2020-07-11 - The Southern Ocean Times

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SOUTHERN OCEAN Times

The

Vol. 8 - No. 3

In This Week’s Edition

MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS

JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM

Looking Toward Shore’s Past, Future Hurricanes

Push For Homeless Shelter Continues

BREAKING NEWS @

jerseyshoreonline.com

Dear Joel Page 11

Dr. Izzy’s Sound News Page 14

Dear Pharmacist Page 15

Inside The Law

Superstorm Sandy did major damage to the shore area. By Patricia A. Miller OCEAN COUNTY The ominous weather reports before Hurricane Sandy hit just before Halloween in October 2012 were not anything you’d want to hear. Neither were the police officers driving down our street warning us to leave before noon the following Monday. We had to sign paperwork that Friday night acknowledging that if we

did not leave, the township was not responsible for anything that happened to us or to our home. We signed. We had never been ordered to leave our Bayville neighborhood before. We left. In the end, we couldn’t return home for seven months, until the house was repaired. Sandy was within 50 miles of the New Jersey coast before it hit in Brigantine as an extratropical

─Photo by Chris Raia

cyclone. The storm pep- ticularly on Long Beach pered the Jersey Shore Island and the Barnegat with hurricane-force Peninsula, where the winds, record low pres- Seaside Heights boardsure, and a huge storm walk collapses into the surge along the coast. ocean.” Sandy took the most “The storm becomes the worst hurricane to affect lives, compared to a the state on record, kill- storm in August 1806 ing 37 and causing nearly storm, which killed 21 $30 billion in damages,” residents. according to the NationGovernor Chris Christie al Oceanic and Atmo- said the losses caused by spheric Administration Sandy were “going to be (NOAA). “Widespread almost incalculable...The devastation is noted, par- (Hurricane - See Page 4)

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Volunteers Perform Social Services While Social Distancing

By Chris Lundy TOMS RIVER – How can you serve people when you’re not allowed to go near them? That’s the problem that service organizations like the Salvation Army have had to wrestle with since the onset of COVID-19. Social

distancing regulations are still very important, which makes them adjust their operations in order to still help people in need, said Major Stephen Ditmer of the Salvation Army on Route 37 in Toms River. “We had to scale way

back in gatherings,” he said. Even now that the state is slowly reopening, they still have to be outside. The big dining area inside the building on Route 37 is not open for those in need right now, he said. Instead of dinners, they serve

takeaway on Thursday nights. The line starts at 4:30 p.m. and lasts for the better part of an hour. There’s a line and people are told to keep six feet apart. However, the homeless population isn’t plugged into social media so they aren’t aware of every

July 11, 2020

detail of the COVID-19 situation. “The barrage of behavioral instruction via social media is not getting to them,” he said, at least in the beginning of the pandemic. The food pantry is open five days a week (Social - See Page 12)

By Chris Lundy TOMS RIVER – A local councilman is renewing his plea to have a homeless shelter built in Ocean County. Currently, the county places the homeless in temporary housing. This solves the short term problem of shelter, but not the root cause of homelessness, Councilman Terrance Turnbach said. While in these motels, they continue to have access to drugs and alcohol; any behavioral issues are not checked. “If we do not address the underlying issues causing an individual to be homeless, we are akin to hamsters running on a wheel. It is time to admit that providing money for people to stay in motels is not a plan that will meaningfully address chronic homelessness,” he said. Toms River opened Riverwood Park Recreation Center off Whitesville Road for Code Blue during nights in the winter. This is a statewide regulation that opens shelters when the temperature reaches freezing. It is run by the nonprofit Just Believe, Inc. According to their figures, there were 193 different people who stayed in the Toms River shelter overnight last winter. During the winter of 2018-2019, that number was 178. These figures do not include those who stayed in other places that were open for Code Blue. Based on these numbers alone, Turnbach said the county’s plan is not working. “Respectfully we must reset our approach to addressing homelessness. The end goal cannot be providing temporary shelter. The end goal must be transitioning individuals into permanent housing,” he said. A shelter would provide people with not only a roof over their heads, but supervision and services that address the reasons that they are homeless in the first place. Shelter Location Part of the problem with homeless shelters is that people don’t want them in their back yard. The site would also need to be near jobs and public transportation, which means it wouldn’t be hidden away. Turnbach said the ideal location for a transitional housing facility would be where a shut down hotel presently is. (Homelessness - See Page 12)

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