Camden County Office of Emergency Management issues “Code Blue”

The Camden County Office of Emergency Management declared that Camden County will be under a Code Blue Advisory from for the following dates and times due to projected dangerously low temperatures by the National Weather Service:

Friday January 23, 7:00 p.m. – Wednesday January 28, 7:00 a.m.

• Projected temperature: Between 3°F and 30°F

Code Blue Advisories are declared when the National Weather Service predicts that the temperature is 32 degrees Fahrenheit or lower, or the wind chill temperature will be zero degrees Fahrenheit or lower for a period of two hours or more.

“As temperatures fall to dangerously low levels, it is critical that our residents have access to a safe place to stay warm,” said Commissioner Jonathan Young, liaison to the Camden County Department of Public Safety. “We urge everyone to check in on vulnerable neighbors, ensure heating systems are working properly, and bring pets indoors.”

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Camden County is Prepared For Severe Winter Storm

(Lindenwold, NJ) – As a heavy winter storm is forecasted to impact South Jersey beginning Sunday, Jan. 25 into Monday, Jan. 26, the Camden County Board of Commissioners and the Camden County Department of Public Works are prepared to handle any and all emergencies due to the weather. Southern New Jesey is expected to receive anywhere from 8 -12 inches of snow.

“We have not seen a snowstorm of this magnitude and severity in over a decade. The safety of the residents of Camden County is paramount and our number one priority,” said Commissioner Jonathan Young, liaison to the Department of Public Safety. “The more people we have out on the roads, the greater chance there is of an emergency situation unfolding. If it is not absolutely necessary, please stay home, and off the roads.”

Camden County’s Department of Public Works and Camden County Parks Department will be working throughout the duration of the storm to ensure that county roadways are passable, and to respond to downed trees and debris. Additionally, due to the impeding inclement weather, all branches of the Camden County Library System will be closed on Sunday, Jan. 25.

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Super Bowl Hoagie Sale at CC Tech Schools

Super Bowl Sunday, February 8th @ 10AM – 2PM

Camden County Technical Schools (CCTS) is hosting a 10” hoagie sale as a fundraiser on Super Bowl Sunday! Help support your community’s sports! Proceeds benefit various sports programs at the Campus of CCTS. Hoagies are $10 each! To learn more, Click Here.

Get Connected with Your Government

At Town Halls, Public Meetings, Our App, or Social Media

Camden County provides several ways for residents to stay informed and connected with local government, including this weekly newsletter, our social media channels, and live meetings. Camden County Board of Commissioners and Congressman Donald Norcross will be scheduling new Town Hall meetings with all levels of government as soon as possible. If you need assistance, we will forward inquiries to the appropriate level of government. Click Here to submit questions.

The Camden County Board of Commissioners holds public Monthly Meetings at 520 Market St, 6th Floor, in Camden. The next Caucus Meeting will be on TuesdayFebruary 17th, and the next Monthly Commissioner Meeting will be on ThursdayFebruary 19th. These meetings help the community stay up-to-date on county proceedings. Click Here to watch meetings online.

Take Camden County with you wherever you go! The Camden County App is our free mobile resource that serves as a one stop source for all of Camden County’s services, events, concerts, programs, weather alerts, and more. Stay connected on the go, available for both iPhone and Android. Click Here to download the app.
Need to contact your elected representatives? Click here: Local | County | State | Federal

Virtua Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital Recognized for Excellence with ACC Transcatheter Valve Certification

The American College of Cardiology (ACC) has recognized Virtua Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital for its expertise and commitment to high-quality care for patients undergoing transcatheter valve repair and replacement procedures. The hospital earned Transcatheter Valve Certification in December 2025 following a comprehensive evaluation of its multidisciplinary team structure, formalized training processes, shared decision-making practices, and performance in national clinical registries.

“Virtua Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital has demonstrated its commitment to providing Southern New Jersey with excellent heart care,” said Deepak L. Bhatt, MD, MPH, FACC, chair of the ACC Accreditation Management Board. “ACC Accreditation Services is proud to award Virtua Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital with Transcatheter Valve Certification.”

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Attention Camden County Seniors

Camden County Government, NJ offers a free Senior Snow Removal Program for qualifying elderly (65+) and disabled residents, using Dept. of Corrections crews to clear snow from driveways/walkways after storms, but it requires residents to call after each event to request service (856-783-4808 ext. 5035); crews work during daylight (8AM-3PM) and don’t supply salt.

How the Program Works:

Eligibility: Seniors (65+) and people with disabilities who live in Camden County.

Activation: Only after at least 4 inches of snow has fallen and stopped.

Requesting Service: You must call after each snowfall to request help: 856-783-4808, ext. 5035.

Service Details: Crews clear sidewalks and driveways during daylight (8 AM – 3 PM) in the order calls are received.

What’s Provided: Shoveling/plowing (equipment provided by Dept. of Corrections).

What’s Not Provided: Salt or ice melt; residents can supply their own for crews to spread.

Restrictions: No guaranteed arrival times, and contact/gifts between crews and residents are prohibited.

President Trump Should Restore Crucial Trade Wins From His First Term

By Jeffrey Gerrish

President Donald Trump is wasting no time completing the ambitious goals left unfinished after his first term.

Soon, he’ll have a rare opportunity to complete another critical piece of unfinished business: ending the exploitation of U.S. businesses by our two largest trading partners, Canada and Mexico.

In the coming months, the United States will undertake a scheduled review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA — the landmark trade deal reached during President Trump’s first term. During that review, the administration will have the chance to restore crucial intellectual property protections that Democrats insisted be dropped after the deal was first negotiated.

I was involved in the negotiation of the USMCA as President Trump’s deputy U.S. trade representative. The president’s goal was to replace the disastrous North American Free Trade Agreement with a modern pact that would protect American workers, innovators, and businesses. A central part of that was strengthening intellectual property protections.

Yet before the deal could take effect, Democrats in Congress stripped out several key protections. For example, we had secured commitments from Mexico and Canada to provide 10 years of regulatory data protection for certain new medicines. Regulatory data protection provides temporary protection for the confidential information that drug developers share with authorities to prove a medicine is safe and effective before it can be sold. House Democrats led efforts to remove this provision, claiming that stronger protections would raise drug prices.

That’s nonsense. The United States already provides 12 years of regulatory data protection, so the change wouldn’t have altered the U.S. market. Removing it has only allowed Canadian and Mexican firms to more easily copy U.S.-made drugs.

Democrats weakened other key IP protections negotiated as part of USMCA, opening the door for Canada and Mexico to undercut U.S. innovators.

Mexico’s failures are especially troubling. In the U.S. trade representative’s most recent Special 301 Report — an annual report spotlighting foreign IP violations — Mexico was placed on the Priority Watch List for “long-standing and significant” concerns, including rampant counterfeiting and piracy.

And Canada has its own shortcomings. It is on the Special 301 Watch List and continues to impose drug price controls that undervalue American-made medicines and exacerbate foreign free-riding on U.S. innovation.

By fixing prices below market value, Canada — like many wealthy nations — forces companies to absorb losses abroad, making it harder to fund new research and pushing a greater share of costs onto American patients. President Trump is actively working to resolve this imbalance as part of lowering drug prices for U.S. patients — and fixing the USMCA is an important place to start.

The needed reforms are straightforward. Create enforceable, verifiable standards mandating respect for IP. Restore the 10-year regulatory data protection standard originally negotiated as part of the USMCA in 2018. Require Canada to abandon price controls and devote a higher, fairer level of spending to new drug development. And enforce full compliance with existing requirements.

The Trump administration now has the opportunity to finish the job it started in the first term on IP protection under the USMCA. For the sake of American workers and innovators, it must not let this opportunity go to waste.

Ambassador Jeffrey Gerrish served as the deputy U.S. trade representative for Asia, Europe, the Middle East and industrial competitiveness from 2018 to 2020. This piece originally appeared in Newsweek.

Winslow Township Announces New Chatbot!

Introducing the all new Winslow Township chatbot called “Ask Winnie”!
Text “Hello” to (833) 434-0700 to get started or open the My Winslow app and click on the chatbot button!
Through Ask Winnie you can find the answers to most questions, and it will even enter a service ticket for you that will go to staff for things that need additional follow up – such as missed trash.
Keep your questions brief for best response – such as “missed trash” or “dog license”.

Resorts Casino Hotel Announces Two Major Capital Improvement Projects

Significant infrastructure upgrades underway at Resorts Casino Hotel
underscore their long-term commitment to Atlantic City
 
 

Resorts Casino Hotel announced two significant capital projects designed to strengthen the property’s infrastructure, enhance guest experience, and support long-term operational efficiency. The investments include the replacement of five cooling towers and a comprehensive restoration of the Ocean Tower façade. 

Cooling Tower Replacement Project 

Resorts is moving forward with the replacement of five 40-year-old cooling towers from the center roof with a brand-new energy efficient system. Also being replaced is the roof and structural steel that support the towers. The new system will improve energy efficiency by maintaining cooling and refrigeration throughout the property with usage-based demand. Other advantages of the new cooling towers include: 

  • Improved reliability and performance  
  • Enhanced energy efficiency  
  • Modernized technology to reduce environmental impact  
  • Greater resilience during peak seasonal demand  
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Members of New Jersey’s Congressional Delegation Release Joint Statement 

New Jersey delegation members including U.S. Senators Andy Kim (D-NJ), and Cory Booker (D-NJ), and U.S. Representatives Frank Pallone (NJ-06), Mikie Sherrill (NJ-11), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ-12), Nellie Pou (NJ-09), Rob Menendez (NJ-08), Herb Conaway (NJ-03), LaMonica McIver (NJ-10), and Donald Norcross (NJ-01) released the following statement opposing the recently announced decision by the Department of Transportation to halt previously allocated federal dollars that would have gone towards improving New Jersey’s transit infrastructure:

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