“[Working with] teenagers, that’s when the emotions can get so strong, they’re becoming adults, the hormones are there,” Tayco said. “And they’re learning things like, ‘Mommy isn’t going to braid my hair anymore. Daddy is not coming on vacation.’ And they understand, that’s it, that people die and that they don’t come back.”
The effort comes as more than 35,000 people have died from coronavirus-related ailments in New Jersey since the onset of the pandemic in 2020.
“I think more and more people have been touched by the grief… and frankly, I think, in many cases, whether it was due to the isolation of COVID … having the opportunity to express their grief, I think makes this bill more timely,” Cryan said.