Thursday, 29 December 2011

How to Repair the Economy: "Be Courageous"


By Thomas A. Bracken
Tom BrackenThere's a photo from the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce's Legislative Awards reception in Atlantic City that was a big hit here at the Chamber offices.
In the picture, state Senate President Steve Sweeney, a Democrat, and Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, a Republican - two strong personalities who have had their differences – are exchanging warm smiles.
Actually, all the Republicans and Democrats at our reception were nothing but smiles. It was a welcome scene and a far cry from the perceived relationship between the Dems and GOP.
When they are inside the Trenton beltway, our government leaders criticize each other, issue scathing press releases and snipe. They assess blame and take credit.
But when you spend time with them, see them up close – lawmakers on both sides want essentially the same things: education reform, job growth, economic development and controlled spending. They want a better New Jersey.
This is what the Chamber wants too. For all of us to realize this goal, we need our elected officials in our towns, in Trenton and in Washington to end the political rancor, especially while we are emerging from a painful recession that has what economists call a long tail of uncertainty. There's no time for obstruction or self-promotion. It's time for our leaders to grab some rope and pull the wagon in the direction of economic growth.
Business leaders and citizens must pitch in too – this state belongs to all of us.
Thomas Edison – a founder and a vice president of the New Jersey Chamber when it was established 100 years ago – said: "If we all did the things we are really capable of doing, we would literally astound ourselves."

So what are we capable of?
Earlier this year, Gov. Chris Christie, Senate President Sweeney, Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver and the Legislature proved they are capable of taking a courageous stand when they reformed health care benefits and pensions for government workers. There were protests in the streets, but the legislation will save tax payer dollars from this day forward by significantly reducing the structural deficits in both local and state budgets. The governor and Legislature should now focus on adopting education reform that will strengthen education and maintain New Jersey's talented workforce.
They should limit spending to programs with proven returns like transportation infrastructure – an investment that also generates jobs. They should adopt smart policies that encourage job growth and economic development.

We urge business leaders to stand strong in trying times. It's tempting to hunker down, but in crisis there is opportunity to grow and innovate. Interest rates are low, the job market is full of great candidates and consumer spending is increasing. Optimism indeed seems to returning. Seven out of ten New Jersey business executives said they expect their companies' business to improve over the next 12 months, and more than half said they plan to hire, according to a survey conducted Oct. 25 by the NJ Chamber of Commerce and Sovereign Bank. Such optimism bodes well for the economy. If business leaders' optimism is followed by action - hiring and investing in their companies - it will speed our momentum toward a full recovery.

New Jerseyans and Americans have displayed resilience while the unemployment rate remains high. There was an increase in consumer spending during the third quarter, which boosted growth to the highest level of the year. And in the past two months, the number of employed individuals in the state's private sector increased by 34,000. We hope New Jerseyans' confidence grows with these indicators – this too will speed the recovery.
"Be courageous," Thomas Edison advised his countrymen during a tough economic stretch, "whatever setbacks America has encountered, it has always emerged as a stronger and more prosperous nation. Be brave as your fathers before you. Have faith and go forward."

Friday, 23 December 2011

50,000 Reasons to be Part of our Historic 75th Walk to Washington


In January, chamber members will join Governor Chris Christie and the state's top business and political leaders in Washington D.C. for the state chamber's 75th Annual Walk to Washington and Congressional Dinner at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel.

Be part of this special Diamond Anniversary Walk by sponsoring our special keepsake dinner program and have your message reach 50,000 prime decision makers.

This year's program will be distributed to one thousand people attending our dinner and train ride, plus government officials, state chamber members and executives from New Jersey's regional and local chambers of commerce.

In addition, this year's program will be an insert supplement in NJBIZ so your company's message will be seen by the entirety of NJBIZ's readership - over 50,000 readers.

Monday, 19 December 2011

The 75th Annual Walk to Washington and Congressional Dinner


The NJ Chamber Of Commerce  just celebrated its Centennial Anniversary and we are ready to kick off our second century in grand style with the Diamond Anniversary Walk to Washington and Congressional Dinner. For 74 years, Chamber members have boarded a special Amtrak charter train and traveled to the nation's Capital to dine with our representatives in Congress and the state Legislature, as well as with the governor and his cabinet members. Join us for unprecedented opportunities for conversation, visibility and camaraderie.

Why walk the walk?

To mingle with the state's movers and shakers and make connections that will help your business grow and succeed. As we emerge from the recession, it is more important than ever to ride the rails and meet face-to-face with as many potential clients as possible.

What is the Walk to Washington?

The tradition began in 1937 when several of the state's top business executives took a train to Washington to have dinner with New Jersey's congressional delegation - and the rest is history. The Walk to Washington obtained its name when folks realized that few sit on the train; they literally walk the train mingling and exchanging business cards the whole way to Washington. The adventure begins when the Chamber's chartered Amtrak train departs Newark and our other scheduled stops - Metro Park, New Brunswick, Trenton, Philadelphia and Wilmington - for the ride to Washington.
What is the Congressional Dinner?

It's your best opportunity of the year to meet people, make connections, and build your business. Once at the Marriott Wardman Park, attendees are invited to the Chamber's Grande Reception that will feature special exhibits focused on Jersey Pride. For dinner, will be joined by Governor Chris Christie, members of his cabinet, state legislators and the New Jersey Congressional delegation. The networking continues late into the evening when everyone gets out of their seats for the Chamber's Dessert Extravaganza. This fun and engaging culmination of the dinner debuted last year to rave reviews.
Want more reasons to attend?

You can participate in the many related events provided by leading New Jersey businesses and organizations. Post-dinner hospitality suites and morning breakfasts are all part of the tradition. Our chartered Amtrak train leaves Union Station in Washington late Friday morning and gets you home in time for dinner. Every attendee will also receive a complementary copy of the N.J. Chamber's Centennial Directory and Commemorative Book which includes contact information for all N.J. Chamber of Commerce members.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

CHAMBER BREAKFAST REGISTRATION

Attend a Roundtable Breakfast with Top Executives
from NJ Transit and DRPA
 
 
What are the State's Plans to Keep Business Moving?  
Friday, December 16, 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Forsgate Country Club, Monroe, NJ


                                James Weinstein
      John Matheussen
                       James Weinstein
                               Executive Director, NJ Transit
         John J. Matheussen
           CEO, Delaware River Port Authority

   
Topics to be Discussed
Transportation Trust Fund Update * Light Rail Extension Projects * Scorecard Initiative to Promote Increased Accountability * Station Upgrades * Glassboro-Camden Line Project * Green Ports Initiative * Other Priorities
 
  
Member price $65; non-member price $110
Click here to register.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Gov. Christie to Keynote N.J. Chamber of CommerceAnnual Dinner in Washington On January 26



The Address will Highlight Chamber's Diamond Anniversary Event

The NJ Chamber of Commerce today announced Gov. Chris Christie will keynote its 75th annual Congressional Dinner on Thursday, January 26, 2012 at the Marriott Wardman Park in Washington, D.C. 
 
The dinner is the highlight of the N.J. Chamber's annual trek to the nation's capital. Each January, Chamber members board a chartered Amtrak train and spend an evening discussing important business issues with the state's top political and business leaders.
  
"People across New Jersey should come to our Congressional Dinner to show support for what Gov. Christie is doing to improve the business climate in our state," said Thomas A. Bracken, president and CEO of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce. "We need the whole business community to clearly show our leaders that we need them to continue the work they have started to turn the state around economically and that everybody in New Jersey benefits from pro-growth policies."
  
Members of Gov. Christie's administration are scheduled to be at the dinner, as well as members of New Jersey's Congressional Delegation and state Legislature.
  
The "Walk To Washington"
  
The Chamber's trip to Washington, D.C. has come to be called the "Walk to Washington" because participants spend the entire train trip to D.C. walking through the various cars, meeting people and making connections.
   
"It's the old fashion face-to-face way of networking and it works," Bracken said. "That is why we have been doing it for three-quarters of a century."
   
The 2012 "Walk to Washington" begins on January 26 when the Chamber's chartered Amtrak train first picks up passengers at Penn Station in Newark. The train then makes stops in Iselin (MetroPark), New Brunswick, Trenton, Philadelphia and Wilmington before heading into Washington, DC.
  
Participants spend the evening at a reception and the Congressional Dinner, and the next morning return to their point of origin via another Amtrak charter.
  
For more information about the Walk to Washington and about joining the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, visit the Chamber's website at www.njchamber.com or call the Chamber's Trenton office at 609-989-7888.  
###

The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce is a business advocacy organization that represents its members on a wide range of business and education issues. Based in Trenton, the organization also links the state's local and regional chambers on issues of importance through its grassroots legislative network. For more information, visit www.njchamber.com.
 

Friday, 2 December 2011

Governor Christie to Keynote 75th Annual Congressional Dinner

Governor Christie to Keynote
The Chamber's Diamond Anniversary Congressional Dinner in January

Governor Chris Christie will join the NJ Chamber of Commerce and hundreds of the state's political and business leaders at the Chamber's 75th annual congressional dinner on January 26, 2012.



You're Invited



Join us for our Diamond Anniversary Walk. 

We will head down to Washington D.C. on the morning of January 26. Our chartered Amtrak train will bring us to the elegant Wardman Park Marriott for an evening dinner and reception with New Jersey's most powerful and influential business and political leaders, including Governor Christie, members of the state's congressional delegation and state legislature.


Please make plans to join us. Now more than ever we need the entire business community to tell our state leaders that we need them to continue the work that has started to turn New Jersey around economically. 



Over 700 guests joined us last year and we expect at least that many guests again, so get your tickets now - click here to reserve tickets.

Sponsorship opportunities for the Walk to Washington are available - contact Amy Kolis at (732) 246-5730 or click here for more information.


And as always, you can call the Marriott Wardman Park at (202) 328-2000 to make your room reservation. Don't forget to tell them you are part of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce's Walk to Washington in order to receive a special room rate. 

The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce
Diamond Anniversary
Walk to Washington and Congressional Dinner
January 26 - 27, 2012 • Marriott Wardman Park, Washington D.C.
To make dinner & train reservations, click here,
or contact Theresa Pollaci at (609) 989-7888 x150.
For sponsorship opportunities, click here,
or contact Amy Kolis at (732) 246-5730.
To make room reservations, call the Marriott Wardman Park, (202) 328-2000
(mention that you are attending the N.J. Chamber event to receive a special rate)

Friday, 25 November 2011

N.J. CHAMBER BREAKFAST SERIES NOVEMBER 22, 2011

Roundtable breakfast with NJ Assembly Executive Directors
For photographs of the breakfast, click here.

Next On the Agenda in Trenton: 
 Education Reform and Putting People Back to Work
 
Getting the political parties to work together, reforming education and putting people back to work will be issues headlining the current lame-duck session and the next Legislative session, said Bill Caruso, executive director of the Assembly Democratic Office and Rick Wright, executive director of the Assembly Republican Office.


Caruso and Wright gave NJ Chamber of Commerce members a post-election update this morning at a roundtable breakfast in Monroe presented by the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce.
Like Gov. Chris Christie, both parties in the Legislature support education reform.


“We have a problem in New Jersey, not every kid has the chance to go to a great public school so we have to look at the alternatives,” Caruso said.


Wright added, “Insanity is doing the same thing to see a different result. We have got to do something different; we have got to save kids and give them a fighting chance. Education reform is a start.”
The two executive directors highlighted the importance of improving New Jersey’s business climate and touted the pro-growth work already accomplished in Trenton. “The business environment has changed in New Jersey,” Wright said. “We are not back by any means, but we are heading in the right direction.”
“The message coming out of government is very good if you are a business,” Caruso added.


To continue that momentum, whether for education reform or improving the economy, the two parties must work together, Caruso added. “No party,” he said, “has a premium on the best ideas.”


For photographs of the breakast, click here.


Source: http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs094/1103817697749/archive/1108741577201.html

Monday, 21 November 2011

More than 600 on hand to celebrate chamber's centennial


More than 600 New Jersey business and political leaders attended a 100th anniversary gala for the NJ Chamber of Commerce on Thursday night at The Palace at Somerset Park, in the Somerset section of Franklin.

"The business community is as important now as it was in 1911 in promoting the economic development of the state," said Dennis Bone, CEO of Verizon New Jersey and immediate past chairman of the chamber. "The outpouring of the business community tonight certainly demonstrates that the business community is united in promoting New Jersey as a great place for business development."


Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, the keynote speaker, recalled how she worked with the chamber to understand issues and challenges the business community faces as part of her role to improve economic development in New Jersey.


"Working with the Chamber of Commerce, we've changed the way people perceive New Jersey," Guadagno said, highlighting administration accomplishments so far. "With your help, we'll continue this progress for years to come."


Chamber President and CEO Thomas A. Bracken and Chairman Jeffrey C. Scheininger, also president of Flexline, touted the enthusiasm of attendees.



The event's turnout "says A, the business community is alive and well, and B, they like what's going on," Bracken said. "There are a lot of good vibes."


The event carried a theme honoring Thomas Edison, one of the chamber's founding fathers. Three of Edison's great-grandchildren — Lizabeth Sloane Eggemann, David Edison Sloane and Heywood Edison Sloane — were recognized during the gala.



Scheininger also announced the chamber had created a fellowship program to honor William Payne, a 27-year employee who managed many of the chamber's train trips to Washington, D.C. Payne died last year.
The formal remarks started on a light note as Bob Doherty, Bank of America's New Jersey state president, admitted he arrived to realize he was the only man dressed in a tuxedo. Doherty, on the podium sporting a business tie, said he gave a staffer $20 for his tie, and pulled his tuxedo tie out of his pocket as proof for the crowd.


NJBIZ provided event-planning assistance for the chamber's gala.


Source: http://njbiz.com/article/20111111/NJBIZ01/111119958/More-than-600-on-hand-to-celebrate-chamber%27s-centennial

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

New Jersey Chamber's 100th Birthday Party Raises The Roof at The Palace in Somerset




The NJ Chamber of Commerce celebrated its 100th birthday in grand style on Thursday with a gala that drew 630 people, including Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno; former Governors Brendan Byrne and James Florio; and three great grandchildren of N.J. Chamber founding member Thomas A. Edison. Also attending the event at the Palace in Somerset Park were Chamber past presidents and past chairs, as well as leaders of New Jersey's top companies that have long supported the N.J. Chamber's mission to make the state a great place to live, work and run a business.


"Tonight we celebrate the 100th anniversary of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce," said Thomas Bracken, president and CEO of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce. "But more than that, we are here to celebrate everything that makes New Jersey and our country great."


Lt. Gov. Guadagno, during a rousing speech, touted N.J. Chamber's vital role in the Garden State.


"I turned to the Chamber of Commerce when I was appointed and I asked what is it that we need to do to revitalize business in New Jersey," Guadagno said.  "Directly because of the Chamber of Commerce, I think we have been successful as an administration and in New Jersey as a whole at creating nearly 50,000 private sector jobs in the last 22 months simply because we listened.


"I like to think people are talking about New Jersey because we have taken your advice to heart, that we need to lower taxes, give people access and we, as Trenton bureaucrats, need to get out of your way," Guadagno continued. "I don't know if we could have done as much as we have done in the last 22 months without all the help of the people that support the Chamber of Commerce. Working together, we have been able to change the way people perceive New Jersey.


"Thank you to all of you and particular thanks to the Chamber of Commerce for being so good at what you do and being so open minded and welcoming to me so I can take your work on the road," Guadagno added. "Congratulations and happy birthday Chamber of Commerce."

 

The event included tributes to Thomas Edison and his family and the legacy of innovation he left in New Jersey, past Chamber leaders, and other New Jersey business leaders that have paved the way.


The event's turnout "says A, the business community is alive and well, and B, they like what's going on," Bracken said. "There are a lot of good vibes."

Source: http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs094/1103817697749/archive/1108623866162.html

Monday, 14 November 2011

New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce, Est. 1911




One hundred years ago, New Jersey’s leading businessmen – including Thomas Edison – petitioned for the establishment of a state chamber of commerce. They recognized the value and the importance of an organization dedicated to making widely known the “commercial, manufacturing, and residential advantages open to those who would locate their business in New Jersey.”

In the hundred years that have passed, the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce has grown into a Garden State institution with more than 1,200 member companies and associations representing 500,000 employees and billions of dollars in annual revenue.

Since the Chamber’s founding, New Jersey’s economy has evolved and transitioned many times over, to the point where the founders would have a difficult time recognizing their state today.

How many of them could have conceived of the ubiquity of television or personal computers, the impact of the Internet or cellular technology – or perhaps most revolutionary of all – women in business.

What has not changed is the purpose of the charter and the chamber. In fact, our centennial charter mirrors closely the purpose of the original charter in scope and importance – and that is to advocate for programs and initiatives that helps grow the economy and create jobs in New Jersey.
Signing the charter
2001 - LT. Gov. Kim Guadano, Dennis Bone, and Anthony La Rocca sign the Chamber's new charter for the next century.

Centennial Celebration

The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce kicked off a year-long centennial celebration on December 7, 2010. Members signed a new business charter reaffirming its mission to promote businesses across the state.

The event, held at the offices of law firm K&L Gates in Newark, featured Lieutenant Governor Kim Guadagno, in her role as secretary of state, ratifying the document.

“I need all of you to do what you are doing today - getting together, talking, networking and supporting a great institution like the New Jersey Chamber,” Guadagno said. “The only way we can fix the problems we have in New Jersey is by putting people back to work … and we need your help.”

Founding

In 1911, the Chamber’s founders petitioned for the establishment of a state chamber of commerce. Gov. Woodrow Wilson was pushing policies seen as antagonistic towards business. The Supreme Court had surprised the business community by ordering a breakup of Standard Oil of New Jersey. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was pushing policies similar to Wilson’s. The time was ripe for New Jersey businessmen and industrialists to act.

Walk to Washington and Congressional Dinner Background

The Walk to Washington tradition began in 1936 when several of the state’s top business executives took a train to Washington to have dinner with New Jersey’s congressional delegation – and the rest is history.
1936 Congressional Dinner

Today, it is regarded as one of New Jersey’s most influential business and political events with a long and rich history of bringing together the state’s premier political and business leaders to discuss how they can work together to generate economic growth and create jobs for New Jersey.

"Like a power lunch writ large, the 74th annual NJ Chamber of Commerce Congressional Dinner featured politicos and wannabe politicos, business leaders and university presidents, both New Jersey senators, and most New Jersey representatives," wrote Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Matt Katz following last January's Walk to Washington. (Read the full article here.)

Last year, more than 700 business leaders joined Governor Chris Christie, Senators Bob Menendez and Frank Lautenberg, members of the state's Congressional delegation and members of the state Legislature on the Walk to Washington.

"I'm glad to be here and I'm glad all of you are here to support the Chamber," Gov. Christie told the audience of 700. "The work that we all have to do together for the people of the state is extraordinarily important."

The Walk to Washington obtained its name when folks realized that few sit on the train; they literally walk up and down the train the whole way to Washington.

The guests board a chartered Amtrak train that leaves from Penn Station in Newark and then stops at various stations across New Jersey, as well as stops in Philadelphia and Wilmington. After the train arrives in the nation’s capital, guests have been joined by governors, state legislators, New Jersey’s Congressional delegation and other prominent business and political leaders from the Garden State for the annual Congressional Dinner.

Today

The State Chamber’s headquarters is located across the street from the State House, which enables our staff to mobilize and react quickly to the rapid events that often unfold in the state’s capital. Our team of lobbyists interact daily with key legislative players in Trenton and our reach extends to Washington, where we represent our members in the halls of Congress and at the White House.

In addition to lobbying, the Chamber provides members with networking events, educational programs and money-saving discounts.

Although the state has transformed from an industrial society to a technological one, the State Chamber’s goal has always remained the same – to represent the varying interests of our members and to help them clear burdensome regulatory hurdles that stifle growth. Our membership has always been broad-based, ranging from solo proprietors to Fortune 500 companies. Throughout the chamber's rich history, the organization's talented leaders have always provided the guidance necessary to develop proactive solutions to the important and tough issues of the day.

Friday, 11 November 2011

Facts about the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce




    * The New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce is a Garden State institution with more than 1,200 member companies and associations representing 500,000 employees and billions of dollars in annual revenue.

    * We are not government funded - we are funded by and work for our members, which are companies, nonprofit organizations and other associations.

    * Founded in Newark in 1911, the State Chamber has been in Trenton for about 15 years, located across the Street from the State House.

    * While the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce is not a government agency, we work with our local, state and federal elected representatives to promote economic growth and job creation.

    * In addition to lobbying, the Chamber provides members with business networking events and educational programs.

    * Thomas A. Edison is one of our founders. He served as one of the Chamber's first vice presidents.

    * Veteran banker Thomas A. Bracken became the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce's president and CEO in February of 2011, taking the reins of the state's business advocacy organization as it celebrates its 100th year. The Skillman resident served as chairman of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce's Board of Directors from 2005 to 2007, and has been involved with the Chamber for more than 30 years.

    * We will hold our 75th annual Walk to Washington in January. Guests board a chartered Amtrak train that leaves from Penn Station in Newark and stops at various stations across New Jersey as well as stops in Philadelphia and Wilmington. After the train arrives in the nation's capital, guests are joined by governors, state legislators, New Jersey's Congressional delegation and other prominent business and political leaders from the Garden State for the annual Congressional Dinner. The Walk to Washington obtained its name when folks realized that few sit on the train; they literally walk up and down the train the whole way to Washington.

    * The NJ Chamber of Commerce Foundation, our non-profit affiliation, is dedicated to improving work force quality in New Jersey. It provides programs to bolster public education in kindergarten through high school; increase the employment rate of qualified people with disabilities; and supports programs that look to help mitigate the nurse and nurse faculty shortage in New Jersey.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

35 N.J. Companies Named to New National Honor Roll For Their Support of People with Disabilities


     
List created by N.J. Chamber Foundation recognizes companies that 
go above and beyond in recruiting and supporting people with disabilities

 
Thirty-five New Jersey companies were among the first named to a new national honor roll of businesses recognized for going above and beyond in recruiting and supporting people with disabilities, announced the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce Foundation today. 
    
The Disabilities At Work Honor Roll recognizes companies for 'going beyond compliance' in their recruiting practices, providing support for employees with disabilities, or supporting disabled causes with philanthropic investments.  Among the New Jersey companies named are McDonalds in Clinton, Aramark in Atco, Healthquest in Flemington, Pediatric Dental Associates in Annandale, Prudential in Newark, and Wakefern in Keasbey. Companies from outside New Jersey include Costco in Washington, JPMorgan Chase in New York, BoozAllen in Virginia and AMErican REPROgraphics in Maryland.
  
Each company on the Honor Roll will receive the Disabilities At Work logo for display on websites and Disabilities At Work window decals to display at its place of business. Consumers who want to support businesses that support people with disabilities can identify and patronize those businesses.
  
"People with disabilities have much to contribute to the workplace and to their communities," said Dana Egreczky, president of the Chamber Foundation. "Businesses that help people with disabilities overcome challenges and contribute to the bottom line deserve our thanks - and our business. We urge everyone to look for companies that display the unique Disabilities At Work logo and patronize them as often as possible."
  
Philip Koury, owner-operator of the Clinton McDonalds on Route 31, says, "It is just good business to give back to the community."
  
Companies on the Disabilities At Work honor roll must meet a strict set of endorsement criteria and be nominated by organizations that work with or support people with disabilities, including nonprofits, state agencies, schools and school districts. 
    
Agencies that work with the disabled can become endorsing agencies for the Disabilities At Work Honor Roll by registering on the Disabilities At Work website (www.DisabilitiesAtWork.org). Once registered, these organizations can endorse businesses that have met one or more of the Disabilities At Work endorsement criteria, available for review on the website.
  
Endorsements last for one year. Companies will be added to the Disabilities At Work Honor Roll throughout the year and announced on a regular basis.  

The complete list of companies named to the new Disabilities At Work Honor Roll:
  



All Seasons Florist
63 Brunswick Avenue
Lebanon
NJ
Aramark
20 Coopers Folly Road
Atco
NJ
Artiste Salon
56 Payne Road
Lebanon
NJ
AT&T
East Midland Avenue
Paramus
NJ
BioNJ
1255 Whitehouse-Mercerville Road
Trenton
NJ
Camden County Technical Schools
343 Berlin Cross Keys Road
Sicklerville
NJ
Captial One Bank
710 Route 46 East
Fairfield
NJ
Country Pets
1271 US HWY 22
Lebanon
NJ
Darrows Sporting Edge
531 US HWY 22
Whitehouse
NJ
Fitzpatrick's Jewish Style Deli
501 New Road
Somers Point
NJ
Gateway Community Action Partnership
110 Cohansey St.
Bridgeton
NJ
G-O-Metric, Inc.
215 Ash Street
Delanco
NJ
Healthquest
310 NJ 31
Flemington
NJ
IKEA
100 Ikea Drive
Westampton
NJ
Johnson & Johnson
1 Johnson & Johnson Plaza
New Brunswick
NJ
Junge Associates
89B Main Street
Lebanon
NJ
Kelly Services
410 George Street
New Brunswick
NJ
Laboratory Corporation of America (Labcorp)
69 First Avenue
Raritan
NJ
McDonalds
1511 State HWY 31
Clinton
NJ
Merck
One Merck Drive
Rahway
NJ
Merck
1 Merck Drive
Whitehouse Station
NJ
Morristown Medical Center
100 Madison Avenue
Morristown
NJ
Napa Auto Supply
53 Old HWY 22
Clinton
NJ
New Jersey Transit
One Penn Plaza East
Newark
NJ
Pediatric Dental Associates
1465 State HWY 31 South
Annandale
NJ
Pelican Pools
3555 Rt. 22
Whitehouse
NJ
Pizza Como
5 Old HWY 22
Clinton
NJ
Presents of Mind
240 Route 206
Flanders
NJ
Prudential
751 Broad Street
Newark
NJ
PSEG
80 Park Plaza
Newark
NJ
RGIS
901 Rt. 168
Turnersville
NJ
Rose and Radish
406 US HWY 22
Whitehouse
NJ
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
2890 Woodbridge Avenue
Edison
NJ
Wakefern

Keasbey
NJ
Wakefern Food Corporation
33 Northfield Avenue
Edison
NJ
Costco
999 Lake Drive
Issaquah
WA
Drugstore.com
411 108th Avenue NE
Bellevue
WA
AMErican REPROgraphics
5542 Nicholson Lane
Rockville
MD
Ernst & Young

Bethesda
MD
CityMouse, Inc.

New York City
NY
JPMorgan Chase
270 Park Avenue
New York
NY
KPMG LLP
345 Park Avenue
New York
NY
BoozAllen

McLean
VA


  


    

About Disabilities At Work
  

Disabilities At Work is a national initiative that provides opportunities for businesses to acquire and display a visible symbol of their support for people with disabilities.
  
By displaying the Disabilities At Work logo, businesses seize opportunities to display a visible symbol of their support for people with disabilities, and the potential for increased customer patronage. Businesses that display the Disabilities At Work logo on wall plaques, point-of-sale magnets, window decals, websites, letterhead, or products have earned the right to do so in a variety of ways.
    
People with disabilities, their families, friends, and supporters control an astonishing $200 billion in disposable income annually. Disabilities At Work uses its unique logo to focus the power of those consumer dollars to support businesses that support people with disabilities.
   
These businesses have earned the right to display the unique logo, as judged by specific nonprofit or state agencies working in local communities.

About The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce Foundation
  
The mission of the NJ Chamber of Commerce Foundation is to build a highly qualified workforce through innovative collaborations with K-12 education and the workforce training and preparation system.
   
The Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization supported by tax-deductible contributions. The Foundation has three areas of interest:  mitigating the predicted nurse shortage, providing enhanced employment opportunities for people with disabilities, and the workforce pipeline (K-12 education).