SOUTHERN OCEAN Times
The
Vol. 13 - No. 19
In This Week’s Edition
MICROMEDIA PUBLICATIONS
JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM
November 8, 2025
More Than A House: Why Flooding On Larry’s Home For Veterans In Need LBI Is Becoming The New Norm
BREAKING NEWS @
Photo courtesy Jo Lucas Flooding in low-lying areas is becoming more and more common.
jerseyshoreonline.com
Community News Pages 8-11
Dr. Izzy Sound News Page 14
Inside The Law Page 17
Classifieds Page 18
Photo by Stephanie Faughnan Nancy Robertiello cuts the ribbon to officially open Larry’s Home, with Just Believe founder Paul Hulse by her side. The emotional moment marked the fulfillment of a promise made in her son’s memory. By Stephanie Faughnan LITTLE EGG HARBOR - A little more than a year after a groundbreaking on an empty lot, dozens of people returned to the same spot on October 28 to witness the transformation that love, perseverance, and purpose made possible. Where bare earth once sat, a ranch-style home now stands tall beneath the American f lag.
Dubbed Larry’s Home, the four-bedroom residence serves as a lasting tribute to the vision of Just Believe, Inc., founder and CEO Paul Hulse. It is a project born from friendship, heartbreak and the shared determination of many who came together to bring Hulse’s inspiration to life as transitional housing for at-risk veterans. (House - See Page 4)
New Office Opens Serving Women, Infants, And Children
By Bob Vosseller OCEAN COUNTY – The Ocean County Health Department was joined by a large number of state, county and municipal officials recently when they cut the ribbon on its new Women, Infants, and Children Program (WIC) office at 1328 River Ave (Route 9), Seagull Square Mall in Lakewood. (Office - See Page 6)
Photo by Bob Vosseller Numerous Ocean County and State officials join staff of the Ocean County Health Department and special guests for the ribbon cutting of the new Ocean County Health Department WIC office.
By Stephanie Faughnan LONG BEACH ISLAND - When the October nor’easter churned its way up the East Coast, the winds and tides seemed relentless. For locals, it looked like yet another autumn storm. For scientists, it was a near-perfect illustration of what’s happening beneath the surface, both literally and climatologically. According to Dr. David A. Robinson, New Jersey’s State Climatologist at Rutgers University, fall coastal flooding isn’t unusual for the Jersey Shore. Some years bring more of it than others, but these seasonal events have always been part of the barrier island’s rhythm. What made the mid-October storm stand out wasn’t its strength, but its persistence. The nor’easter, Robinson explained, was a slow-moving low-pressure system that stalled just southeast of New Jersey. Over several days, steady easterly winds pushed ocean water toward the coast and into the bays. Because the storm lingered through multiple tidal cycles, new water arrived before the previous high tide could recede. The back bays, unable to drain fast enough, bore the brunt of the flooding, a pattern increasingly common across the central Jersey Shore. The Back Bay Problem For homeowners on LBI, flooding from the bay has become more than a storm-season worry. Robinson said the science behind it is clear: “Sea level continues to rise along the Jersey coast and is expected to accelerate throughout the remainder of the 21st century, and beyond.” Because bayfront properties tend to sit lower (Flooding - See Page 5)
The Risk That Didn’t Die With Him 10