New Jersey officials are demanding answers after another round of flooding left communities in Oradell, New Milford, and River Edge under water.
ORADELL, New Jersey -- New Jersey officials are demanding answers after another round of damaging flooding.
Friday was a frightening morning for residents living along the bank of the Hackensack River, as the water rose and swallowed up several blocks of homes.Residents said they did not get notified that the Hackensack River was swelling and could not hold the excessive amount of rain that came into the area on Thursday night.
Local officials want utility company Veolia Suez to release critical information and requested a meeting.
Norge Siste Nytt, Norge Overskrifter
Similar News:Du kan også lese nyheter som ligner på denne som vi har samlet inn fra andre nyhetskilder.
Restoring cost-of-living hikes for N.J. public worker pensions gets new life as inflation soarsThis is the latest chapter in the reforms Gov. Chris Christie and state lawmakers installed a decade ago to overhaul New Jersey's pubic-worker pension system.
Les mer »
Lots of new truckers are on the road, and many are from N.J.New Jersey had the third-largest percentage increase in the number of truck drivers of the 50 states.
Les mer »
N.J. is OK with pump-your-own gas — but there’s a catch, new poll showsThe poll comes as state lawmakers consider ending New Jersey ban on self-serve gas.
Les mer »
Officials identify man killed in N.J. capital city shootingThe Mercer County Homicide Task Force was investigating the killing of a 31-year-old Trenton man on Saturday, a spokeswoman said.
Les mer »
Man gets 375 years in 2016 NJ slayings of woman, 2 kidsAn Essex County judge imposed three consecutive life terms on 31-year-old Jeremy Arrington and consecutive sentences on other counts.
Les mer »
NJ woman debuts second food truck at her former high schoolMegan Hilbert is growing South Jersey's women-owned food truck scene with Red's Rolling Restaurants I & II.
Les mer »