News

Consumers in ‘very sour mood’ as inflation outpaces wages

The prices of gas, home energy and food all spiked by double digits over the past month, but wages aren't keeping up, with annual inflation now topping 9%. "It’s leading to a very sour mood,” said James W. Hughes, dean emeritus at Rutgers University’s Edward J....

Traffic cameras could reduce racial profiling, Rutgers study finds

Perceptions among state and federal policymakers that the public opposes the installation of speed cameras has made the technology rare despite the fact it could reduce racial profiling and minimize police-driver interactions, according to a Rutgers study recently...

NJ employee payout limits lack legal enforcement

When the Legislature passed laws in 2007 and 2010 designed to save taxpayers money by limiting sick leave cash-outs for local public employees, it did not explicitly add an enforcement mechanism. And that may be one of the reasons why the Office of...

NJ alleges familiar benefits fraud in Wildwood

When we saw the words "health benefits fraud" in a headline recently, our first thought was finally, a step toward justice in the massive kickbacks to public employees in South Jersey for submitting bogus prescriptions to their lavishly funded state health...

Paul Wiedefeld MCRP ’81 joins VTC Advisory Board

Mr. Wiedefeld served as the General Manager/CEO of the Washington Metro, one of the nation’s largest transit systems serving more than 300 million passenger trips annually and with an annual $2.2 billion operating budget.

Equity implications of electric bikesharing in Philadelphia

Recent PhD grad Or Caspi examines how the integration of e-bikes influenced Indego’s usage in disadvantaged areas. In these regions, the users use shared e-bikes for commute, leisure, and other utilitarian purposes, while in the rest of the city, users use e-bikes...