Getting a Preview Error with new version
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Since updating to version 1.1 of this plugin, I keep getting the following error:
THERE HAS BEEN AN ERROR WITH THE API. PLEASE MAKE SURE YOUR API SETTINGS ARE CORRECT AND TRY AGAIN: ONLY_PREVIEW_ALLOWED
Worked fine with v.0.8. Settings have not changed and all of my API keys are correct. Any ideas?
I’ve tested the article.json file in Apple’s News Preview tool and getting no errors there. Also been into the settings page and clicked save again just for good measure. Debug email reads as follows:
Array ( [headers] => Array ( [date] => Tue, 10 May 2016 17:13:21 GMT [request-id] => 77f7b24f-c349-481a-b50c-2edcf9425975 [content-type] => application/json; charset=UTF-8 [content-length] => 44 [connection] => keep-alive ) [body] => {"errors":[{"code":"ONLY_PREVIEW_ALLOWED"}]} [response] => Array ( [code] => 400 [message] => Bad Request ) [cookies] => Array ( ) [filename] => ) request meta: Array ( [data] => Array ( [links] => Array ( [section] => Array ( [0] => https://u48r14.digitalhub.com/sections/574e2cb7-de46-3900-848d-07d9f46c611c ) ) [isPreview] => ) )
Here are my files too - https://we.tl/D1B4w1bLnr
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Yes, that did it, thank you Bradford. Also, I enabled the developer email in case something goes wrong again (hopefully not) I can show you the error message. Thanks for your help
I did read through the thread and added the metabox in settings.
I clicked preview and update and got the same message:
There has been an error with the API. Please make sure your API settings are correct and try again: ONLY_PREVIEW_ALLOWED
The preview box on that post is clicked.
Please paste the JSON file for that post here. Also please turn on debug mode and paste the contents of the email that you receive from the plugin when you try to publish the post. Thanks.
Thanks.
Not sure how to do a JSON file.
I did get one post to work.
This one did not. https://monarchhousing.org/2016/05/18/community-development-at-the-capital-lobby-day/
This is the debug report:
Array
(
[headers] => Array
(
[date] => Thu, 19 May 2016 19:17:28 GMT
[request-id] => 10fdc6cb-de44-4759-a1e3-b82333b04b29
[content-type] => application/json; charset=UTF-8
[content-length] => 212
[connection] => keep-alive
)[body] => {“errors”:[{“code”:”INVALID_DOCUMENT”,”keyPath”:[“root”,”metadata”,”thumbnailURL”],”message”:”Unable to determine mime type of URL [https://monarchhousing.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/keanstatelobbyday3.jpg]”}]}
[response] => Array
(
[code] => 400
[message] => Bad Request
)[cookies] => Array
(
)[filename] =>
)request meta:
Array
(
[data] => Array
(
[links] => Array
(
[sections] => Array
(
[0] => https://u48r14.digitalhub.com/sections/f690fa25-9a1e-320b-81c9-2554a8129875
))
[isPreview] => 1
))
There is a link to download JSON for each post if you go to Apple News list in the WordPress dashboard.
Thanks.
{“version”:”1.1″,”identifier”:”post-30939″,”language”:”en”,”title”:”Edison Celebrates Opening of Kilmer Homes”,”documentStyle”:{“backgroundColor”:”#FFFFFF”},”layout”:{“columns”:7,”width”:1024,”margin”:100,”gutter”:20},”components”:[{“role”:”title”,”text”:”Edison Celebrates Opening of Kilmer Homes”,”textStyle”:”default-title”},{“role”:”container”,”layout”:”headerContainerLayout”,”style”:{“fill”:{“type”:”image”,”URL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/04\/NP1_6885.jpg”,”fillMode”:”cover”}},”behavior”:{“type”:”background_parallax”}},{“role”:”byline”,”text”:”by Kate M. Kelly | Apr 3, 2016 | 9:41 AM”,”textStyle”:”default-byline”,”layout”:”byline-layout”},{“role”:”heading3″,”text”:”Kilmer Homes 120 Apartments For\nLow-income and Homeless Families”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-heading-3″,”layout”:”heading-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”On March 31, 2016, the Kilmer Homes I & II partners celebrated a ribbon cutting event. Over 75 representatives of the partnership, funders, federal, state and local officials, service providers and tenants attended the event.\n\nThe ribbon cutting celebrated the grand opening of 120 newly constructed affordable apartments, apartments for homeless families, and the redevelopment of the former U.S. Army Camp Kilmer. Camp Kilmer officially closed in 2009.\n\nPaul Myer, who lives in Kilmer Homes with his wife and two young children, shared his story with [**Fios1 news**](http:\/\/www.fios1news.com\/newjersey\/edison-affordable-housing-complex#.Vv5IPDasmsM).”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”dropcapBodyStyle”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cHe is living proof of how the complex has changed the course of people\u2019s lives. About 1 \u00bd years ago, the company he worked for went under. Paul and his family were forced to live in a shelter where they watched the complex being built. Now they live at Kilmer Homes and he has a full time job.\u201d\n\n\n\u201cNot a lot of people are given opportunities for second chances like this.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Paul Myer.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”embedwebvideo”,”aspectRatio”:1.777,”URL”:”https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/982ue9c85sk”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Kilmer Homes was funded in part through the federal Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program. Despite continued pressure to reduce its federal funding, the 42-year-old CDBG program continues to positively impact communities and their citizens.\n\nThe ribbon cutting coincides with National Community Development Week. Kilmer Homes exemplifies how federal funding, specifically CDBG funding, can effectively create affordable housing.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cEdison is proud to be a community of inclusion; home to people of various cultures, ethnicities, faiths and socioeconomic backgrounds. Kilmer Homes I & II is a significant step in our effort to provide new, safe and attractive affordable housing to meet the housing needs of people with lower-and moderate incomes, including our seniors and veterans.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”[**Mayor Thomas Lankey**](http:\/\/edisonnj.org\/mayor\/index.php) said.\n\nThese are photos on our [**Facebook page from the ribbon cutting**](https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/media\/set\/?set=a.969804579722887.1073741844.108411399195547&type=1&l=07115798b5). All photos were taken by [**Asish B. Patel**](http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/staff\/#asish).\n\n[srizonfbalbum id=3]\n\nKilmer Homes I & II was jointly developed by [**The Alpert Group, LLC**](http:\/\/www.thealpertgroup.com\/), [**Edison Affordable Housing, Inc**](http:\/\/edisonha.org\/)., and Monarch Housing Associates, Inc.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cKilmer Homes is a welcome addition to New Jersey\u2019s 6th District which will have a positive impact on our community. Kilmer Homes is a vibrant housing community that will provide affordable housing to residents I am so pleased that funds from the Sandy Aid package could help make this project a reality, and I applaud all those who worked to see this project through to completion.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said U.S. [**Representative Frank Pallone**](http:\/\/pallone.house.gov\/) (D-6.)\n\nThe development helps Middlesex County towards meeting the goals in its plan to end homelessness.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cBy providing a veteran preference and renting 30 apartments to homeless families, Kilmer Homes is assisting HUD in reaching its goal of eliminating homelessness and veteran homelessness in New Jersey. HUD\u2019s Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, Continuum of Care homeless services, and Community Development Block Grant \u2013 Disaster Recovery funding also contributed to this project, and I am pleased that Kilmer Homes has given a preference to Hurricane Sandy victims in need of a permanent place to call home.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Maria Maio-Messano, [**HUD New Jersey Field Office Director**](http:\/\/www.hud.gov).\n\n[ Fios 1 Coverage ](http:\/\/www.fios1news.com\/newjersey\/edison-affordable-housing-complex#.Vv5IPDasmsM)\n\n[ Edison Sentinel Coverage ]()”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”}],”componentTextStyles”:{“default-heading-3”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:24,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”dropcapBodyStyle”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”},”dropCapStyle”:{“numberOfLines”:2,”numberOfCharacters”:1,”fontName”:”Georgia-Bold”,”textColor”:”#000000″}},”default-body”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”}},”default-pullquote”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”textColor”:”#53585f”,”textTransform”:”uppercase”,”lineHeight”:48,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-title”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-byline”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Medium”,”fontSize”:17,”textColor”:”#53585f”}},”componentLayouts”:{“heading-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”body-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:5,”margin”:{“top”:25,”bottom”:25}},”quote-layout”:{“margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”headerContainerLayout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”ignoreDocumentMargin”:true,”minimumHeight”:”50vh”,”margin”:{“top”:0,”bottom”:25}},”byline-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:10,”bottom”:10}}},”metadata”:{“excerpt”:”Kilmer Homes I & II is a significant step in Edison’s efforts to provide affordable housing for our citizens with lower-and moderate incomes.”,”thumbnailURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/04\/NP1_6885.jpg”,”dateCreated”:”2016-04-03T09:41:51+00:00″,”dateModified”:”2016-05-19T15:13:59+00:00″,”datePublished”:”2016-04-03T09:41:51+00:00″,”canonicalURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/2016\/04\/03\/edison-celebrates-opening-of-kilmer-homes\/”,”generatorIdentifier”:”publish-to-apple-news”,”generatorName”:”Publish to Apple News”,”generatorVersion”:”1.1.2″}}
This one is the one I got published. https://apple.news/A4CjivP-pSXO9ai7kJ6aYzw
This is JSON file for that post:
{“version”:”1.1″,”identifier”:”post-31400″,”language”:”en”,”title”:”The Long Way Home”,”documentStyle”:{“backgroundColor”:”#FFFFFF”},”layout”:{“columns”:7,”width”:1024,”margin”:100,”gutter”:20},”components”:[{“role”:”title”,”text”:”The Long Way Home”,”textStyle”:”default-title”},{“role”:”container”,”layout”:”headerContainerLayout”,”style”:{“fill”:{“type”:”image”,”URL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/shanay-manson-housing-lottery-b06d73921e9f2cfe372b0a55b747a07cef4ae534-s1300-c85.jpg”,”fillMode”:”cover”}},”behavior”:{“type”:”background_parallax”}},{“role”:”byline”,”text”:”by Kate M. Kelly | May 16, 2016 | 11:50 AM”,”textStyle”:”default-byline”,”layout”:”byline-layout”},{“role”:”heading3″,”text”:”Receiving a Federal Housing Choice\nVoucher Depends on Chance”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-heading-3″,”layout”:”heading-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”A recent [**NPR Planet Money**](http:\/\/n.pr\/1TagihT) piece explains how housing vouchers are allocated compared to other federal social programs such as Food Stamps, Medicaid and the Earned Income Tax Credit which are provided on a need basis.\n\nA household\u2019s opportunity to move into an affordable housing with a voucher depends solely on chance.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”dropcapBodyStyle”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cWith housing though, that\u2019s not how it works. There are far more people who qualify than actually receive help. For subsidized housing vouchers, there is often a lottery. And your chances aren\u2019t good.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”The piece profiles a young woman living in Hartford, Connecticut and her journey in couch surfing with her children \u2013 staying in the homes of friends.\n\nShe finds employment and applies for a voucher through the West Hartford Housing Authority and ultimately secures a voucher.\n\nBut in interviewing the director of the West Hartford Housing Authority, listeners learn that when the waiting list for vouchers opened up, over 3,000 households applied in a matter of hours.\n\nMonarch Housing is proud to be an organizer of the [**July 13, 2016 Congressional Reception**](http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/2016\/02\/17\/nj-hill-day-moved-to-july-13-2016\/) focused on urging New Jersey\u2019s elected officials in Washington, DC to \u201cStop the Cuts.\u201d One of the key advocacy issues is increasing funding for rental housing vouchers.\n\n[ Planet Money ](http:\/\/n.pr\/1TagihT)”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”}],”componentTextStyles”:{“default-heading-3”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:24,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”dropcapBodyStyle”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”},”dropCapStyle”:{“numberOfLines”:2,”numberOfCharacters”:1,”fontName”:”Georgia-Bold”,”textColor”:”#000000″}},”default-body”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”}},”default-pullquote”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”textColor”:”#53585f”,”textTransform”:”uppercase”,”lineHeight”:48,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-title”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-byline”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Medium”,”fontSize”:17,”textColor”:”#53585f”}},”componentLayouts”:{“heading-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”body-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:5,”margin”:{“top”:25,”bottom”:25}},”quote-layout”:{“margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”headerContainerLayout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”ignoreDocumentMargin”:true,”minimumHeight”:”50vh”,”margin”:{“top”:0,”bottom”:25}},”byline-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:10,”bottom”:10}}},”metadata”:{“excerpt”:”There are far more people who qualify than actually receive help. For subsidized housing vouchers, there is often a lottery. And your chances aren’t good.”,”thumbnailURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/shanay-manson-housing-lottery-b06d73921e9f2cfe372b0a55b747a07cef4ae534-s1300-c85.jpg”,”dateCreated”:”2016-05-16T11:50:31+00:00″,”dateModified”:”2016-05-19T15:11:08+00:00″,”datePublished”:”2016-05-16T11:50:31+00:00″,”canonicalURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/2016\/05\/16\/the-long-way-home\/”,”generatorIdentifier”:”publish-to-apple-news”,”generatorName”:”Publish to Apple News”,”generatorVersion”:”1.1.2″}}
Any update on how to get this to work on all posts?
There isn’t an update and this isn’t a simple issue to resolve. Errors with publishing to Apple News generally involve unsupported markup in your content which could be a result of an unsupported embed type you’re using or a third party plugin. We have your content and will look into it further as time permits. However, if you want a rapid fix, you can always read up on Apple News format and work with the News Preview tool to troubleshoot your content. That could lead to a more specific error that would give us a quicker route to a solution.
Thanks. I will use the preview and let you know what i find.
It just seems odd that one posted with no problems using the same plugins etc.
I opened the file in Preview and got these errors:
Error: Invalid URL:
document -> components -> [4]Error: Invalid URL:
document -> components -> [15]This is the file:
{“version”:”1.1″,”identifier”:”post-31451″,”language”:”en”,”title”:”The Cost of Poverty: The Perpetuating Cycle of Concentrated Poverty in NJ Cities”,”documentStyle”:{“backgroundColor”:”#FFFFFF”},”layout”:{“columns”:7,”width”:1024,”margin”:100,”gutter”:20},”components”:[{“role”:”title”,”text”:”The Cost of Poverty: The Perpetuating Cycle of Concentrated Poverty in NJ Cities”,”textStyle”:”default-title”},{“role”:”container”,”layout”:”headerContainerLayout”,”style”:{“fill”:{“type”:”image”,”URL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/06\/APN_final_logo.png”,”fillMode”:”cover”}},”behavior”:{“type”:”background_parallax”}},{“role”:”byline”,”text”:”by Kate M. Kelly | May 20, 2016 | 8:12 AM”,”textStyle”:”default-byline”,”layout”:”byline-layout”},{“role”:”heading3″,”text”:”New Report Shows Cycle of Poverty and\nDisinvestment in NJ Cities”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-heading-3″,”layout”:”heading-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”[**The Anti-Poverty Network of New Jersey**](http:\/\/www.antipovertynetwork.org\/) and the [**John S. Watson Institute for Public Policy**](http:\/\/www.tesu.edu\/watson\/institute\/) have released a joint report that investigates the budgetary consequences of concentrated poverty in four New Jersey Cities.\n\n[ The Cost of Poverty: The Perpetuating Cycle of Concentrated Poverty in New Jersey Cities ](http:\/\/www.antipovertynetwork.org\/resources\/Documents\/CostofPovertyReport.pdf)\n\n[ Executive Summary ]()”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”dropcapBodyStyle”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cAs leaders, conceiving solutions to the crisis that is concentrated poverty is not only a public policy imperative, but a moral one. I believe that we must work together to organize high-intensity partnerships with business, government, education and faith leaders to formulate solutions that are practical, effective and sustainable.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Eric Jackson, [**Mayor of the City of Trenton**](http:\/\/www.trentonnj.org\/).\n\nThe report, [**The Cost of Poverty: The Perpetuating Cycle of Concentrated Poverty in New Jersey Cities**](http:\/\/www.antipovertynetwork.org\/resources\/Documents\/CostofPovertyReport.pdf), examines the budgetary pressures in four New Jersey cities facing the challenges of decreasing resources to address persistent poverty:\n\n- Bridgeton,\n- Passaic,\n- Perth Amboy, and\n- Trenton.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cThese cities offer us important insight into the perpetuating cycle of concentrated poverty, depleted resources, and the inability to invest in needed services. There is a lot of discussion in Trenton right now about \u2018tax fairness.\u2019 This important research reveals the structural unfairness of burdening our cities with the overwhelming task of addressing concentrated poverty, while their resources to do so keep shrinking.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”photo”,”URL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/CostofPoverty-1.png”,”layout”:”anchor-layout-right”,”anchor”:{“targetComponentIdentifier”:”component-573f65bd4a5c3″,”targetAnchorPosition”:”center”,”rangeStart”:0,”rangeLength”:1},”animation”:{“type”:”fade_in”,”userControllable”:true,”initialAlpha”:0}},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Explained Serena Rice, Executive Director of the Anti-Poverty Network of New Jersey, which commissioned the report.\n\n \n\nAmong the report\u2019s findings:\n\n- The most impoverished municipalities shoulder an unmanageable municipal tax burden \u2013 a greater burden than even their wealthy neighbors.\n- Services like healthcare, libraries, housing, mental health services, social wrap-around services, economic development, and infrastructure are crowded out of constrained budgets.\n- Due to the limits of public and affordable housing even in low-income areas, citizens of Bridgeton, Passaic, Perth Amboy, and Trenton must frequently spend over half their income on rent, leaving little else for other basic needs.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”,”identifier”:”component-573f65bd4a5c3″},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cAs urban mayors, our administrations are not only commissioned to economic development, constituent services and providing everyday vital services, but also addressing socio-economic challenges that other communities do not face directly. \u00a0This report lays out the wide-gaped spectrum of fiscal statuses within one of the wealthiest states in America.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Wilda Diaz, [**Mayor of the City of Perth Amboy**](http:\/\/ci.perthamboy.nj.us\/mayor-wilda-diaz.html).”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cI am grateful to the John S. Watson Institute at Thomas Edison University, the New Jersey Urban Mayors Association, HJA Strategies, and the Anti-Poverty Network for their exhaustive analysis on the history and causes of urban poverty and how it gets concentrated and perpetuated in urban cities throughout New Jersey, including the City of Bridgeton. I am even more appreciative of the recommendations that were shared with the communities featured in the report. Now it is up to us, both in the impacted communities and at the state level, to begin mapping a strategy to make systemic changes so we can restore our urban communities to a more prosperous and growth-oriented future.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Albert B. Kelly, [**Mayor of the City of Bridgeton**](http:\/\/www.cityofbridgeton.com\/kelly.php).\n\nThe report recommends a number of systemic changes to break the cycle of concentrated poverty:\n\n- Strengthening the safety-net for poverty-stricken families and their children.\n- Addressing the budgetary system that unfairly burdens both income-strapped families and impoverished municipalities.\n- Promoting family financial success through supportive work\/family policies, adjusting the allocation of municipal budget State aid and support programming so that it prioritizes areas of concentrated need, and reimagining the fundamental structure of New Jersey\u2019s property tax system.”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”},{“role”:”quote”,”text”:”\u201cA civil society embraces the duty of caring for all of its people. I believe that this report sheds a light on the state of poor people in New Jersey and specifically the long history of bad policies and limited investments that lead to concentrated poverty in urban areas. We hope that it lays the foundation for dialogue that will lead to real solutions that provide safety nets to families when needed but more importantly, lead them out of poverty permanently.\u201d\n\n”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-pullquote”,”layout”:”quote-layout”},{“role”:”body”,”text”:”Said Barbara Johnson, Executive Director of the John S. Watson Institute of Public Policy at Thomas Edison State University.\n\n[ The Cost of Poverty: The Perpetuating Cycle of Concentrated Poverty in New Jersey Cities ](http:\/\/www.antipovertynetwork.org\/resources\/Documents\/CostofPovertyReport.pdf)\n\n[ Executive Summary ]()”,”format”:”markdown”,”textStyle”:”default-body”,”layout”:”body-layout”}],”componentTextStyles”:{“default-heading-3”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:24,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”dropcapBodyStyle”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”},”dropCapStyle”:{“numberOfLines”:2,”numberOfCharacters”:1,”fontName”:”Georgia-Bold”,”textColor”:”#000000″}},”default-body”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Regular”,”fontSize”:18,”lineHeight”:24,”textColor”:”#000000″,”linkStyle”:{“textColor”:”#428bca”}},”default-pullquote”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”textColor”:”#53585f”,”textTransform”:”none”,”lineHeight”:48,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-title”:{“fontName”:”AvenirNext-Bold”,”fontSize”:48,”lineHeight”:52,”textColor”:”#000000″,”textAlignment”:”left”},”default-byline”:{“textAlignment”:”left”,”fontName”:”AvenirNext-Medium”,”fontSize”:17,”textColor”:”#53585f”}},”componentLayouts”:{“heading-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”body-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:5,”margin”:{“top”:25,”bottom”:25}},”quote-layout”:{“margin”:{“top”:15,”bottom”:15}},”anchored-image”:{“margin”:{“top”:25,”bottom”:25}},”anchor-layout-right”:{“columnStart”:3,”columnSpan”:4},”headerContainerLayout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”ignoreDocumentMargin”:true,”minimumHeight”:”50vh”,”margin”:{“top”:0,”bottom”:25}},”byline-layout”:{“columnStart”:0,”columnSpan”:7,”margin”:{“top”:10,”bottom”:10}}},”metadata”:{“excerpt”:”This research reveals the structural unfairness of burdening our cities with the overwhelming task of addressing concentrated poverty, while resources keep shrinking.”,”thumbnailURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/06\/APN_final_logo.png”,”dateCreated”:”2016-05-20T08:12:42+00:00″,”dateModified”:”2016-05-19T18:10:45+00:00″,”datePublished”:”2016-05-20T08:12:42+00:00″,”canonicalURL”:”http:\/\/monarchhousing.org\/2016\/05\/20\/the-cost-of-poverty-the-perpetuating-cycle-of-concentrated-poverty-in-nj-cities\/”,”generatorIdentifier”:”publish-to-apple-news”,”generatorName”:”Publish to Apple News”,”generatorVersion”:”1.1.2″}}
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