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I was having very similar thoughts. I have already seen several New Jersey municipality pages that have already been updated (as early as last night) to reflect the election results, as if the results were certified and the candidate was in office already. I think the stepped approach you described above makes perfect sense. In the existing
New Jersey General Assembly page, we should put in a statement that the members listed will be in office until January XXth and refer via a link to the new page listing who the Assembly members will be as of 2006, once they're sworn in and take office. On swearing-in day (whatever that might me, and let's confirm it), we would change the
New Jersey General Assembly page and remove the reference. To show the newly elected members as being in office already is just plain incorrect.
Alansohn16:06, 9 November 2005 (UTC)reply
Sounds good. Creating
New Jersey General Assembly, 2004-2005 term. As for swearing in, according to the legislature web site, "The two-year legislative term begins at noon on the second Tuesday in January of each even-numbered year. At the end of the second year, all unfinished business expires." This places the beginning of the next term at January 10th 2006. --
ChrisRuvolo (
t)
17:51, 9 November 2005 (UTC)reply
By the way, my sympathies and commiseration on your preview problems. Every time I click on "save page" when I meant "preview" there's always a blindingly obvious typo that would have been caught by a preview. I had read the same text on the NJ Legislature web site and interpreted it as you had regarding the start of the term. My only question is on the year range for the terms of office. As the terms start and end in early January, I think they should be listed as 2004-2006 and 2006-2008, rather than 2004-2005 and 2006-2007. You could also base it on elections and say 2003-2005 and 2005-2007, but I think that the even year ranges make the most sense and are most accurate.
Alansohn18:49, 9 November 2005 (UTC)reply
--
Can anyone find out the salary of an assemblyman?
Wikipedia link is inaccurate, Benjamin Van Cleve, NJ Speaker 1784-86 is not the same person as Ohio pioneer, Benjamin Van Cleve, b. 1773
List of Speakers: 1784-86: Benjamin Van Cleve, Hunterdon. This is linked to another Wikipedia article to a person with the same name, Benjamin Van Cleve. The link should be removed. These are not the same individuals. The BVC in the link was born 1773 and was a pioneer in Ohio (as is accurately noted in the Wikipedia article). ONLY the link is wrong.
98.201.118.140 (
talk)
22:52, 15 September 2012 (UTC) I'm L. Silkwood, Houston, TX.reply
Errors in Speaker of General Assembly list.
There are all kinds of errors in listings of The Speakers of the General Assembly? Either they are out of order or someone made a lot of typos when typing the year/years each person was speaker. Just look at the listings for the 1940’s, 1950’s, and 1960’s.
2601:80:C87F:8310:4D5F:9F35:CBCD:1E84 (
talk)
16:35, 19 November 2021 (UTC)reply