Dianne DeOliveira
In light of recent recalls in NJ, how safe is our food supply?
A number of food recalls in New Jersey over the past two weeks alone, including everything from baby food to granola bars, might have you questioning the safety of the food supply.
Hurricane season is coming soon: Are you prepared?
Some of Superstorm Sandy's disastrous effects are still with us. It's National Hurricane Preparedness Week — are you ready?
Ocean County job fair offers job-interview outfits for those in need
The Mental Health Association in New Jersey has a 35 percent success rate in helping people gain employment through this event.
NJ boaters shell out big bucks, helping keep local economy afloat
New Jersey boat owners take about five trips out on the water per month.
NJ homeowners say they have proof of FEMA ‘fraud’ on Sandy claims
Fed up with what they say is fraud, delays and denials with Sandy-related flood insurance claims, the group Stop FEMA Now on Thursday takes its fight to Washington, D.C., backed by more than 200 homeowners from New Jersey and New York.
A bus caravan was expected to depart from seven locations from Marlton to Staten Island, headed for a rally on Capitol Hill...
Return to the Jersey Shore: NY, North Jersey residents fuel real estate boom
Low inventory is helping sellers get the prices they want and even leading to bidding wars, one real estate experts says.
Is your child addicted to video games? NJ therapist’s advice for parents
Tablets and computer games can be educational and stimulating, but they can also take kids away from life.
Congressman: Funding for NJ beach replenishments at risk
Beach replenishment is critical to New Jersey's $43 billion tourism industry, and most of that is due to people visiting the beaches, U.S. Rep Frank LoBiondo says.
NJ heroin epidemic leaving a growing number of children without their parents
Among the victims of New Jersey's struggle with a heroin-addiction epidemic are children whose parents are jailed or admitted into drug treatment programs.
The key to helping those in mental health crises
If you encountered someone experiencing a mental crisis, would you know how to approach them? Most people wouldn't:
NJ sees steady decrease in motor vehicle fatalities
After years of decline and a historic low in 2014, figures from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration show road deaths increased by 9 percent last year nationally, but not in New Jersey.
Are senior citizens really lonely? Maybe not, study says
But those in cities are lonelier than those in the suburbs, and Democrats are lonelier than Republicans, the study finds.