asbury park press front page wednesday, oct. 14 2015
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Asbury Park Press front page for Wednesday, Oct. 14 2015.TRANSCRIPT
Get into the ZoneIN SPORTS: Complete high school gridiron coverageAPP.COM: Video highlights, photo galleries and more on football.APP.COM/ROADSHOW: Catch APP’s Red Zone Road Show featuring Manalapan & Middletown South.
As you think of ways to spend time outdoors this fall, addarea downtowns. With the variety of restaurants lining theirstreets, we promise you won’t leave hungry. STORY, 1D
TABLE
You can alwaysgo downtown
ASBURY PARK PRESS :: MONMOUTH EDITION APP.COM $1.00
WEDNESDAY 10.14.15
VOLUME 136
NUMBER 246
SINCE 1879
ADVICE 5DCLASSIFIED 1ECOMICS 4DLOCAL 3AOBITUARIES 15A
OPINION 18ASPORTS 1CTABLE 1DWEATHER 8CYOUR MONEY 14A
Fourth in a weeklong series
This summer, a single word on Jim Jablonski’s ther-mostat told more about Trenton’s property tax reformgridlock than a thousand political speeches.
That word was “off.”Jablonski set his air conditioner to off because he
could no longer afford to cool his home and pay his$9,438 in annual property taxes at the same time.
The choice was not pleasant. The persistent heat seta new state record, yet the 62-year-old Millstone Town-ship resident didn’t flick on the AC even when the tem-peratures cracked 90 more than a dozen times.
The retired Exxon refinery chemical plant electri-cian said he has to stretch a fixed income to cover hisproperty taxes. He thinks the levy would be about a
Spending inTrenton stillspiraling outof control Proposed bills wouldadd $2.8B in three yearsBOB JORDAN @BOBJORDANAPPMICHAEL SYMONS @MICHAELSYMONS_
See TAXES, Page 4A
He says he’s used to hearing classmates in the hall-ways whisper hurtful things about the way he dressesand looks. His peers at his Monmouth County highschool think he’s a girl who likes to wear boys’ clothes.
But the student, 16, is actually transgender: The gen-der he was assigned at birth does not completely matchhis gender identity. On most days he identifies as maleeven though he was born female.
So when he wears a brace to mask the female shapeof his body and dons loose jeans, hoodies and T-shirts,
Can policies protectN.J.’s transgenderstudents at school? KAREN YI @KAREN_YI
See GENDER, Page 13A
EXCLUSIVE BEING TRANSGENDER IN SCHOOL
LAS VEGAS Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sen. Ber-nie Sanders clashed on U.S. involvement in the MiddleEast, gun control and economic policy as they openedthe first Democratic debate Tuesday, outlining compet-ing visions for a party seeking to keep the White Housefor a third straight term.
Clinton was an aggressor from the start, an unex-pected shift for a candidate who has barely mentionedher Democratic rivals since launching her campaignsix months ago. Until now, Clinton and Sanders — whohas emerged as her toughest competition — have cir-cled each other cautiously and avoided personal at-tacks.
After Sanders, a self-described democratic social-ist, derided “a casino capitalist process by which so fewhave so much,” Clinton said it would be a “big mistake”for the U.S. to turn its back on the system that built theAmerican middle class. Asked whether she thoughtSanders, who has a mixed record on gun control legisla-tion, had been tough enough on the issue, she said sim-ply,” No, I do not.”
Sanders defended his gun control record, and calledfor better mental health services, stricter backgroundchecks and closing a loophole that exempts gun showsfrom background checks
The two also tangled over foreign policy, an issuewhere Clinton is often more hawkish than others in theDemocratic Party. The former secretary of state reit-erated her call for more robust U.S. action to stop theSyrian civil war and defended her judgment on interna-tional issues, despite having voted for the 2002 invasionof Iraq.
Sanders called the Iraq war “the worst foreign pol-icy blunder in the history of our country” and said hewould not support sending American combat troopsback to the Middle East to fight terrorism.
DEMS CLASH ONGUNS, ECONOMY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Democratic presidential candidates from left, former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Hillary RodhamClinton, former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley and former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee take the debate stage Tuesday.
Clinton, Sanders tangle as frontrunnersas O’Malley, Webb, Chafee join debate
JULIE PACE AND LISA LERER ASSOCIATED PRESS
Clinton said it
would be a “big
mistake” for the
U.S. to turn its
back on the
system that built
the American
middle class.
See DEBATE, Page 13A
Sanders derided
“a casino
capitalist process
by which so few
have so much.”
DEMOCRATS DEBATE AMID PARTY SHIFT PAGE 1B