witnessed. Amy Rosenberg covers the phenomenon of beach spreading in Sea Isle, where she encountered “a stretch of beach dotted with 6-by-6 portable cabanas, 10 by 10 canopies, half-moon baby tents, folding end-tables, a 12-by-12 canopy, wading pools, rafts the size of a twin bed and other elements of these elaborate compounds.”

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