THE STATE HAS ADVISED THAT ELECTRONICALLY STOLEN SNAP/WFNJ BENEFITS ARE NO LONGER BEING REPLACED. THE STATE IS CREATING SAFETY FEATURES WHICH WILL BE COMING OUT SOON.
Published on February 27, 2019
Morris County Sheriff James M. Gannon's Hope One mobile substance abuse recovery and resource program was featured in a segment that aired Feb. 23 and Feb. 24 on MeTV's "Jersey Matters" program.
Morris County Sheriff James M. Gannon was interviewed Feb. 19, 2019, about his Hope One mobile substance abuse recovery and resource program by "Jersey Matters" Journalist Kimberly Kravitz in Morristown.
MeTV Correspondent Kimberly Kravitz met with Sheriff Gannon and the Hope One staff at the vehicle's stop on Feb. 19 outside Bethel AME Church in Morristown. As Hope One approaches its second anniversary of operations, Kravitz spotlighted the 6,200 contacts staff has had with addicted individuals and their families and friends, and how anyone can be trained aboard the Hope One vehicle in the life-saving administration of Narcan, the opioid-reversal spray.
"I think the message is there's hope. There's hope. This all begins with hope. I've seen some tremendous success stories here," Sheriff Gannon said in the interview.
If you missed it, watch the segment here:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHFX0bLFaj0