Dino is an on-air and digital journalist for New Jersey 101.5FM. He began working with the station in 2007 as a morning news producer, until his transition into the field.
Dino Flammia
4 years later, NJ colleges still feeling impacts of COVID lockdown
Some students lack basic skills like taking notes, one college said.
Party City getting a makeover: What stores in NJ will look like
The NJ-based retailer must like what it's seeing in a test run of a new store format.
‘Zombie drug’ continues to infiltrate NJ street supply
A quickly growing threat within the New Jersey opioid crisis is a drug that's not an opioid and not meant for human use.
Top 10 scams revealed: They cost NJ residents millions a year
Being vulnerable is so expensive.
How many arrests have been avoided with NJ’s legal weed laws?
Recreational marijuana has now been legal in New Jersey for three years.
Common material in NJ schools could be damaging children’s organs
No one knows how many schools in New Jersey have students and staff stepping on to potentially toxic floors on a daily basis.
NJ beaches post their 2024 prices: How to get the best deals
A seasonal badge could run you as much as $115.
Is NJ stepping on parents’ toes? Controversial mental-health bill advances
New Jersey lawmakers are interfering with the role of parents, according to critics of a proposed law that has already received the green light from a panel of legislators.
NJ-to-Pa. bridge, a ‘bane’ to drivers for generations, may get replaced
The bridge has been rehabilitated multiple times since opening to traffic in 1905.
Big cut coming to NJ’s gas tax? A new plan has been introduced
The idea from Democrats in the Assembly and Senate also calls for bigger fees related to owning an electric vehicle.
NJ data showing dramatic rise in dangerous disease could be misleading
Tick season is approaching in New Jersey.
Poll: NJ adults more concerned that book bans will impact learning
"When we assess views in a scientific and representative way, public opinion on this issue shows — like many other topics — that the loudest voices do not necessarily represent the majority," said Ashley Koning, director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling.