
DOVER BEACHES NORTH, NJ - OCTOBER 29: A machine works on a demolition of a house one year after being partially destroyed by Superstorm Sandy, October 29, 2013 in Dover Beach North, New Jersey. Hurricane Sandy made landfall last year on October 29th near Brigantine, New Jersey and affected 24 states from Florida to Maine and cost the country an estimated $65 billion.(Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images)DOVER BEACHES NORTH, NJ - OCTOBER 29: A machine works on a demolition of a house one year after being partially destroyed by Superstorm Sandy, October 29, 2013 in Dover Beach North, New Jersey. Hurricane Sandy made landfall last year on October 29th near Brigantine, New Jersey and affected 24 states from Florida to Maine and cost the country an estimated $65 billion. (Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images)
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A New Jersey legislative committee is using a hearing to chide Gov. Chris Christie for not producing quarterly reports on monitoring of Superstorm Sandy rebuilding projects.
The Assembly’s State and Local Government committee’s hearing is scheduled for Monday morning.
READ MORE: 3 Montgomery County School Districts To Require Masks Again Due To County's COVID-19 LevelSome members of the committee are upset about how the administration has responded to a March 2013 law requiring independent monitors to oversee Sandy projects that cost more than $5 million.
READ MORE: WATCH LIVE: Delaware County DA To Announce Charges Against Bus Driver Accused Of Taking Illicit Photos Of Teenage StudentsSo far, the Legislature has not received any of the quarterly reports called for in the law.
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