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ALERT: Newark Officials Issue ‘Code Blue’ Due to Frigid Temperatures from Wednesday through Saturday

Newark

The City of Newark is reminding residents that there are emergency shelters operating during the extreme cold weather that have partnered with the City to provide overnight sheltering.  

For more information about sheltering services, contact the shelters listed below or the Department of Health and Community Wellness, Division of Social Services at (973) 877– 9481, Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Below is a list of area shelters and the populations served:

Apostle House, 513-515 Avon Avenue, Newark, NJ

(973) 482-0625 - Women and children only

Isaiah House, 238 North Munn Avenue, East Orange, NJ

(973) 678 – 5882 - Single mothers and families with children

Catholic Charities - St. Rocco’s, 368 South 7th Street,

Newark, NJ (973) 286-4175 - Families with children

Circle of Life, 55 Tillinghast Street, Newark, NJ

(862) 763 – 4859 - Adults only - LGBTQ Friendly

Fairmont Health, 202 Fairmont Avenue, Newark, NJ

(973) 643 – 7705 - Adults only

H.E.L.P. Center, 224 Sussex Avenue, Newark, NJ

(973) 705-7200 - Adults only

The City offers the following tips on keeping homes safe and coping with extreme winter weather:

Keep the house heated to a minimum of 68 degrees. The temperatures inside the walls where the pipes are located is substantially colder than the walls themselves. A temperature lower than 68 degrees will not keep the inside walls from freezing.

Identify the locations for the main water shutoff in your home. Find out how it works in case you have to use it.

Open hot and cold faucets enough to let them drip slowly. Keeping water moving within the pipes will prevent them from freezing.

Check on seniors to make sure that they are warm and dry.

Stay indoors as much as possible.

Check all windows and doors for drafts. Place plastic if you feel a draft.

Do not use generators indoors.

It is illegal to use kerosene heaters indoors.

Keep anything that can burn at least three feet away from heating equipment, like the furnace, fireplace, wood stove, or portable space heater.

Have a three-foot “kid-free zone” around open fires and space heaters.

Never use your oven to heat your home.

Remember to turn portable heaters off when leaving the room or going to bed.

Take inventory of emergency items.

Test smoke and carbon monoxide alarms monthly.

Avoid carbon monoxide poisoning by checking and cleaning your furnace and chimney regularly and ensure you have proper ventilation and the exhaust pipe is free of debris.

The City of Newark Housing Code requires all property owners to supply heat from October 1 through May 1 between the hours of 6 a.m. and 11 p.m. at a minimum inside temperature of 68°F, and between the hours of 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. at a minimum inside temperature of 65°F. To report no heat or hot water in your apartment, call the Division of Code Enforcement at (973) 733-6471.  

Anyone with questions about the City’s heat ordinance or any other Newark municipal policy or program can contact the Newark Non-Emergency Call Center at (973) 733-4311, from 8:00 am to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.

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