The
SOUTHERN OCEAN Times Vol. 8 - No. 8
In This Week’s Edition
MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS
JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM
Plan To Grow Oyster Beds In Bay Still In Infancy
BREAKING NEWS @
jerseyshoreonline.com
Community News! Pages 8-10
Dr. Izzy’s Sound News Page 14
Dear Pharmacist Page 15
Inside The Law Page 17
−Photo courtesy Steve Evert Several winning decoy carvings are seen from a past Decoy and Gunning show held at Tip Seaman County Park, Tuckerton. By Patricia A. Miller TUCKERTON − Participants involved with the Tuckerton Oyster Reef in Barnegat Bay in southern Ocean County recently celebrated a birthday. The project, part of a partnership with Stockton University, Parsons Seafood and the American Littoral Society, just turned four years old. Located between Tuckerton and Beach Haven,
the project was born thanks to a grant from the Barnegat Bay Partnership. But it’s still just in the beginning stages. “This project is only a small step in what will likely take a lot of time and effort to establish a self-sustaining population in the Barnegat Bay,” said Dr. Christine Thompson, an associate professor of marine science at Stockton University. “The half-
acre footprint of the oysters on the reef is a tiny fraction of the 1,350 square miles of Barnegat Bay or the 89,000 hectares of oyster reefs explorer Henry Hudson had to navigate in 1609.” The new reef was expanded two years ago with more funding from the Barnegat Bay Partnership, the Jetty Rock Foundation and a new shell recycling (Oyster - See Page 4)
August 15, 2020
Officials: We’re Still Learning About COVID
By Chris Lundy OCEAN COUNTY – In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, the big question was “Is it here?” People looked up the numbers in the state, in the county, even in their own towns. Slowly, each town started to have some positive cases of COVID-19. This made people need even more information. Who had it? Where in town was it? Some members of the public even wanted to know what streets the people lived on. Now that it is here, people study the numbers differently. They see the large totals. They wonder when we might get past this. They wonder if it’ll ever go down. They wonder if the whole thing is blown out of proportion. The truth is that the numbers have always been a guideline rather than something set in stone. Daniel Regenye, Ocean County’s Public Health Coordinator, explained the numbers. The case counts show how many tests came back positive. It doesn’t show if someone got better. It doesn’t show if someone moved. There have also been issues where people’s zip codes don’t correspond to where they actually live. For example, there are people in Berkeley’s senior communities that have Toms River postal codes. Anecdotally, many people have a story of someone who had the symptoms but never got tested. Or, they got tested and got a false negative. So, they are not in that total, even (COVID - See Page 12)
Decoy And Gunning Show Going Virtual This Year
By Bob Vosseller TUCKERTON – The 38th Annual Old Time Barnegat Bay Decoy and Gunning Show won’t quite be the same this year. It is going virtual. The event’s hosts, t h e O c e a n C o u nt y Department of Parks
and Recreation and the Ocean County Board of Chosen Freeholders recently an nounced that this year, due to the ongoing coronavirus health crisis, the show will go virtual and all public events will be cancelled.
“This show is normally a two day event at Tip Seaman County Park in Tuckerton and it attracts thousands of people,” Ocean County Freeholder Virginia E. Haines, Chairwoman of the Ocean County Department of Parks
and Recreation said. “Because of safety c onc e r n s r e s u lt i ng from the coronavirus pandemic, we will not be holding the show this year but will bring some of the an nual highlights to the public (Show - See Page 4)
−Photo provided by Ocean County Several winning decoy carvings are seen from past Decoy and Gunning show held at Tip Seaman County Park, Tuckerton.
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