Tag Archives: towns

Italian towns in Calabria will pay you $33K to move in

Why bother sweating out your mortgage every month when scenic, picture postcard towns in Italy will pay you to move there?

The Italian region of Calabria is percolating a plan to boost populations of dwindling towns by offering people up to $33,000 to move to sleepy hamlets with less than 2,000 inhabitants, according to CNN.

There are over seven towns to choose from, located in the mountains and on the ocean — but there are a few catches.

Hopefuls must commit to starting up a small business, either taking over an existing company or starting their own. And they need to be professionals that the towns are actively seeking, CNN reports. And Boomers need not apply: applicants have to be under 40 and willing to relocate within 90 days of approval.

“We’re honing the technical details, the exact monthly amount and duration of the funds, and whether to include also slightly larger villages with up to 3,000 residents,” Gianluca Gallo, a regional councilor, told CNN. “We’ve had so far a huge interest from villages and hopefully, if this first scheme works, more are likely to follow in coming years.”

The scheme has close to $1 million earmarked and will be launched in the coming weeks.
Stefano Cellai/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The project is called “active residency income,” and aims to boost the appeal of Calabria as a spot for “south-work” — the rebranded southern Italy version of remote working — explains Gianpietro Coppola, mayor of Altomonte, who contributed to the scheme.

He says it’s a more targeted approach to revitalizing small communities.

“We want this to be an experiment of social inclusion,” Coppola told CNN. “We want to draw people to live in the region, enjoy the settings, spruce up unused town locations such as conference halls and convents with high-speed internet.”

The scheme, which has over $850,000 earmarked, will be launched in the upcoming weeks and applications will be found online.

Small Italian communities hope to attract younger residents less than 40-years-old.
Stefano Cellai/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

More than 75 percent of the roughly 320 towns in Calabria have fewer than 5,000 people living there, according to CNN. Locals are fearful that some communities will fade away unless younger folks move in.

“The goal is to boost the local economy and breathe new life into small-scale communities,” Gallo said. “We want to make demand for jobs meet supply, that’s why we’ve asked villages to tell us what type of professionals they’re missing to attract specific workers.”

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Timberwolves’ Karl-Anthony Towns reflects on ’emotional’ night as father attends first game since Jackie Cruz-Towns’ death

NEW YORK — Before the Minnesota Timberwolves tipped off against the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night, Karl-Anthony Towns jogged over to the stands and reached out to grasp hands with a fan in a white No. 32 jersey that said “Towns” on the back. The fan was Karl-Anthony’s father, Karl Towns Sr.

The game, which the Timberwolves lost 112-107, was the first Towns Sr. had attended since his wife, Jackie Cruz-Towns, died from complications of COVID-19 on April 13, 2020.

After the game, Karl-Anthony Towns said his father being there meant “everything” to him.

“He understood how upset I was after the loss,” Towns said. “But he came to me, and he told me something I don’t know if he should’ve told me. It got me a little emotional. He told me my mom would’ve been proud with how I played tonight.”

Towns Sr. was one of the first fans in Barclays Center on Monday. He walked down the steps toward the court and smiled and waved as his son went through layup lines, snapping photos and videos.

“Me and my dad got emotional before the game,” Towns said. “Because he made his presence known. It affected me because my mom always did that.”

Cruz-Towns had been a constant presence at Timberwolves games. She would often sit near the court, visit with opposing players she had gotten to know over the years, and was known for loudly and excitedly cheering on her son.

“My mom would be the one to go at the stanchion,” Towns said Monday, “or be there and wave at me until I said hi to her or came and hugged her.”

Towns shared that his mother was in a medically induced coma and had been placed on a ventilator because of the virus on March 25, 2020. Towns Sr. had also been diagnosed with COVID-19, had been hospitalized and recovered. Cruz-Towns was 58 when she died.

Towns, who grew up in New Jersey, had roughly a dozen family members in attendance at Monday’s game to support him.

“It was really the first time having family watch me playing in person,” said Towns, who himself was diagnosed with COVID-19 in January. “And it’s crazy seeing my dad. I’m like, ‘Where’s my mom? She’s gonna come.’ And, obviously, she’s not gonna show up. That affected me, but I go out there and play the best I can for this team.”

Towns finished with 31 points, 12 rebounds and 5 assists, including key points down the stretch to help the Wolves claw back from a double-digit deficit. Afterward, he stayed and played tag with his niece and nephew on the court as Barclays Center employees turned the lights out.

“It’s emotional,” Towns Sr. told ESPN. “I’m glad to be back supporting him. It’s what she would’ve wanted, too.”

ESPN’s Royce Young contributed to this report.



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Vaccination rate increasing in Mass. as fewer towns in red zone

For the third week straight, Massachusetts health officials reported a decrease in the number of communities at the highest risk of coronavirus transmission. 

The Department of Public Health also released its weekly vaccine dashboard Thursday, which displayed a rise in both vaccinations and vaccine dose shipments to Massachusetts, though shots are being administered quicker than they’re arriving. 

Thursday’s town-by-town coronavirus risk data categorizes communities’ risk level on a scale from red, the highest, to gray, the lowest — this week officials reported 153 towns in the red zone, compared to 192 last Thursday, continuing along the same downward trend as the past few weeks. 

See this Thursday’s full town-by-town coronavirus data here

According to the state, 149,030 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been administered and reported in the last seven days, while 681,472 have been distributed overall. 

In total, 29,250 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were shipped to the Bay State in the last week, as well as 83,300 doses of Moderna’s vaccine. 

Officials reported that in total, 896,300 doses have been shipped to Massachusetts, marking a 31% dip from the previous week. 

While the state is making about 120,000 new vaccine appointments available this week, Gov. Charlie Baker urged patience at a press conference Wednesday, noting that most residents who are eligible may have to wait several weeks to schedule theirs. 

Baker’s administration has sparked frustration over the dragging pace of its distribution compared to most other states.

See this Thursday’s full weekly report on vaccinations here


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N.J. weather: Updated snowfall totals across state, with 25 inches already on the ground in some towns

Those snow accumulation numbers across New Jersey keep shooting up, with several towns now reporting as much as 25 inches on the ground — and one town with a measurement of 30 inches as of 7:20 p.m. Monday.

All that snow, and the monster winter storm still has a long way to go before it tapers down.

The top snow totals Monday morning were 8 to 9 inches, but during the afternoon hours when the storm intensified, accumulations jumped to as much as a 2 feet in some parts of the Garden State. The big leader so far is Mendham in Morris County, with a whopping 30 inches of snow reported by the National Weather Service Monday evening.

That is only 4 inches away from matching New Jersey’s all-time snowstorm record of 34 inches — a record that has stood for nearly 122 years. The elusive record was set during a multi-day storm that stretched from Feb. 11 to Feb. 14, 1899, in Cape May.

Among the other huge snowfall totals reported Monday evening were 28 inches in Sparta in Sussex County, 26 inches in Ledgewood and Long Valley in Morris County, and 25.8 inches in Randolph, also in Morris.

Here’s a rundown of the latest snowfall accumulations in each county, reported by the National Weather Service’s regional forecast offices in New Jersey and New York regional office, along with the Community Cooperative Rain, Hail & Snow Network, as of 4 p.m. Monday.

MORE: Track snowfall projections for your town with new interactive map

(Note: Most of the totals listed below are from the early afternoon and mid-afternoon, but some are measurements that were taken Monday morning and have not yet been updated. Additional updates will be posted Monday night.)

Atlantic County

  • Mays Landing: 3.0 inches
  • Pomona: 2.5 inches
  • Egg Harbor City: 1.8 inches
  • Hammonton: 1.6 inches
  • Egg Harbor Twp.: 1.3 inches
  • Somers Point: 1.0 inch

Bergen County

(updated 9:40 p.m. Monday)

  • Closter: 22.4 inches
  • Westwood: 20.0 inches
  • Mahwah: 18.5 inches
  • East Rutherford: 18.3 inches
  • Dumont: 17.5 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 17.5 inches
  • Northvale: 16.5 inches
  • Lyndhurst: 16.0 inches
  • Fair Lawn: 15.0 inches

Burlington County

  • Florence: 6.3 inches
  • Westampton: 6.1 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 5.6 inches
  • Lumberton: 5.5. inches
  • Columbus: 5.1 inches
  • Bordentown: 4.8 inches
  • Cooperstown: 4.1 inches
  • Moorestown: 3.8 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 3.7 inches
  • Southampton: 3.0 inches
  • Marlton: 2.8 inches
  • South Jersey Regional Airport: 2.8 inches

Camden County

  • Blackwood: 5.5 inches
  • Gloucester City: 5.1 inches
  • Haddon Heights: 5.1 inches
  • Springdale: 4.2 inches
  • Lindenwold: 4.0 inches

Cape May County

  • Goshen: 1.0 inch
  • Villas: 0.8 inches
  • Seaville: 0.5 inches

Cumberland County

  • Hopewell Twp.: 4.0 inches

Karen Lamberton of Montclair clears snow from her sidewalk as the white frozen stuff continues to pile up from the big winter storm on Monday, Feb. 1, 2021.Steve Hockstein | For NJ Advance Media

Essex County

(updated 9:40 p.m. Monday)

  • Essex Fells: 20.0 inches
  • West Orange: 18.2 inches
  • Newark Liberty Airport: 16.2 inches
  • Cedar Grove: 15.7 inches
  • North Caldwell: 15.0 inches
  • Verona: 14.3 inches
  • Millburn: 12.5 inches
  • South Orange: 12.5 inches
  • Caldwell Airport: 12.1 inches

Gloucester County

  • Greenwich Twp.: 4.3 inches
  • Mantua Twp.: 4.2 inches
  • Sewell: 3.0 inches
  • Westville: 3.0 inches
  • Malaga: 3.0 inches
  • Washington Twp.: 2.8 inches
  • Woodbury: 2.8 inches
  • Williamstown: 2.0 inches
  • Glassboro: 2.0 inches
  • Pitman: 1.4 inches

Hudson County

  • Harrison: 12.0 inches
  • Hoboken: 11.5 inches

Snow covers cars parked on East 12th Street in Bayonne during a winter storm on Monday, Feb. 1, 2021.

Hunterdon County

  • Whitehouse Station: 17.1 inches
  • Raritan Twp.: 15.0 inches
  • Flemington: 14.5 inches
  • Readington: 14 inches
  • Stanton: 13.0 inches
  • Lebanon: 10.2 inches
  • Clinton: 9.0 inches
  • Sand Brook: 8.6 inches

Mercer County

  • East Windsor: 9.5 inches
  • Hamilton: 8.8 inches
  • Princeton: 8.3 inches
  • Robbinsville: 8.2 inches
  • Ewing: 5.8 inches

Middlesex County

  • New Brunswick: 18.0 inches
  • South Plainfield: 17.0 inches
  • Port Reading: 16.5 inches
  • Iselin: 16.0 inches
  • East Brunswick: 15.0 inches
  • Perth Amboy: 15.0 inches
  • Woodbridge: 14.3 inches
  • Edison: 14.0 inches
  • Highland Park: 13.5 inches
  • Metuchen: 13.5 inches
  • Milltown: 13.0 inches
  • South River: 13.0 inches
  • North Brunswick: 12.0 inches
  • Carteret: 12.5 inches
  • South Brunswick: 11.5 inches
  • Plainsboro: 11.4 inches
  • Colonia: 11.2 inches
  • Old Bridge: 11.0 inches
  • Hopelawn: 10.5 inches
  • Avenel: 10.0 inches
  • Monroe / Rossmoor: 8.5 inches

Monmouth County

  • Union Beach: 16.0 inches
  • Holmdel: 13.5 inches
  • Belford: 12.0 inches
  • Keyport: 12.0 inches
  • Colts Neck: 11.5 inches
  • Freehold: 11.5 inches
  • Cliffwood: 11.0 inches
  • Hazlet: 11.0 inches
  • Manalapan: 9.8 inches
  • Marlboro: 9.5 inches
  • Eatontown: 8.7 inches
  • Keyport: 8.5 inches
  • Howell: 7.9 inches
  • Freehold Twp.: 7.7 inches
  • Atlantic Highlands: 6.8 inches
  • Deal: 6.5 inches
  • Long Branch: 6.0 inches
  • Leonardo: 5.0 inches
  • Wall Twp.: 5.0 inches

Morris County

  • Mendham: 30.0 inches (as of 7:20 p.m.)
  • Ledgewood: 26.0 inches
  • Long Valley: 26.0 inches
  • Randolph: 25.8 inches
  • Chester: 24.8 inches
  • Lake Hopatcong: 22.0 inches
  • Chatham: 20.3 inches
  • Green Pond: 20.0 inches
  • Netcong: 20.0 inches
  • Morris Twp.: 19.0 inches
  • Mendham: 18.5 inches
  • Flanders: 18.0 inches
  • Budd Lake: 17.0 inches
  • Long Hill Twp.: 16.0 inches
  • Montville: 15.0 inches
  • Morristown: 14.5 inches
  • Florham Park: 14.4 inches
  • Denville: 12.0 inches
  • Succasunna: 11.5 inches
  • Washington Twp.: 7.7 inches
  • East Hanover: 9.6 inches
  • Mountain Lakes: 9.5 inches

Ocean County

  • Jackson: 7.3 inches
  • Brick: 5.3 inches
  • Whiting: 5.0 inches
  • Forked River: 4.5 inches
  • Bayville: 4.0 inches
  • Toms River: 4.0 inches
  • Point Pleasant: 2.5 inches

Passaic County

  • Passaic: 15.9 inches
  • Bloomingdale: 15.7 inches
  • Totowa: 13.1 inches
  • West Milford: 12.3 inches
  • Wayne: 7.0 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 6.0 inches
  • Little Falls: 5.6 inches
  • Hawthorne: 5.0 inches

Salem County

  • Pennsville: 4.0 inches
  • Pilesgrove: 3.3 inches
  • Woodstown: 2.8 inches
  • Salem: 2.5 inches

Somerset County

  • Warren Twp.: 22.0 inches
  • Bridgewater: 20.2 inches
  • Basking Ridge: 19.5 inches
  • Somerville: 19.0 inches
  • Warrenville: 18.5 inches
  • North Plainfield: 17.4 inches
  • Manville: 17.3 inches
  • Branchburg: 17.0 inches
  • Somerset: 17.0 inches
  • Green Brook: 15.0 inches
  • Watchung: 15.0 inches
  • Hillsborough: 11.8 inches

Sussex County

  • Sparta: 28.3 inches
  • Stanhope: 25.3 inches
  • Hopatcong: 24.0 inches
  • Stanhope: 24.0 inches
  • Byram Twp.: 22.5 inches
  • Wantage: 15.5 inches
  • Pellettown: 12.5 inches
  • Stockholm: 12.0 inches
  • Vernon: 11.9 inches

Union County

  • Westfield: 13.0 inches
  • Roselle Park: 12.8 inches
  • Plainfield: 12.0 inches
  • Cranford: 10.5 inches
  • Springfield: 10.5 inches
  • Elizabeth: 8.4 inches
  • New Providence: 7.0 inches

Warren County

  • Allamuchy- Panther Valley: 23.0 inches
  • Frelinghuysen: 16.7 inches
  • Hackettstown: 16.0 inches
  • Hope: 16.0 inches
  • Stewartsville: 15.8 inches

Current weather radar

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Len Melisurgo may be reached at LMelisurgo@njadvancemedia.com. Tell us your coronavirus story or send a tip here.

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