If You’ve Noticed A Blue Line Painted On The Street, Here’s What It Means

Downtown New Jersey is seeing a blue line spread. It has been seen in parks, on county roads, and in the area between the double yellow lines that run down main streets. It frequently passes a police station directly.

Mahwah Mayor Bill Laforet stated, “I see communities start to paint that blue line, and it’s a simple thing,” prior to the township painting one in front of the police station on Wednesday. “It’s a chance for the community to say something about how we value the police department.”

Although townships and boroughs across the state are painting the line to support police, the trend is particularly popular in Bergen County and other communities in North Jersey.

What is meant by the line?

The thin blue line is becoming more and more visible as people nationwide rush to express their support for law enforcement in the wake of shootings that target officers. It’s on flags, T-shirts, and wristbands, and it’s on the paint on the street.

The line has historically stood between law-abiding citizens and the criminal element, symbolizing the function of law enforcement.

However, among other things, the blue line painted in Chestnut Branch Park also represents officer unity and camaraderie, according to Rodney J. Sawyer, police chief of Mantua Township in Gloucester County.

“It stands in support of a profession that in recent months has come under fire and attacked as a symbol of conspiracy, cover ups, and accused of racist behavior,” he wrote in his email. “It represents the solidarity displayed within the profession when a Law Enforcement Officer makes the ultimate sacrifice… It is the thin blue line in the midst of tragedy that rushes in as others rush out.”

Though there are differing opinions on how to assist EMTs and paramedics, some towns have also painted red lines in recognition of firefighters. Dumont chose green paint, while Glen Rock used white in Bergen County.

Related Posts

My daughter begged me not to go on a business trip. “Daddy, something bad happens when you’re gone.” I cancelled the trip. Told no one. That night, I hid in the basement. At 11 PM, my mother-in-law arrived with two men I’d never seen. They walked toward my daughter’s room — I stepped out of the shadows. They tried to run, but someone was waiting for them at the door.

In the jagged peaks of Afghanistan, survival wasn’t a matter of luck; it was a matter of listening to the hum of the air. When the silence turned…

My Sister Expected Me to Skip a Job Interview for a Mall Trip — I Said No

The Interview My name is Madison. I’m twenty-five, and on that morning, I genuinely believed—maybe, just maybe—my life was finally turning a corner.   I’d landed an…

My husband files for divorce, and my 7-year-old daughter asks the judge: “May I show you something that Mom doesn’t know about, Your Honor?” The judge nodded. When the video started, the entire courtroom froze in silence.

The sound of a gavel striking wood is usually the sound of order, of finality. But on the day my husband, Tmaine, sued me for divorce, that sound…

“Please… don’t let him take me back.” Six War Veterans Froze When an 8-Year-Old Girl

Blood hit the bakery counter before anyone noticed the girl. It fell in slow, uneven drops, dark against the pale wood, pooling beside a stack of fresh…

“Make my daughter walk again and I’ll adopt you…” the rich man had promised. But what the orphan did…

The night the sirens faded into the distance and the hospital doors closed behind him, Michael Turner understood that his life had divided itself into a before…

My Kids Tried To Take My Secret Montana Cabin With a Locksmith – So I Called the Law and a Lawyer Instead-qii

The first sound was the crunch of tires on frozen gravel, sharp and wrong in the quiet I’d grown used to. I was standing at the kitchen…

This Post Has One Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *