SCHEDULE 14A

                                 (Rule 14a-101)

                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
               Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.   )

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [_]

Check the appropriate box:

[_]  Preliminary Proxy Statement          [_]  Soliciting Material Under Rule
[_]  Confidential, For Use of the              14a-12
     Commission Only (as permitted
     by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[_]  Definitive Additional Materials




                        BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.
[_]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

________________________________________________________________________________
2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

________________________________________________________________________________

3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed  pursuant
     to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
     calculated and state how it was determined):

________________________________________________________________________________
4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

________________________________________________________________________________
5)   Total fee paid:

________________________________________________________________________________
[_]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials:

________________________________________________________________________________
[_]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting  fee was paid
     previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

     1)   Amount previously paid:

________________________________________________________________________________
     2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

________________________________________________________________________________
     3)   Filing Party:

________________________________________________________________________________
     4)   Date Filed:

________________________________________________________________________________





                        BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.
                            481 EDWARD H. ROSS DRIVE
                         ELMWOOD PARK, NEW JERSEY 07407
                                  201-791-2600



                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                -----------------

                                  JULY 30, 2009

                                -----------------

         The annual meeting of the stockholders of  Bio-Reference  Laboratories,
Inc. (the "Company") will be held at the Sheraton  Crossroads Hotel,  Crossroads
Corporate Center,  Route 17 North,  Mahwah, New Jersey 07495-0001,  on Thursday,
July 30, 2009 at 9:00 A.M. local time, for the purpose of considering and acting
on the following matters:

         1.   Election of three  directors to the Company's  Board of Directors,
              each to serve for a term of three years and until his successor is
              duly elected and qualified (Proposal One).

         2.   Such other  business as may properly be brought before the meeting
              or any adjournment thereof.

         Pursuant to the  provisions of the By-Laws,  the Board of Directors has
fixed the close of  business  on Monday,  June 15,  2009 as the record  date for
determining the  stockholders of the Company  entitled to notice of, and to vote
at the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

         Stockholders  who do not expect to be present in person at the  meeting
are  urged to date  and sign the  enclosed  proxy  and  promptly  mail it in the
accompanying postage-paid envelope.


                                   By Order of the Board of Directors

                                            Marc D. Grodman
                                               President


Dated: June 18, 2009


         PLEASE  COMPLETE  AND  PROMPTLY  RETURN  YOUR  PROXY  IN  THE  ENCLOSED
POSTAGE-PAID  ENVELOPE.  THIS WILL NOT  PREVENT YOU FROM VOTING IN PERSON AT THE
MEETING  BUT WILL,  HOWEVER,  HELP TO  ASSURE A QUORUM  AND  AVOID  ADDED  PROXY
SOLICITATION COSTS.






                        BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.
                            481 EDWARD H. ROSS DRIVE
                         ELMWOOD PARK, NEW JERSEY 07407
                                  201-791-2600

                                -----------------

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                                -----------------

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON JULY 30, 2009

                                -----------------

         This Proxy Statement of Bio-Reference Laboratories,  Inc., a New Jersey
corporation  (the  "Company") is first being mailed to  Stockholders on or about
June 18, 2009 in connection  with the  solicitation  of proxies by the Company's
Board of  Directors  to be used at the  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of the
Company to be held on Thursday,  July 30, 2009 at 9:00 A.M.  (local time) at the
Sheraton Crossroads Hotel,  Crossroads Corporate Center, Route 17 North, Mahwah,
New Jersey  07495-0001.  Accompanying this Proxy Statement is a Notice of Annual
Meeting  of  Stockholders,  a form of Proxy  for the  meeting  and a copy of the
Company's 2008 Annual Report containing financial statements and related data.

         All proxies  which are properly  filled in,  signed and returned to the
Company  prior  to or at the  Meeting  will be  voted  in  accordance  with  the
instructions  thereon. A proxy may be revoked by any stockholder giving the same
prior to the exercise  thereof by (a) written notice  addressed to the Company's
Chief Information Officer and delivered to the Company's principal offices prior
to the commencement of the Meeting, (b) providing a signed proxy bearing a later
date, or (c) appearing in person and voting at the Meeting.  The Company intends
to vote  executed but unmarked  proxies in favor of Proposal  One. The Board has
fixed the close of business on Monday,  June 15, 2009 as the record date for the
determination  of stockholders who are entitled to notice of, and to vote at the
meeting or any adjournment thereof.

         The expenses of preparing, assembling, printing and mailing the form of
proxy and the  material  used in  solicitation  of proxies  will be borne by the
Company.  In addition to the  solicitation  of proxies by use of the mails,  the
Company may utilize the services of some of its  officers and regular  employees
(who will  receive no  additional  compensation  therefore)  to solicit  proxies
personally, and by telephone. The Company has requested banks, brokers and other
custodians,  nominees and fiduciaries to forward copies of the proxy material to
their principals and to request  authority for the execution of proxies and will
reimburse  such  persons  for  their  services  in  doing  so.  The cost of such
additional solicitation incurred otherwise than by use of the mails is estimated
not to exceed $10,000.

         At the record  date,  the Company had  13,805,308  shares of its Common
Stock,  $.01 par value (the "Common Stock") issued and outstanding,  the holders
of which are each  entitled to one vote per share.  The presence in person or by
proxy of at least a majority of the  outstanding  Common  Stock is  necessary to
constitute  a quorum at the  meeting.  Broker  nonvotes  (that is,




proxies from brokers or nominees  indicating that such persons have not received
instructions from the beneficial owners or other persons entitled to vote shares
on a  particular  matter  as to  which  the  broker  or  nominee  does  not have
discretionary  authority)  will be counted for purposes of  determining a quorum
for the transaction of business at the Annual Meeting but will not be considered
as votes  for  purposes  of  determining  the  outcome  of a vote.  Election  of
directors  (Proposal  One)  requires the  affirmative  vote of a majority of the
votes cast on the Proposal by the holders of Common  Stock  present in person or
by proxy at the meeting.

         The  following  table sets forth  information  as of June 15, 2009 with
respect to the ownership of Common Stock by (i) each person known by the Company
to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of its outstanding Common Stock, (ii)
each director of the Company,  (iii) each executive officer of the Company,  and
(iv) all directors and executive  officers as a group. The percentages have been
calculated on the basis of treating as outstanding for a particular  holder, all
shares of Common  Stock  outstanding  on said date owned by such  holder and all
shares of Common  Stock  issuable  to such  holder in the event of  exercise  of
outstanding  options  and  warrants  owned by such holder at said date which are
exercisable within 60 days of such date.

         Name and Address of            Shares of Common Stock        Percentage
         Beneficial Owner               Beneficially Owned(1)         Ownership
         ----------------               ----------------------        ---------
         Directors and
         Executive Officers*
         ------------------

         Marc D. Grodman(2)                   1,460,501                  11%
         Howard Dubinett(3)                     310,872                   2%
         Sam Singer(4)                           91,916                   1%
         Joseph Benincasa                        -0-                      -
         Harry Elias                             -0-                      -
         Gary Lederman                           27,200                   -
         John Roglieri                            5,000                   -

         Executive Officers                   1,895,489                  14%
         and Directors as a group
         (seven persons)(2)(3)(4)

         Other Greater than 5%
         Beneficial Owner
         ----------------
         Arbor Capital Management, LLC(5)       732,900                   5%
         Rick D.Leggott
         One Financial Plaza
         120 South Sixth Street
         Suite 1000
         Minneapolis, MN 55402

----------
*    The address of all of the Company's directors and executive officers is c/o
     the Company, 481 Edward H. Ross Drive, Elmwood Park, New Jersey 07407.


                                       2


(1)  Except as otherwise  noted,  each holder named in the table has sole voting
     and  investment  power with  respect to the shares of Common Stock shown as
     beneficially owned.

(2)  Includes  1,233,834  shares owned  directly.  Also includes  173,467 shares
     owned by Dr. Grodman's wife, Pam Grodman,  and 53,200 shares owned by their
     children.  Dr.  Grodman  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of these  226,667
     shares.

(3)  Includes  310,872  shares owned  directly.  In lieu of an outright sale, on
     October 15, 2007,  Howard Dubinett  entered into a pre-paid  variable price
     forward  sales  contract  ("Forward  Contract")  with  UBS  Securities  LLC
     ("UBS").  Pursuant to the Forward  Contract,  Mr.  Dubinett  pledged 89,047
     shares of his BRLI  Common  Stock to secure  his  obligation  to  deliver a
     maximum  89,047 shares of BRLI Common Stock to UBS on October 19, 2009 (the
     "Settlement  Date").  As  prepayment  for the pledge of these  shares,  UBS
     agreed to pay Mr.  Dubinett  $2,572,474 or  approximately  $28.89 per share
     representing  87.9%  of the  proceeds  from the sale of  89,047  shares  on
     October 16,  2007.  The number of shares  that Mr.  Dubinett is required to
     deliver on the  Settlement  Date varies  based upon the price of the Common
     Stock on the Settlement  Date. Mr. Dubinett will benefit from any excess in
     the price of the Common Stock on the  Settlement  Date  between  $32.87 per
     share up to a maximum  $39.44  per  share by being  able to  deliver  fewer
     shares.  Until the Settlement  Date, Mr. Dubinett retains the voting rights
     to the 89,047  pledged  shares and is deemed the  beneficial  owner of such
     shares.

(4)  Includes 82,016 shares owned  directly,  and 9,900 shares owned by children
     who share Mr. Singer's household. Mr. Singer disclaims beneficial ownership
     of these 9,900 shares.

(5)  According to a Schedule 13G dated  February 5, 2008 which they filed with
     the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  Arbor Capital  Management,  LLC
     ("Arbor")  in its  capacity  as an  investment  advisor  and  its  CEO  and
     controlling person,  Rick D. Leggott,  could be deemed the beneficial owner
     of these 732,900 shares which were owned by investment  advisory clients at
     said date. In the Schedule 13G filing, Arbor and Mr. Leggott stated that to
     the best of their  knowledge,  these  732,900  shares were  acquired in the
     ordinary  course of  business;  were not acquired for the purpose of and do
     not have the effect of changing or influencing  the control of the Company;
     and  were  not  acquired  in  connection  with or as a  participant  in any
     transaction having such purpose or effect.

         The  Company's  executive  officers and  directors and members of their
immediate  families  owning and having the right to vote an aggregate  1,895,489
shares  (14%) of the  Company's  outstanding  Common  Stock  have  stated  their
intention  to vote their  shares  FOR the  nominees  proposed  for  election  as
directors (Proposal One).

                        ACTION TO BE TAKEN AT THE MEETING
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
                                 (PROPOSAL ONE)

         The  number  of  directors  on the  Company's  Board  of  Directors  is
currently fixed at seven. The Company's Certificate of Incorporation divides the
Board of Directors  into three  classes.  The members of each class of directors
serve for  staggered  three-year  terms.  The Board is  comprised of two Class I
directors (Dr. Grodman and Mr. Dubinett), two Class II directors (Mr.


                                       3


Singer and Mr. Elias) and three Class III directors (Mr. Benincasa, Mr. Lederman
and Dr.  Roglieri),  whose terms expire upon the election and  qualification  of
their successors at successive Annual Meetings to be held in 2009 (the Class III
directors),  in  2010  (the  Class  I  directors)  and in  2011  (the  Class  II
directors). At each Annual Meeting of Stockholders, the directors comprising one
of the classes are elected for a full term of three years.

         Mr.  Benincasa,  Mr.  Lederman  and Dr.  Roglieri  (current  Class  III
directors)  are  being  proposed  for  re-election  at this  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders,  each to serve for a  three-year  term and until his  successor is
elected and qualifies.  The shares represented by proxies will be voted in favor
of the election as directors of Mr. Benincasa, Mr. Lederman and Dr. Roglieri who
are the nominees of the Board of Directors for  election,  and authority to vote
for  their  election  as Class III  directors  shall be  deemed  granted  unless
specifically  withheld.  Management  has no reason to  believe  that any of such
nominees  for the office of director  will not be  available  for  election as a
director.  However,  should  any of them  become  unwilling  or unable to accept
nomination  for  election,  it is  intended  that the  individuals  named in the
enclosed  proxy may vote for the election of such other person or persons as the
Board of Directors may recommend.

         The  following  table sets forth certain  information  as of the record
date  with  respect  to each of the  directors  and  executive  officers  of the
Company.

Name                               Age         Position
----                               ---         --------

Marc D. Grodman, M.D.              57          Chairman of the Board, President,
                                               Chief   Executive   Officer   and
                                               Director

Howard Dubinett                    57          Executive Vice  President,  Chief
                                               Operating Officer and Director

Sam Singer                         65          Senior  Vice   President,   Chief
                                               Financial     Officer,      Chief
                                               Accounting Officer and Director

Joseph Benincasa(a)(c)(e)          59          Director

Harry Elias(a)(c)(e)               79          Director

Gary Lederman, Esq.(b)(c)(e)      75          Director

John Roglieri, M.D.(a)(d)(e)      70          Director

----------
(a)  Member of the Audit Committee
(b)  Chairman of the Audit Committee
(c)  Member of the Compensation Committee
(d)  Chairman of the Compensation Committee
(e)  Member of the Nominating Committee

BACKGROUND

         The  following is a brief  account of the business  experience  of each
director including each nominee for director of the Company.

                                       4


         Marc D. Grodman, M.D. founded the Company in December 1981 and has been
its Chairman of the Board,  President,  Chief  Executive  Officer and a Director
since its formation.  Dr. Grodman is an Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine
at Columbia  University's  College of  Physicians  and  Surgeons  and  Assistant
Attending Physician at New York Presbyterian  Hospital, New York City. From 1980
to 1983,  Dr.  Grodman  attended  the Kennedy  School of  Government  at Harvard
University  and was a Primary  Care  Clinical  Fellow at  Massachusetts  General
Hospital.  From 1982 to 1984,  he was a medical  consultant  to the Metal Trades
Department  of the  AFL-CIO.  Dr.  Grodman  received  a  B.A.  degree  from  the
University of Pennsylvania  in 1973 and an M.D. degree from Columbia  University
College of Physicians  and Surgeons in 1977.  Except for his part time duties as
Assistant  Professor of Clinical Medicine and Assistant  Attending  Physician at
Columbia University and New York Presbyterian  Hospital, Dr. Grodman devotes all
of his working time to the  business of the Company.  Since  January  2005,  Dr.
Grodman has been a member of the Board of  Directors  of the  American  Clinical
Laboratory Association and since April 2008, has been its chairman.

         Howard  Dubinett  has  been  the  Executive  Vice-President  and  Chief
Operating  Officer  of the  Company  since its  formation  in 1981.  He became a
Director of the Company in April 1986. Mr. Dubinett attended Rutgers University.
Mr. Dubinett devotes all of his working time to the business of the Company.

         Sam Singer has been the Company's  Vice  President and Chief  Financial
Officer since October 1987 and a Director since November 1989. He is responsible
for all of the Company's financial activities. Mr. Singer was the Controller for
Sycomm Systems Corporation, a data processing and management consulting company,
from 1981 to 1987, prior to joining the Company.  He received a B.A. degree from
Strayer University and an M.B.A. from Rutgers University. Mr. Singer devotes all
of his working time to the business of the Company.

         Joseph  Benincasa  became a Director of the  Company in June 2005.  Mr.
Benincasa  currently  serves as the  Executive  Director of The Actors'  Fund of
America,  a position  he has held since 1989.  The  Actors'  Fund is the leading
national,  non-profit human services organization providing comprehensive social
and health  care  services,  employment,  training  and  housing  support to the
entertainment  profession.  It is  headquartered  in New York City with regional
offices  in  Chicago  and Los  Angeles.  He is also a  director  of St.  Peter's
University  Medical  Center and also sits on the boards of directors of Broadway
Cares/Equity  Fights AIDS;  the National  Theatre  Workshop of the  Handicapped;
Career Transition for Dancers;  the Times Square Alliance;  the New York Society
of Association Executives;  the YMCA of New York City and the Somerset Patriots,
a minor league  baseball  team.  Mr.  Benincasa  holds a B.A. from St.  Joseph's
University and an M. Ed. from Rutgers  University.  He also attended the Fordham
University Graduate School of Business.

         Harry Elias  became a Director of the Company in March 2004.  Mr. Elias
commenced  his  employment  in sales and  marketing  with JVC Company of America
("JVC") in 1967,  subsequently being appointed as JVC's Senior Vice President of
Sales  and  Marketing  in 1983 and as  Executive  Vice  President  of Sales  and
Marketing  in 1990.  In 1995,  Mr.  Elias  was  named as JVC's  Chief  Operating
Officer,  a position he occupied until April 2003 when he resigned his


                                       5


positions upon his appointment as JVC's "Honorable Chairman." JVC, a distributor
of audio and video  products  headquartered  in Wayne,  New Jersey is the wholly
owned United States  subsidiary of Victor Company of Japan,  a  manufacturer  of
audio and video products headquartered in Japan. In January 2005, after retiring
from JVC,  Mr.  Elias was  appointed  Chairman of the Board of and  commenced to
serve as a consultant to AKAI USA, the sole  distributor in the United States of
electronic products produced by AKAI, a Chinese manufacturer.  Mr. Elias retired
from AKAI in 2007 and currently is self-employed as a Business Consultant.

         Gary  Lederman,  Esq.  became a Director of the Company in May 1997. He
received his B.A. degree from Brooklyn  College in 1954 and his J.D. degree from
NYU Law  School  in 1957.  He was  manager  of  Locals  370,  491 and 662 of the
U.F.C.W.  International  Union from 1961 to 1985.  He is retired from the unions
and has  been a  lecturer  at  Queensboro  Community  College  in the  field  of
insurance.  He served on an institutional review board for RTL, a pharmaceutical
drug testing laboratory until his retirement in February 2007.

         John Roglieri, M.D. became a Director of the Company in September 1995.
He is an  Assistant  Professor  of Clinical  Medicine  at Columbia  University's
College of Physicians and Surgeons and an Assistant  Attending  Physician at New
York Presbyterian  Hospital,  New York City. Dr. Roglieri received a B.S. degree
in  Chemical  Engineering  and a B.A.  degree in Applied  Sciences  from  Lehigh
University in 1960, an M.D.  degree from Harvard  Medical  School in 1966, and a
Master's  degree from the Columbia  University  School of Business in 1978. From
1969 until 1971,  he was a Senior  Assistant  Surgeon in the U.S.  Public Health
Service in  Washington.  From 1971 until 1973,  he was a Clinical  and  Research
Fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital.  From 1973 until 1975, he was Director
of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars program at Columbia University.  In
1975  he  was  appointed   Vice-President,   Ambulatory  Services  at  New  York
Presbyterian  Hospital,  a position which he held until 1980. Since 1980, he has
maintained  a private  practice  of internal  medicine at  Columbia-Presbyterian
Medical  Center.  From 1988 until 1992,  he was also  Director  of the  Employee
Health Service at New York  Presbyterian  Hospital.  From 1992 through 1999, Dr.
Roglieri  was  the  Corporate  Medical  Director  of  NYLCare,  a  managed  care
subsidiary of New York Life Insurance  Company ("New York Life").  Dr.  Roglieri
was chief medical officer of Physician  WebLink,  a national  physician practice
management  company,  from  1999 to 2000.  Since  2001,  he has  been a  Medical
Director  for New York  Life.  He is a member  of  advisory  boards  to  several
pharmaceutical  companies,  a  member  of the  Editorial  Advisory  Board of the
journals  Managed  Care and  Seminars in Medical  Practice,  and is a subject of
biographical record in Who's Who in America.

         There are no family  relationships  between or among any  directors  or
executive officers of Bio-Reference  Laboratories.  The Company's Certificate of
Incorporation  provides for a staggered Board of Directors pursuant to which the
Board is divided  into three  classes of  directors  and the members of only one
class are elected each year to serve a three-year term.

THE  BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE FOR THE THREE  CLASS  III  DIRECTOR
NOMINEES NAMED ABOVE.

                                       6



KEY PERSONNEL AND CONSULTANTS

         The  following  key  personnel   and   consultants   make   significant
contributions to the Company's operations.

         James Weisberger, M.D. (Age 53) joined the Company in September 2003 as
Vice President, Assistant Chief Medical Officer and Director of Hematopathology.
He is  currently  employed as the  Company's  Chief  Medical  Officer.  Prior to
joining  the  Company,  he was  Director  of  Hematopathology  at  IMPATH,  Inc.
(1999-2003).  He is board certified in internal medicine,  anatomic and clinical
pathology,  and  hematopathology.  He has a New York State  Department of Health
Certificate  of  Qualification  as a  Laboratory  Director.  He  is  a  Clinical
Assistant  Professor of Pathology at New York  Medical  College,  Valhalla,  New
York.  Prior to joining  IMPATH,  he was an Assistant  Professor of Medicine and
Pathology at New York Medical  College  (1995-1999).  He has a B.S.  degree from
Stanford  University (1977); an M.S. degree from Stanford University (1978); and
an M.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1983).

         Charles T. Todd,  Jr.  (Age 58) is a Senior Vice  President  engaged in
Sales.  Mr.  Todd  was  the  founder  and  CEO of  GenCare  Biomedical  Research
Corporation  ("GenCare"),  a specialty oncology laboratory that was purchased by
the Company in 1995. He attended Seton Hall University  where he received a B.S.
degree in Finance in 1974.

         Richard  Faherty  (Age 62) serves as the  Company's  Chief  Information
Officer  as  well  as  the  chief  executive  officer  of  its  two  informatics
operations. Mr. Faherty provided custom programming and system analysis services
to Gencare from 1987 until its  acquisition  by the Company in 1995. He became a
consultant  to the  Company in 1995 in the  information  technology  area and an
employee  in 1999.  Mr.  Faherty is a graduate of the  University  of Notre Dame
(1968) and the Fordham Law School (1975).

         John Bennett,  M.D.,  Scientific Advisory Board Chairman,  is Professor
Emeritus at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York. Dr.
Bennett has long been recognized as an  intellectual  force in the treatment and
understanding  of leukemias,  lymphomas and other  cancer-related  diseases.  He
established the French-American-British  (FAB) Leukemia Working Group and is one
of the world's leading authorities on Myelodysplasia. He is founder and Chairman
of the MDS  Foundation,  as well as Editor of the Journal of Leukemia  Research.
Dr.  Bennett is  currently  Professor  Emeritus  and former  Head of the Medical
Oncology Unit at the  University of Rochester  Medical Center and formerly was a
Professor  of Oncology in Medicine,  Pathology  and  Laboratory  Medicine at the
University of Rochester Medical School. For nearly four decades, Dr. Bennett has
been  honored by the medical  community as an expert in the field of oncology as
evidenced  by the  numerous  chairs  he has held in  prestigious  societies  and
committees  and his  authorship  of more than 400  publications  in peer  review
journals, the majority of which are in the area of hematologic malignancies. Dr.
Bennett  earned  his B.A.  from  Harvard  University  and his M.D.  from  Boston
University. He served his residency in medicine at Beth-Israel Hospital, Boston,
Massachusetts  and completed a fellowship in hematology at Boston City Hospital.
He headed the Morphology and Cytochemistry Section of the Clinical Center at the
National  Institutes  of  Health  ("NIH")  before  joining  the  faculty  at the
University of


                                       7


Rochester. Dr. Bennett serves the Company in an advisory capacity as chairman of
its Scientific Advisory Board.

         Sherri  Bale,  Ph.D.,  FACMG (Age 53) joined the  Company in  September
2006, when  BioReference  Laboratories  acquired the operating assets of GeneDx.
She received her M.S. and Ph.D.  degrees from the University of Pittsburgh,  and
her  post-doctoral  training in medical  genetics at the NIH. She is an American
Board of Medical  Genetics-Certified  Ph.D.  - Medical  Geneticist  and Founding
Member of the American College of Medical Genetics.  She founded GeneDx with Dr.
John Compton, also a long-time NIH scientist, after 16 years at the NIH. For the
past six years,  she has served as President  and  Clinical  Director of GeneDx,
which  specializes in developing and providing  molecular  diagnostics tests for
rare hereditary disorders.  She has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed papers,
book chapters,  and books in the field. She serves on numerous Boards of patient
advocacy  and  non-profit  organizations,  and is a member of the Faculty of the
Metropolitan  Medical  Genetics  Training  Program of the National  Human Genome
Research Institute-,  NIH, in Bethesda, MD. She holds a second degree black belt
in judo.

         John  Compton,  Ph.D.,  (Age 60)  serves  as  Scientific  Director  and
Co-President  of GeneDx Inc.,  the  operating  assets of which were  acquired by
BioReference  Laboratories in September 2006. He has 25 years  experience in the
development  and  application  of  molecular  biological  techniques  to  answer
questions  about genetics and epidermal  differentiation,  and has authored more
than 60 publications in the field. He holds B.S.  degrees in Physics and Biology
from MIT,  received his Ph.D.  from the  University of  California,  Berkeley in
Biophysics,  and did his post-doctoral  training in protein-DNA  interactions at
the  Baylor  College  of  Medicine.   Following  six  years  as  an  independent
investigator at the Jackson Laboratory, he joined the Laboratory of Skin Biology
in the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases at the
NIH in 1991 where he was Staff  Scientist in the Genetic  Studies  Section until
2000, when he and NIH colleague Sherri Bale formed GeneDx to develop and provide
molecular  genetic  testing  in rare  hereditary  disorders.  In 2003  they were
jointly awarded the Entrepreneur of the Year award by the Technology  Council of
Maryland.  John is also in his  eighth  year as Mayor of the Town of  Washington
Grove, MD.

COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(A) OF THE EXCHANGE ACT

         Based  solely on a review of Forms 3 and 4 and any  amendments  thereto
furnished to the Company pursuant to Rule 16a-3(e) under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934,  or  representations  that no Forms 5 were  required,  the  Company
believes  that  with  respect  to  fiscal  2008,  its  officers,  directors  and
beneficial  owners  of more  than 10% of its  equity  timely  complied  with all
applicable Section 16(a) filing requirements.

THE BOARD AND ITS COMMITTEES

BOARD MEETINGS

         The Board of Directors  held four meetings  during fiscal 2008.  All of
the Company's current Directors  attended all of the fiscal 2008 meetings of the
Board of Directors and of the


                                       8


committee  meetings  which they were eligible to attend.  The Board of Directors
has determined that the four non-employee  Directors each meet the definition of
"independent"  as required by the  applicable  listing  standards  of the Nasdaq
Stock Market, Inc. ("Nasdaq Stock Market").

COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         The Board of Directors has established  three standing  committees:  an
Audit Committee, a Compensation Committee and a Nominating Committee.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

         The Audit  Committee is comprised of the four  non-employee  members of
the Board of Directors, Gary Lederman (Chairman),  Joseph Benincasa, Harry Elias
and John  Roglieri.  The  Board of  Directors  deems  each  such  individual  as
"independent"  as  defined by the rules of the Nasdaq  Stock  Market.  The Audit
Committee met four times during fiscal year 2008.  The Audit  Committee  confers
with the  Company's  auditors  and reviews,  evaluates  and advises the Board of
Directors  concerning  the adequacy of the  Company's  accounting  systems,  its
financial reporting practices,  the maintenance of its books and records and its
internal  controls.  In addition,  the Audit Committee  reviews the scope of the
audit of the Company's financial  statements and the results thereof.  The Board
of  Directors  has  determined  that Gary  Lederman is qualified to serve as the
Company's  "audit  committee  financial  expert" as  defined  in Item  407(d) of
Regulation S-K promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.  A copy of
the  Audit   Committee   Charter  may  be  found  on  the   Company's   website:
WWW.BIOREFERENCE.COM.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

         The  Compensation  Committee  is  comprised  of the  four  non-employee
members of the Board of Directors,  John Roglieri (Chairman),  Joseph Benincasa,
Harry Elias and Gary Lederman. The Compensation Committee met once during fiscal
year 2008.

         The Compensation  Committee has the primary  responsibility  of setting
the  compensation  of the executive  officers of the Company as well as adopting
the  terms  of any  Senior  Management  Incentive  Bonus  Plan.  A  copy  of the
Compensation  Committee's  Charter  may  be  found  on  the  Company's  website:
WWW.BIOREFERENCE.COM.

NOMINATING COMMITTEE

         The Nominating  Committee is comprised of the four non-employee members
of the Board of Directors, Harry Elias, Joseph Benincasa, Gary Lederman and John
Roglieri. Pursuant to its charter, a copy of which may be found on the Company's
website:  WWW.BIOREFERENCE.COM,  the Nominating Committee's role is to establish
criteria for the selection of directors; to identify individuals qualified to be
directors;  to  evaluate  director  candidates  proposed  by  stockholders;   to
recommend  individuals to fill vacancies on the Board and to recommend  nominees
for director at each annual stockholder  meeting.  The Nominating  Committee may
consider  nominees  for  director  of the Company  submitted  in writing c/o the
Committee at the Company's  executive offices,  whether by executive officers of
the Company;  current directors of the Company, search


                                       9


firms (if any)  engaged by the  Committee,  and, in the  circumstances  provided
below,   shall  consider  nominees  for  director  proposed  by  a  stockholder.
Information  with respect to the proposed nominee must be provided in writing by
the stockholder  addressed to the Committee at the Company's  executive offices,
and  received  not less than 90 nor more than 120 days prior to the  anniversary
date of the prior year's annual  meeting,  provided  that if the current  year's
annual  meeting is not  scheduled  to be held within 30 days of the  anniversary
date of the prior year's  annual  meeting,  notice from a  stockholder  shall be
considered  timely if it is received not later than the tenth day  following the
date on which the notice of the annual  meeting  was mailed or the date on which
public  disclosure of the date of the annual meeting was made,  whichever occurs
first.  The  information  shall  include  the  name  of the  nominee,  and  such
information with respect to the nominee as would be required under the rules and
regulations  of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  to be included in the
Company's Proxy Statement if the proposed  nominee were to be included  therein.
In addition, the stockholder's notice shall also include the class and number of
shares  the   stockholder   owns,  a  description   of  all   arrangements   and
understandings   between  the   stockholder   and  the   proposed   nominee,   a
representation  that the stockholder  intends to appear in person or by proxy at
the meeting to nominate the person named in its notice,  and a representation as
to whether the  stockholder  intends to deliver a proxy  statement to or solicit
proxies from shareholders of the Company.

         The Nominating  Committee generally identifies potential candidates for
director by seeking  referrals  from the  Company's  management,  members of the
Board of Directors and their various business contacts. Candidates are evaluated
based  upon  factors  such  as  independence,  knowledge,  judgment,  integrity,
character,   leadership,  skills,  education,  experience,  financial  literacy,
standing in the community and ability to foster a diversity of  backgrounds  and
views and to complement the Board's existing strengths. There are no differences
in the manner in which the Committee  will evaluate  nominees for director based
on whether the nominee is recommended by a stockholder.

         The Company does not have an Executive Committee.  Officers are elected
by and hold office at the discretion of the Board of Directors.

         The  Company  does not have a  policy  with  regard  to  attendance  by
directors at annual  meetings of  stockholders.  The Company's  three  executive
officers as well as Messrs.  Elias and Lederman  were the directors who attended
the Company's last annual meeting of stockholders on July 17, 2008.

         Pursuant to the Company's charter and bylaws, the Company has agreed to
indemnify its directors and executive  officers to the fullest extent  permitted
by law.

CODE OF ETHICS

         The Company has adopted a Code of Ethics that applies to its  executive
officers and to key financial and accounting personnel. The Company will, upon a
stockholder's written request to Investor Relations,  c/o the Company, furnish a
paper copy of the Code of Ethics.


                                       10



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         The table below  summarizes the total  compensation  paid or accrued by
the Company  with  respect to the years  ended  October 31, 2008 and 2007 to its
three  executive  officers and to its two other most highly  compensated  senior
management  employees  during the  periods.  All of the  Company's  group  life,
health,  hospitalization or medical  reimbursement plans, if any, as well as its
401(k) Plan, do not discriminate in scope,  terms or operation,  in favor of any
of its  officers,  senior  management  members or  directors,  and are generally
available to all salaried employees.

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE



                                                                                     Change in
                                                                                    Pension Value
                                                                                    Nonqualified
                                                                     Non-Equity         and
                                                                      Incentive       Deferred        All
                        Fiscal               Bonus   Stock   Option     Plan        Compensation     Other
       Name and          Year     Salary     ($)(D)  Awards  Awards  Compensation     Earnings     Compensation    Total
  Principal Position      (b)     ($)(c)      (1)    ($)(e)  ($)(f)   ($)(g)(2)        ($)(h)       ($)(i)(3)      ($)(i)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     
Marc D.                   2008   $910,877     -0-     -0-     -0-         -0-            -0-        $101,424    $1,012,301
Grodman M.D.              2007    852,000     -0-     -0-     -0-     $85,200            -0-          96,230     1,033,430
President and
Chief Executive
Officer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Howard                    2008   $362,935     -0-     -0-     -0-         -0-            -0-         $40,070      $403,005
Dubinett                  2007    323,350     -0-     -0-     -0-     $32,335            -0-          40,070       395,755
Executive Vice
President and
Chief Operating
Officer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sam Singer                2008   $362,935     -0-     -0-     -0-         -0-            -0-         $39,739      $402,674
Senior Vice               2007    323,350     -0-     -0-     -0-     $32,335            -0-          39,822       395,507
President and
Chief Financial
Officer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Faherty           2008   $486,540     -0-     -0-     -0-         -0-            -0-        $139,962      $626,502
Chief Information         2007    438,750     -0-     -0-     -0-     $43,875            -0-         167,187       649,812
Officer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Charles T. Todd, Jr.      2008   $505,237     -0-     -0-     -0-         -0-            -0-         $13,116      $518,353
Senior Vice               2007    385,500     -0-     -0-     -0-     $38,550            -0-          10,184       434,234
President - Sales
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


(1) Under SEC  disclosure  rules,  the term "bonus" does not include awards that
are  performance  based.  As a result  of this  definition,  payments  under the
Company's  2007  Incentive  Bonus Plan for Senior  Management are not considered
"bonuses" and are reported under the column captioned "Non-Equity Incentive Plan
Compensation".

(2) The 2007 Senior Management  Incentive Bonus Plan adopted by the Compensation
Committee  provided  for  bonuses  as a  percentage  of  salary  to be  paid  to
designated  members  of Senior  Management  (twelve  in total) to the extent the
Company's Total Operating Income equaled certain designated percentages of Total
Net  Revenues.  The  amounts in column (g)  reflect the cash awards to the named
officers under the 2007 Senior Management  Incentive Bonus Plan. No bonuses were
earned under the Plan with respect to fiscal 2008.

(3) The amounts in column (i) All Other Compensation are detailed below.



                                       11





                           Personal Use of
                           Company Leased         Personal Use of      Life Insurance
Name                       Automobile             Company Airplane     Premium (a)       Other         Total
----                       ----------             ----------------     --------------    -----         -----
                                                                                       
         FISCAL YEAR 2008
-----------------------------------
Marc D. Grodman             $23,020                   $8,404             $70,000           $-0-       $101,424
Howard Dubinett              15,070                      -0-              25,000            -0-         40,070
Sam Singer                   14,739                      -0-              25,000            -0-         39,739
Richard Faherty              28,021                      -0-                 -0-       $111,941(b)     139,962
Charles Todd Jr.              9,937                    3,179                 -0-            -0-         13,116

         FISCAL YEAR 2007
-----------------------------------
Marc D. Grodman             $20,900                   $5,330             $70,000           $-0-        $96,230
Howard Dubinett              15,070                      -0-              25,000            -0-         40,070
Sam Singer                   14,822                      -0-              25,000            -0-         39,822
Richard Faherty              28,109                    1,673                 -0-       $137,408(b)     167,190
Charles Todd Jr.               9,385                     799                 -0-            -0-         10,184


----------

(a) See "Split Dollar Life Insurance" herein

(b) Mr. Faherty rents an airplane to the Company (when the Company's airplane is
unavailable) for corporate flights.  Such rentals totaled $71,108 in fiscal 2008
and $55,965 in fiscal 2007.  In addition,  a separate  corporation  of which Mr.
Faherty is the majority  shareholder  provided  networking,  data  reporting and
programming  services to the Company in fiscal 2008 and fiscal 2007 for which it
received $40,833 and $81,713 in compensation respectively.

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS WITH NAMED OFFICERS

         Dr. Grodman serves as President and Chief Executive Officer pursuant to
a seven-year employment agreement which expires on October 31, 2011. Dr. Grodman
has the right to elect to cancel the employment  agreement  effective at the end
of any calendar month commencing October 31, 2008 on not less than 90 days prior
written  notice,  subject  to  a  six  month  non-competition  restriction.  The
employment agreement is automatically  renewable for additional two year periods
subject  to the right of either  party to elect not to renew at least six months
prior thereto. The employment agreement provides Dr. Grodman with minimum annual
base  compensation  of $750,000  subject to annual  percentage  increases to the
extent  of  annual  percentage  increases  in  the  Consumer  Price  Index.  The
Compensation  Committee  can  but is not  required  to  increase  Dr.  Grodman's
compensation  at the end of any fiscal  year  based  upon his and the  Company's
performance.  The  employment  agreement also provides Dr. Grodman with business
use of an  automobile  leased by the  Company  and  participation  in any fringe
benefit and bonus  plans  available  to the  Company's  employees  to the extent
determined by the  Compensation  Committee.  The employment  agreement  contains
provisions  governing in the event of Dr. Grodman's  partial or total disability
and provides for termination for cause or in the event of Dr.  Grodman's  death.
Dr. Grodman has the right to terminate the employment  agreement in the event of
a material  change in his duties and  responsibilities,  the  relocation  of the
Company's  principal  executive  offices  from  Elmwood  Park,  New  Jersey to a
location  more than fifty miles distant or a material  breach of the  employment
agreement by the Company  (including a reduction in Dr. Grodman's benefits under
the agreement).  In the event of a Change in Control of the Company, Dr. Grodman
can elect to terminate the agreement.  In that event,  he will be entitled to be
paid a lump sum Severance  Payment equal to 2.99 times the average of his


                                       12


annual  compensation  paid by the Company for the five calendar years  preceding
the earlier of the calendar year in which the Change of Control  occurred or the
calendar year of the Date of  Termination,  subject to the provisions of Section
409-A of the Internal Revenue Code. See "Split-Dollar  Life Insurance" herein as
to the Endorsement Split-Dollar Life Insurance Agreement between the Company and
Dr. Grodman.

         Mr.  Dubinett  serves as Executive Vice  President and Chief  Operating
Officer  pursuant to an employment  agreement  which has been  extended  through
October 31, 2009. Mr. Dubinett's minimum annual  compensation under the extended
agreement is equal to his annual  compensation  in fiscal 2002 and is subject to
increases based on increases in the Consumer Price Index as well as to increases
at the discretion of the Compensation Committee.  The agreement provides for (i)
the leasing of an automobile for his use; (ii)  participation in fringe benefit,
bonus,  pension,  profit sharing, and similar plans maintained for the Company's
employees; (iii) disability benefits; (iv) certain termination benefits; and (v)
in the  event of  termination  due to a Change  in  Control  of the  Company,  a
Severance Payment equal to 2.99 times Mr. Dubinett's average annual compensation
during the preceding  five years,  subject to the provisions of Section 409-A of
the Internal  Revenue Code. See "Split Dollar Life  Insurance"  herein as to the
Endorsement  Split Dollar Life Insurance  Agreement  between the Company and Mr.
Dubinett.

         Mr. Singer serves as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer
pursuant to an employment  agreement which has been extended through October 31,
2009, Mr. Singer's minimum annual  compensation  under the extended agreement is
equal to his annual  compensation  in fiscal  2002 and is  subject to  increases
based on increases  in the  Consumer  Price Index as well as to increases at the
discretion of the  Compensation  Committee.  The agreement  provides for (i) the
leasing of an automobile  for his use;  (ii)  participation  in fringe  benefit,
bonus,  pension,  profit sharing, and similar plans maintained for the Company's
employees; (iii) disability benefits; (iv) certain termination benefits; and (v)
in the  event of  termination  due to a Change  in  Control  of the  Company,  a
Severance  Payment equal to 2.99 times Mr. Singer's average annual  compensation
during the preceding  five years,  subject to the provisions of Section 409-A of
the Internal Revenue Code. See  "Split-Dollar  Life Insurance"  herein as to the
Endorsement  Split-Dollar  Life Insurance  Agreement between the Company and Mr.
Singer.

         Mr.  Faherty  serves  as Chief  Information  Officer  and  Director  of
Information Services pursuant to an employment agreement currently due to expire
on October 31, 2011.  Mr.  Faherty's  initial Base  Compensation  of $400,000 in
fiscal 2005 is subject to increases  based upon  management's  evaluation of his
and the  Company's  performance  and is  also  subject  to  increases  based  on
increases  in the  Consumer  Price  Index.  The  agreement  provides for (i) the
leasing of an automobile  for Mr.  Faherty's use; (ii)  participation  in fringe
benefit and bonus plans available to the Company's  employees;  (iii) disability
benefits; (iv) certain termination benefits; and (v) in the event of termination
due to a Change in Control of the  Company,  a Severance  Payment  equal to 2.99
times Mr. Faherty's average annual compensation during the preceding five years,
subject to the provisions of Section 409-A of the Internal Revenue Code.

         Mr.  Todd  serves as a Senior Vice  President  in Sales  pursuant to an
Employment  Agreement  currently  due to expire on October 31, 2011.  Mr. Todd's
initial  Base  Compensation  of $350,000 in fiscal 2005 is subject to  increases
based upon management's  evaluation of his and


                                       13


the Company's performance and is also subject to increases based on increases in
the  Consumer  Price  Index.  The  agreement  provides for (i) the leasing of an
automobile for Mr. Todd's use; (ii)  participation  in fringe benefits and bonus
plans available to the Company's  employees;  (iii)  disability  benefits;  (iv)
certain  termination  benefits;  and (v) in the  event of  termination  due to a
Change in Control of the Company,  a Severance  Payment  equal to 2.99 times Mr.
Todd's average annual compensation  during the preceding five years,  subject to
the provisions of Section 409-A of the Internal Revenue Code.

POTENTIAL PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION OR CHANGE IN CONTROL AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2008

         The following table sets out the payments that could be paid to each of
the  Company's  three  executive  officers  and to its  two  other  most  highly
compensated  senior  management  employees upon termination of employment due to
death,  disability,  for  Good  Reason  or a Change  in  Control,  in each  case
occurring as of October 31, 2008.



Employee                    Disability(a)     Good Reason(b)        Death(c)     Change in Control(d)
--------                    ------------      -------------         --------     --------------------
                                                                         
FISCAL YEAR 2008
----------------
Marc D. Grodman M.D.         $1,366,300       $2,732,600          $7,861,374         $2,253,250
Howard Dubinett                 362,900          362,900           1,334,550            876,152
Sam Singer                      362,900          362,900             768,295            877,175
Richard Faherty                 486,500        1,459,600             243,300          1,170,738
Charles Todd, Jr.               505,200        1,515,700             252,618            973,093


-------------

(a) Dr. Grodman's  employment  agreement entitles him to monthly compensation at
his then  current  Base  Compensation  for 18  months  in the event of his Total
Disability.  The employment  agreement of each of the other employees  listed in
the table entitles the employee to monthly compensation at his then current Base
Compensation for twelve months in the event of his Total Disability.

(b) "Good Reason" entitling the employee to voluntarily terminate his employment
agreement  includes  assignment of duties  inconsistent with his current duties,
reduction  of his  Base  Compensation,  relocation  of the  Company's  principal
executive offices to a location more than 50 miles from the current location and
other breaches by the Company of the employment  agreement.  In the event of his
voluntary  termination  for "Good Reason",  each of the employees  listed in the
table is entitled to be paid his monthly Base  Compensation  until completion of
his current  Employment Period which is as follows:  Dr. Grodman - until October
31,  2011;  Messrs.  Dubinett and Singer - until  October 31, 2009;  and Messrs.
Faherty and Todd - until October 31, 2011.

(c) Under Dr. Grodman's employment  agreement,  his employment terminates in the
event of his death and his beneficiaries would be entitled to the death proceeds
of the  insurance  policy owned by the Company on his life after  deducting  the
Company's  "Interest in the Policy". In the event of Mr. Dubinett's death or Mr.
Singer's death while employed by the Company, the decedent's beneficiaries would
be entitled to the death  proceeds of the insurance  policy owned by the Company
on his  life  after  deducting  the  Company's  "Interest  in the  Policy"  plus
additional  payments equal to six months of his Base  Compensation  in effect at
the time of his death. See "Split-Dollar Life Insurance" herein. In the event of
Mr.  Faherty's  death or Mr.  Todd's death while  employed by the  Company,  the
decedent's  beneficiaries  would be entitled to additional payments equal to six
months of his Base Compensation at the time of his death.

(d) In the event of a termination  of employment  after a "Change in Control" of
the Company,  the employee is entitled to receive a lump sum  Severance  Payment
equal to 2.99 times the  average of his annual  compensation  paid or payable by
the Company in connection  with his  employment and


                                       14


included in his gross income as compensation  income for the five calendar years
preceding the calendar year in which the Change in Control occurred,  subject to
the provisions of Section 409-A of the Internal Revenue Code.

SPLIT-DOLLAR LIFE INSURANCE

         Pursuant to the terms of their 1997 employment agreements,  the Company
had  established  split-dollar  life  insurance  programs  for each of its three
Executive Officers. As a result of the passage of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002
(signed into law on July 30, 2002), these three programs were modified. Pursuant
to the modification,  each of the three Executive Officers assigned ownership of
his  policies to the Company and new  policies  were issued to replace the prior
policies  with  annual  premiums  under  the new  policies  ($70,000  under  Dr.
Grodman's  policy  and  $25,000  each  under  Messrs.  Dubinett's  and  Singer's
policies)  being equal to the  premiums  paid under the replaced  policies.  The
Company  has  now  executed  new   "Endorsement   Split-Dollar   Life  Insurance
Agreements"  with  each of its three  Executive  Officers.  Pursuant  to the new
agreements,  the Company has agreed to continue to pay the annual premium on the
policy on each officer's  life during the period of his full-time  employment by
the  Company.  The  Company  is the sole owner of the policy and of its net cash
surrender  value,  and in the event of the  officer's  death while  serving as a
full-time employee of the Company,  the Company will be entitled to receive that
amount of the death  proceeds equal to its interest in the policy (the aggregate
amount of  premiums  paid by the  Company  with  respect to the policy  less the
amount of any loans,  if any,  from the Insurer to the Company  against the cash
value or policy proceeds,  and less the aggregate amount of any premiums paid by
the officer to the Company in reimbursement of premiums paid by the Company) and
the  balance  of the death  proceeds  will be paid to the  officer's  designated
beneficiaries.  The premiums paid by the Company on the current policies and the
prior policies aggregated approximately $1,542,000 and $1,422,000 at October 31,
2008 and October 31, 2007,  respectively.  At that date,  the net cash surrender
value of the three current  policies  aggregated  approximately  $1,225,000  and
$1,054,000  at October  31,  2008 and  October  31,  2007,  respectively  and is
recorded on the books of the Company at these values.

STOCK OPTIONS

EMPLOYEE STOCK OPTION PLANS

THE 1989 PLAN

         In July  1989,  the  Company's  Board  of  Directors  adopted  the 1989
Employees Stock Option Plan (the "1989 Plan") which was approved by shareholders
in November 1989. The 1989 Plan provided for the grant of options to purchase up
to 666,667  shares of Common  Stock.  Under the terms of the 1989 Plan,  options
granted  thereunder  could be  designated as options which qualify for incentive
stock option  treatment  ("ISOs") under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 ("the Code"), or options which do not so qualify ("NQOs").

         Under the 1989 Plan, the exercise  price of an option  designated as an
ISO could not be less than the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date
the option was granted. However, in the event an option designated as an ISO was
granted to a 10%  shareholder  (as defined in the 1989 Plan) such exercise price
was required to be at least 110% of such fair market value.  Exercise  prices of
NQOs could be less than such fair market value.  The aggregate fair market value
of shares  subject to options  granted to a participant  which are designated as


                                       15


ISOs  which  first  become  exercisable  in any  calendar  year could not exceed
$100,000. All options under the 1989 Plan were required to be granted before the
Plan's  July 1999  Termination  Date so that no further  options  can be granted
under the 1989 Plan. At October 31, 2008, there were no outstanding  ISO's under
the 1989 Plan.

THE 2000 PLAN

         On August 25, 2000,  the Board of Directors  adopted the 2000  Employee
Incentive  Stock  Option Plan (the "2000 Plan")  reserving an aggregate  800,000
shares of  Bio-Reference  Common Stock for issuance  upon exercise of ISOs which
may be granted  under the 2000 Plan.  Stockholders  ratified the adoption of the
2000 Plan at the December 14, 2000 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. During fiscal
2008, no ISOs were granted under the 2000 Plan.  During fiscal 2008, ISOs issued
under the 2000 Plan to purchase an  aggregate  4,500  shares at exercise  prices
ranging from $5.94 to $8.40 per share were  exercised.  As a result,  at October
31,  2008,  there  were  outstanding  ISOs  under the 2000 Plan  exercisable  to
purchase an aggregate  157,000  shares at exercise  prices ranging from $5.52 to
$15.34 per share.

         The 2000 Plan  authorizes  the grant of options  which  qualify for ISO
treatment  under Section 422 of the Code, to purchase up to a maximum  aggregate
800,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock.  Options may only be granted under
the 2000  Plan to  employees  of the  Company  and its  subsidiaries  (including
officers and directors who are also employees).

         The 2000 Plan is administered by the Board of Directors.  The Board has
the  discretion to determine the eligible  employees to whom, and the price (not
less than the fair market  value on the date of grant) at which  options will be
granted; the periods during which each option is exercisable;  and the number of
shares subject to each option. The Board has the authority to interpret the 2000
Plan and to establish and amend rules and regulations relating thereto.

         The 2000 Plan  provides  that the exercise  price of an option  granted
thereunder  shall not be less than the fair market  value of the Common Stock on
the date the option is granted. However, in the event an option is granted under
the 2000 Plan to a holder  of 10% or more of the  Company's  outstanding  Common
Stock, the exercise price must be at least 110% of such fair market value. Under
the 2000 Plan,  options must be granted  before the August 24, 2010  Termination
Date. No option may have a term longer than ten years  (limited to five years in
the case of an option  granted to a 10% or greater  stockholder of the Company).
The aggregate  fair market value of the  Company's  Common Stock with respect to
which  options are  exercisable  for the first time by a grantee  under the 2000
Plan during any calendar year cannot exceed $100,000.  Options granted under the
2000 Plan are non-transferable and must be exercised by an optionee,  if at all,
while  employed by the Company or a  subsidiary  or within  three  months  after
termination of such optionee's employment due to retirement,  or within one year
of such  termination  if due to disability or death.  The Board may, in its sole
discretion,  cause the Company to lend money to or guaranty any obligation of an
employee for the purpose of enabling such employee to exercise an option granted
under the 2000 Plan provided  that such loan or  obligation  cannot exceed fifty
percent (50%) of the exercise price of such option.


                                       16



THE 2003 PLAN

         On June 3,  2003,  the Board of  Directors  adopted  the 2003  Employee
Incentive  Stock  Option Plan (the "2003 Plan")  reserving an aggregate  800,000
shares of  Bio-Reference  Common Stock for issuance  upon exercise of ISOs which
may be granted  under the 2003 Plan.  Stockholders  ratified the adoption of the
2003 Plan at the July 31, 2003 Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders.  During  fiscal
2008,  ISOs were  granted  under the 2003 Plan  exercisable  to purchase  20,000
shares at an exercise  price of $34.99 per share.  In fiscal  2008,  ISOs issued
under the 2003 Plan to purchase an aggregate  29,313  shares at exercise  prices
ranging from $12.22 to $21.46 per share were  exercised  and ISOs granted  under
the 2003  Plan  exercisable  to  purchase  7,145  shares  were  canceled  due to
terminations  of  employment.  As a result,  at  October  31,  2008,  there were
outstanding  ISOs  under the 2003 Plan  exercisable  to  purchase  an  aggregate
244,280 shares at exercise prices ranging from $12.22 to $34.99 per share.

         The 2003 Plan  authorizes  the grant of options  which  qualify for ISO
treatment  under  Section 422 of the Code to purchase up to a minimum  aggregate
800,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock.  Options may only be granted under
the 2003 Plan to employees of the Company and its subsidiaries  (including those
officers and directors who are also employees).

         The 2003 Plan is administered by the Board of Directors.  The Board has
the discretion to determine the eligible  employees to whom, and the prices (not
less than the fair market  value on the date of grant) at which  options will be
granted; the periods during which each option is exercisable;  and the number of
shares subject to each option. The Board has the authority to interpret the 2003
Plan and to establish and amend rules and regulations relating thereto.

         The 2003 Plan  provides  that the exercise  price of an option  granted
thereunder  shall not be less than the fair market  value of the Common Stock on
the date the option is granted. However, in the event an option is granted under
the 2003 Plan to a holder  of 10% or more of the  Company's  outstanding  Common
Stock, the exercise price must be at least 110% of such fair market value.

         Under the 2003 Plan,  options  must be granted  before the June 2, 2013
Termination  Date.  No option may have a term longer than ten years  (limited to
five years in the case of an option  granted to a 10% or greater  stockholder of
the Company). The aggregate fair market value of the Company's Common Stock with
respect to which options are  exercisable  for the first time by a grantee under
all of the  Company's  Stock Option Plans during any calendar year cannot exceed
$100,000.  Options granted under the 2003 Plan are  non-transferable and must be
exercised  by an  optionee,  if at  all,  while  employed  by the  Company  or a
subsidiary  or  within  three  months  after   termination  of  such  optionee's
employment due to retirement,  or within one year of such  termination if due to
disability or death. The Board may, in its sole discretion, cause the Company to
lend money to or  guaranty  any  obligation  of an  employee  for the purpose of
enabling  such  employee  to  exercise  an  option  granted  under the 2003 Plan
provided that such loan or  obligation  cannot exceed fifty percent (50%) of the
exercise price of such option.


                                       17



NON-QUALIFIED OPTIONS (NQOS) AND WARRANTS

         At October 31, 2007, there were outstanding NQOs owned by one member of
the Scientific Advisory Board exercisable to purchase an aggregate 15,000 shares
at an  exercise  price of $7.94 per share.  These NQOs  expired  unexercised  in
fiscal 2008.

See Note 11 of Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

OPTION GRANTS TO THE COMPANY'S THREE NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS (AND THE TWO OTHER
NAMED MOST HIGHLY COMPENSATED SENIOR MANAGEMENT EMPLOYEES) IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

         No options to purchase  shares of the Common  Stock were granted to any
of the  Company's  three  Named  Executive  Officers or the two other named most
highly compensated senior management employees in fiscal 2008.

OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED

         At October 31, 2007 and at October 31, 2008,  these were no outstanding
options held by the Company's three executive officers, the two other named most
highly compensated senior management employees or any of its directors.

                              DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

         During fiscal 2008,  each  director who was not a Company  employee was
compensated  for his services as a director with a quarterly fee of $13,750.  In
addition,  Gary  Lederman as chairman of the Audit  Committee  and John Roglieri
M.D. as chairman of the Compensation  Committee was each compensated for serving
as a  Committee  Chairman  with  an  additional  quarterly  fee  of  $2,750.  No
director's fees were paid to the Company's employee directors who determined the
compensation to be paid to the Company's  non-employee  directors for serving in
such capacity and as Committee chairmen.

         The following table sets forth the  compensation  paid to the Company's
non-employee directors in fiscal 2008.

                           Director's   Committee
Director                   Fees         Chairman Fees     Other        Total
--------                   ----------   -------------     -----        -----
Joseph Benincasa          $55,000            -0-           -0-        $55,000
Harry Elias                55,000            -0-         $527 (a)      55,527
Gary Lederman (b)          55,000         $11,000 (b)      -0-         66,000
John Roglieri M.D. (c)     55,000          11,000 (c)      -0-         66,000

-----------

(a) For personal use of Company airplane

(b) Chairman of the Audit Committee

(c) Chairman of the Compensation Committee


                                       18



                      COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

BACKGROUND

         Through  fiscal 2001,  the Board of Directors,  including the Company's
three executive  officers,  were responsible for reviewing the compensation paid
to the  Company's  executive  officers,  provided  that  none  of the  Company's
executive officers could vote with respect to his own compensation  package.  In
fiscal 2002,  the Company  established a  Compensation  Committee  consisting of
three non-employee  directors,  Morton L. Topfer  (Chairman),  Gary Lederman and
John  Roglieri.  Mr.  Topfer  resigned  as a  director  and as a  member  of the
Compensation  Committee in February 2004. In March 2004, Dr. Roglieri became the
Chairman of the Compensation  Committee and Mr. Elias was elected as a member of
the  Committee.  Mr.  Benincasa was elected as a member of the Committee in June
2005.

         In May 1997,  the Company  executed an  employment  agreement  with Dr.
Grodman  which  expired on October 31,  2004.  Effective  November 1, 2004,  the
Company  executed a new seven year employment  agreement with Dr.  Grodman,  the
terms of which are  described  above.  See  "Employment  Agreements  with  Named
Officers."

         In May 1997,  the Company  also  executed  employment  agreements  with
Messrs.  Dubinett and Singer (each expiring on October 31, 2002).  During fiscal
2002, the Compensation Committee authorized extensions of both Messrs.  Dubinett
and Singer's  contracts for two  additional  years,  with the Company having the
option  to  extend  each  agreement  for two  consecutive  one-year  periods  in
addition.  In  consideration  for  Messrs.  Dubinett  and Singer  executing  the
extension agreements,  the Company agreed that the base compensation during each
extension year would not be less than the total cash  compensation  paid to such
individual in fiscal 2002. The Company's  option to extend Mr.  Dubinett and Mr.
Singer's employment agreements has been further extended through fiscal 2009.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY

         In view of the  fact  that  the  three  named  executive  officers  own
substantial equity interests in the Company,  the compensation  program for them
focuses primarily on base salary, subject to annual increase based upon a review
of the  executive's  and the  Company's  performance.  In  addition,  to further
incentivize  the  executive  officers as well as certain other members of senior
management, in 2005, the Company established a Senior Management Incentive Bonus
Plan designed to assist in the Company's  profitability.  Bonuses under the Plan
are  earned and paid only to the extent the  Company's  Total  Operating  Income
equaled certain designated percentages of Total Net Revenues. Plan criteria were
met with  respect to fiscal 2005 and 2007 so that  bonuses were earned and paid,
but no bonuses were earned or paid under the Plan with respect to fiscal 2006 or
fiscal 2008 as the Plan's targeted performances were not achieved.

RATIONALE FOR CURRENT EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS WITH THE THREE EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         During the summer of  calendar  year 2004 with the  knowledge  that Dr.
Grodman's seven year employment agreement was due to expire in October 2004, the
Compensation  Committee


                                       19


commenced  negotiations  with Dr.  Grodman  for the  terms  of a new  employment
agreement.  In the course of its  negotiations,  the Committee took into account
among other factors as a barometer of Dr. Grodman's performance as the Company's
chief executive  officer,  the substantial  increase since 1997 in the Company's
net revenues, operating income and the market price of the Common Stock. Another
factor taken into account by the  Committee was the  compensation  being paid to
the chief  executive  officers  of a peer  group of nine  other  publicly  owned
clinical testing laboratories including the two major companies in the industry,
Quest  Diagnostics,  Inc. and Laboratory  Corporation of America  Holdings.  The
terms of Dr. Grodman's "split-dollar" insurance arrangement with the Company and
the fact that the proposed new employment  agreement did not provide Dr. Grodman
with  additional  equity  compensation  was  also  taken  into  account.   After
discussion,  each of the three members of the Compensation Committee at the time
(Dr.  Roglieri,  Mr.  Elias and Mr.  Lederman)  concluded  that the terms of the
proposed new employment  agreement were fair to and in the best interests of the
Company and its stockholders and that the proposed  compensation  thereunder was
not excessive.

         The  Compensation  Committee has determined that the base salaries paid
with  respect to fiscal 2008,  and the terms of the  extension  agreements  with
Messrs.  Dubinett and Singer,  were  reasonable in  relationship to the services
performed,  the responsibilities  assumed and the results obtained,  and were in
the  best  interests  of  the  Company.   In  connection   with  Dr.   Grodman's
compensation,  the Compensation  Committee  considered the Company's increase in
net revenues,  patients  serviced,  working capital and shareholders'  equity in
fiscal 2008 compared with the corresponding period in fiscal 2007.  Furthermore,
the compensation  paid to Messrs.  Grodman,  Dubinett and Singer for fiscal 2008
comports  with the  Compensation  Committee's  perception  of base  compensation
levels of  principal  executives  employed by other  companies,  both public and
private.

BENEFITS AND PERQUISITES

         The Company's policy is to provide health benefits as well as access to
its 401(k)  Plan to which it  contributes  a maximum of $500 per  employee  each
year, for all of its employees including the three executive officers.

         The Company  leases  automobiles  for their use but amounts  reflecting
their  personal use are  reported as income to them  subject to tax.  Similarly,
personal  use of the  Company  airplane  by any  of the  executive  officers  is
reported as income to them,  subject to tax.  See  Footnote  (3) to the "Summary
Compensation Table".

CHANGE IN CONTROL BENEFITS

         The employment agreements with the three executive officers provide for
substantial  Severance  Payments  to them in the event of a change in control of
the Company.  This provision  provides an additional level of financial security
for the three executive officers.  These executives could be asked to evaluate a
transaction  purportedly  expected to maximize shareholder value while resulting
in the  elimination of their jobs. The Severance  Payment  provision (2.99 times
the annual  average of the preceding five years of  compensation)  could help


                                       20


to minimize the distraction  caused by concerns over personal financial security
in the context of a proposed change in control.

STOCK OPTION GRANT PRACTICES

         The Company grants stock options at an exercise price at least equal to
the fair market  value on the date of the grant.  Due to the  substantial  stock
ownership position of the three executive  officers,  no stock options have been
granted to them (or restricted stock awarded to them) in the last three years.

POLICY REGARDING THE ONE MILLION DOLLAR DEDUCTION LIMITATION

         Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code generally  disallows a tax
deduction to public  corporations  for compensation in excess of $1,000,000 paid
for any fiscal year to a corporation's  chief executive  officer and to the four
other most highly compensated  executive officers in office as of the end of the
fiscal year. The statute exempts qualifying performance-based  compensation from
the  deduction  limit if  certain  requirements  are met.  However,  shareholder
interests  may at times  be best  served  by not  restricting  the  Compensation
Committee's discretion and flexibility in developing compensation programs, even
though  the  programs  may  result  in  non-deductible   compensation  expenses.
Accordingly,  the Compensation  Committee may from time to time approve elements
of compensation for certain officers that are not fully deductible,  although no
such elements have been approved to date.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

         During fiscal 2008, the members of the Company's Compensation Committee
were:

                          John Roglieri M.D. - Chairman
                          Joseph Benincasa
                          Harry Elias
                          Gary Lederman

         No member of the  Compensation  Committee was an officer or employee of
the Company in fiscal 2008 or was formerly an officer of the Company.


COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

         The members of the Company's Compensation Committee hereby state;

         (A)  We have  reviewed and discussed the  Compensation  Discussion  and
              Analysis contained in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for
              the year ended October 31, 2008 with the Company's Management, and

                                       21


         (B)  Based on such review and  discussions,  we have recommended to the
              Company's Board of Directors that the Compensation  Discussion and
              Analysis be included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K
              for the year ended October 31, 2008.

                                                    COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

                                               By   John Roglieri M.D., Chairman
                                                    Joseph Benincasa*
                                                    Harry Elias
                                                    Gary Lederman

* Mr. Benincasa first became a member of the Compensation Committee in June 2005
and  was  not a  party  to the  2004  negotiation  of Dr.  Grodman's  employment
agreement.

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

         The Audit Committee oversees the Company's  financial reporting process
on behalf of the Board of Directors.  It is the  responsibility of the Company's
independent  auditors to perform an independent  audit of and express an opinion
on the Company's financial statements.  The Audit Committee's  responsibility is
one of review and oversight. In fulfilling its oversight responsibilities:

         (1)  The Audit  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  has reviewed and
              discussed  with the  Company's  management  the audited  financial
              statements.

         (2)  The Audit  Committee has  discussed  with MSPC,  Certified  Public
              Accountants and Advisors, A Professional Corporation ("MSPC"), the
              Company's  independent  auditors,   the  matters  required  to  be
              discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, "Codification
              of Statements on Auditing  Standards,  AU ss. 380," as modified or
              supplemented.

         (3)  The Audit Committee has also received the written  disclosures and
              the letter from MSPC required by the Independence  Standards Board
              Standard  No. 1  (Independence  Standards  Board  Standard  No. 1,
              Independence  Discussions with Audit  Committees),  as modified or
              supplemented,  and has discussed  with MSPC. the  independence  of
              that firm as the Company's auditors.

         (4)  Based on the Audit Committee's review and discussions  referred to
              above,  the Audit Committee  recommended to the Board of Directors
              that the Company's audited financial statements be included in the
              Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  October
              31, 2008, for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

         Each of the Audit Committee  members is independent,  as defined in the
Rules of the Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.

                                       22


         The members of the Audit  Committee are not  professionally  engaged in
the  practice  of auditing  or  accounting  and are not experts in the fields of
accounting,  auditing, or auditor independence.  However, the Board of Directors
has determined that Gary Lederman is qualified to serve as the "audit  committee
financial  expert" of the  Company as defined in Item 407(d) of  Regulation  S-K
promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Members of the Committee
rely without independent verification on the information provided to them and on
the representations made by management and the independent auditors.

                                                     AUDIT COMMITTEE

                                                     Gary Lederman, Chairman
                                                     Joseph Benincasa, Member
                                                     Harry Elias, Member
                                                     John Roglieri, Member

                             STOCK PRICE PERFORMANCE

         Set forth below is a line graph comparing the yearly  cumulative  total
return on the Company's Common Stock for the five fiscal years ended October 31,
2008 based on the market price of the Common Stock,  with the  cumulative  total
return of  companies  in the S&P 500  Composite  and with a peer  group of eight
publicly owned medical laboratories.

                      COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR TOTAL RETURN
                      FOR BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.,
                              S&P 500 COMPOSITE AND
                          MEDICAL LABORATORY PEER GROUP


                                [GRAPHIC OMITTED]








                                       23



         The Medical Laboratory peer group consists of the following  companies:
Clarion  Technologies,  Inc., Enzo Biochem Inc., Genoptix Inc., Laboratory CP of
Amer Holdgs, Medtox Scientific Inc., Neogenomics Inc., Orchid Cellmark Inc., and
Quest Diagnostics Inc.

                                    AUDITORS

         The firm of MSPC,  has been selected by the Board of Directors to audit
the  accounts  of the Company  and its  subsidiaries  for the fiscal year ending
October 31, 2009.  MSPC and its  predecessor  firm have served as the  Company's
auditors since 1988. Representatives of such firm are not expected to be present
at the July 30, 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

AUDIT FEES

         MSPC  billed  the  Company  approximately   $235,120  for  professional
services rendered in connection with the audit of the Company's annual financial
statements  for the fiscal  year ended  October  31,  2008 and the review of the
financial  statements  included in its  quarterly  reports on Form 10-Q for such
fiscal year compared to approximately $232,300 in billings for such services for
the fiscal year ended  October 31, 2007.  In  addition,  MSPC billed the Company
approximately  $17,500 in fiscal 2008 for its audit of the Company's 401(k) Plan
for  calendar  year 2007 as  compared to  approximately  $17,500 of such fees in
fiscal 2007 with respect to calendar year 2006.

AUDIT-RELATED FEES

         MSPC  billed  the  Company  approximately  $15,750  for  due  diligence
services  rendered in relation to certain  acquisitions  during  fiscal 2008 and
approximately $97,750 for Sarbanes-Oxley ("SOX") related audit fees.

TAX FEES

         MSPC billed the Company  approximately  $72,500  for tax  services  for
fiscal 2008 and approximately $46,900 for tax services for fiscal 2007. The fees
were billed for tax return preparation.

ALL OTHER FEES

         No other fees were billed to the Company by MSPC with respect to fiscal
2008 or fiscal 2007 other than for the services described above.

AUDIT COMMITTEE PRE-APPROVAL POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

         The Audit Committee pre-approved each material non-audit engagement for
services performed by the Company's independent auditor in fiscal 2008. Prior to
pre-approving  any such non-audit  engagement or service,  it is the Committee's
practice to first gather  information  regarding  the  requested  engagement  or
service in order to enable the Committee to assess the impact of the  engagement
or service on the auditor's independence.

                                       24


         The Audit Committee has considered  whether the provision of tax return
preparation and other professional services to the Company by MSPC is compatible
with such firm  maintaining its independence and has concluded that such firm is
independent  with respect to the Company in its role as the Company's  principal
accountant and auditor.

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2010 ANNUAL MEETING

         Under  current  rules  of  the  Securities  and  Exchange   Commission,
stockholders wishing to submit proposals for inclusion in the Proxy Statement of
the Board of Directors for the 2010 Annual Meeting of Stockholders  (expected to
be held in July 2010),  must submit such  proposals  so as to be received by the
Company at 481 Edward H. Ross Drive, Elmwood Park, New Jersey 07407 on or before
February 18, 2010.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

         Management  does not know of any other  matters  which are likely to be
brought  before  the  Meeting.  However,  in the event  that any  other  matters
properly come before the Meeting,  the persons named in the enclosed  proxy will
vote said proxy in accordance with their judgment in said matters.

         According to Securities and Exchange  Commission rules, the information
presented in this Proxy  Statement  under the captions  "Compensation  Committee
Report,  "Audit  Committee  Report" and "Stock  Price  Performance"  will not be
deemed to be  "soliciting  material"  or deemed  filed with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, and nothing  contained in any previous  filings made by the Company
under  such  Acts  shall  be  interpreted  as  incorporating  by  reference  the
information presented under said specified captions.

                                       BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                           Marc D. Grodman, President

Elmwood Park, New Jersey
June 18, 2009





                                       25





                                                                 0          [  ]



                        BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.

          REVOCABLE PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS - JULY 30, 2009

           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

       The undersigned, a Stockholder of BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC. (the
"Company") hereby appoints Marc D. Grodman and Sam Singer or either of them, as
proxy or proxies of the undersigned, with full power of substitution, to vote,
in the name, place and stead of the undersigned, with all of the powers which
the undersigned would possess if personally present, on behalf of the
undersigned, all the shares which the undersigned is entitled to vote at the
Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC. to be
held at 9:00 A.M. (local time) on Thursday, July 30, 2009 at the Sheraton
Crossroads Hotel, Crossroads Corporate Center, Route 17 North, Mahwah, New
Jersey 07495-0001 and at any and all adjournments thereof. The undersigned
directs that this proxy be voted as follows:

                (CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON THE REVERSE SIDE)

[  ]                                                                  14475 [  ]




                                                                

                                                  ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF

                                                  BIO-REFERENCE LABORATORIES, INC.

                                                            JULY 30, 2009




                                          NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL
                                          -------------------------------------------------
                                          The Notice of Meeting, Proxy Statement, Proxy Card
                                                are available at www.bioreference.com





                                                     Please sign, date and mail
                                                       your proxy card in the
                                                      envelope provided as soon
                                                            as possible.





                            |  Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided. |
                            \/                                                                        \/


[  ] 20330000000000000000 9                                                           073009
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND "FOR" PROPOSAL 2.
    PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE [x]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                |
1. To elect two Class II directors, each to serve for a term of |                                               FOR  AGAINST ABSTAIN
   three years and until his successor is elected and qualified | 2. In their discretion, on all other matters   --     --      --
   (Proposal One).                                              |    as shall properly come before the meeting  |  |   |  |    |  |
                                                                |                                                --     --      --
 ---                              NOMINEES:                     |
|   | FOR ALL NOMINEES            O Joseph Benincasa            | THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR ALL OF THE FOREGOING.
 ---                              O Gary Lederman               | UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED AS ABOVE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED
                                  0 John Roglieri               | "FOR" THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS (PROPOSAL ONE). IN ADDITION,
 ---  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY                                        | DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY IS CONFERRED AS TO ALL OTHER MATTERS THAT
|   | FOR ALL NOMINEES                                          | MAY COME BEFORE THE MEETING UNLESS SUCH AUTHORITY IS SPECIFICALLY
 ---                                                            | WITHHELD. STOCKHOLDERS WHO ARE PRESENT AT THE MEETING MAY WITHDRAW
                                                                | THEIR PROXY AND VOTE IN PERSON IF THEY SO DESIRE.
 ---  FOR ALL EXCEPT                                            |
|   | (See instructions below)                                  |
 ---                                                            | PLEASE MARK, SIGN, AND RETURN YOUR PROXY PROMPTLY. NO POSTAGE IS
                                                                | REQUIRED IF RETURNED IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE AND MAILED IN THE
                                                                | UNITED STATES. RECEIPT OF THE NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
                                                                | STOCKHOLDERS, THE ACCOMPANYING PROXY STATEMENT OF THE BOARD OF
                                                                | DIRECTORS AND THE COMPANY'S ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                                                | OCTOBER 31, 2008 IS ACKNOWLEDGED.
INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual  |
              nominee(s), mark "FOR ALL EXCEPT" and fill in the |
              circle next to each nominee you wish to withhold, |
              as shown here: o                                  |
----------------------------------------------------------------|
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
                                                                |
----------------------------------------------------------------|
To change the address on your account, please check the         |
box at right and indicate your new address in the          ---  |
address space above. Please note that changes to the      |   | |
registered name(s) on the account may not be submitted     ---  |
via this method.                                                |
----------------------------------------------------------------|
                          ------------------         -----------                             ------------------         -----------
Signature of Stockholder |                  | Date: |           |  Signature of Stockholder |                  | Date: |           |
                          ------------------         -----------                             ------------------         -----------
     NOTE: Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly, each holder should
           sign. When signing as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If
           the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such.
           If signer is a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.
[  ]                                                                                                                            [  ]