Ah, the New Jersey Legislature is back from their summer break on September 12, and boy, are we in for a treat! What could possibly go wrong when dozens of elected officials gather in Trenton to decide the fate of the Garden State? Strap in, folks—because it’s going to be a wild ride of questionable decisions and unintended consequences.
Let’s start with the obvious: banning straws. Because clearly, the biggest threat to New Jersey’s future isn’t crumbling infrastructure or sky-high property taxes—it’s plastic straws. One can only imagine the innovative ways our lawmakers will take this a step further. Perhaps they’ll outlaw plastic utensils next? Maybe a ban on paper plates for good measure? By the time they’re done, we might be eating our takeout with our bare hands. Because who needs convenience when we can save the planet one minuscule, inconvenient step at a time?
And then there’s the looming ban on leaf blowers. Say goodbye to peaceful Saturday mornings in the fall, when your neighbor’s leaf blower serenades you out of bed at the crack of dawn. But instead of outlawing only the noise pollution, why not go the extra mile? Let’s ban rakes while we’re at it, because those are practically medieval torture devices. Better yet, why not make it a law that everyone has to leave the leaves on their lawns? We can rebrand it as “natural landscaping.” Nature is in, right?
Of course, no legislative session would be complete without the inevitable push to ban gasoline-powered cars. Because nothing says “we’re ready for the future” like forcing everyone to trade in their reliable, fossil-fuel-guzzling vehicles for electric ones they can’t afford. And let’s not forget the charging stations we’ll need to build on every street corner, powered by… wait, what exactly? Oh, right, the very fossil fuels we’re trying to eliminate. But hey, at least we’ll feel good about pretending to be eco-friendly while sitting in a gridlocked traffic jam.
As for new ways to tax residents? Don’t worry, they’ve got that covered. Whether it’s a “luxury” tax on your morning coffee or a surcharge on the air you breathe, there’s always a fresh idea for shaking down hard-working New Jerseyans. After all, how else are we going to pay for the shiny new laws that no one asked for?
But let’s not forget about the pièce de résistance—new ways to offer benefits, jobs, houses, and loans to everyone who isn’t a tax-paying citizen. Because nothing says “welcome to New Jersey” like a complex web of incentives designed to make sure everyone but you can afford to live here.
So, as the New Jersey Legislature prepares to reconvene, we can all look forward to the next batch of head-scratching laws and regulations that will no doubt make life here just a little more complicated—and a lot more expensive. Cheers to progress! Or whatever it is they’re calling it these days.
No legislative schedule has been announced, so what they will be voting on at this point is your guess is as good as ours.