Posted on Leave a comment

>For the Record – Voter Turnout Percentages from Recent Municipal Elections

>1998 – 3.27% – 2 seats, unopposed

2000 – 15.36% – 3 seats, 5 candidates

2002 – 16.35% – 2 seats, 4 candidates

2004 – 18.33% – 3 seats, 8 candidates

2006 – 7.94% – 2 seats, 3 candidates

2008 – 16.87% – 3 seats, 5 candidates

In summary, the percentage of voters turning out in 2008 was slightly higher than the 10-year average (13.02%).

So why is one of the incumbents continuing to insist that their resounding loss resulted primarily from low voter turnout/voter apathy?

Does this person truly believe that all of the incumbents’ supporters stayed away from the polls on municipal Election Day?

The fat lady has finished signing. Time to face reality; it’s over.

3balls Golf Giftsshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=55539

Posted on Leave a comment

>We need to begin opening up our own fuel sources here in the U.S.

>Dear Friends:

This past week, I hosted a press conference at the Mahwah Sunoco gas station in Mahwah, NJ to address the concerns of constituents from New Jersey’s 5th congressional district about New Jersey’s rising gas costs.

America’s taxpayers work too hard to have their family’s money wasted by Washington bureaucrats. Washington must focus on decreasing the skyrocketing gas and food costs and actually focus on the family budget not the federal one. I strongly believe that we need to develop our nation’s current resources. We need to begin opening up our own fuel sources here in the U.S. and begin deep sea exploration. The Energy Information Administration estimates that untapped U.S. reserves would provide 1 million barrels per day for 30 years. At the price of $125 per barrel, this new oil would deliver $191.1 billion in corporate income tax and royalty revenue to the federal government.

Americans and New Jerseyans have experienced sky-rocketing gas prices. Families across the nation and state have been struggling to make ends meet because of rising prices at the pump. And to make matters worse, our great state of New Jersey is one of the hardest hit states. For every gallon a gasoline attendant puts in your tank, you as a New Jersey resident will pay 18.2 cents in federal taxes.

This taxpayer money is then sent to Washington where part of it is lost in the bureaucratic process and this is where the real problem lies. All too often, the federal government simply wastes your hard-earned money on unnecessary projects like the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere. For New Jerseyans, there’s another issue at stake. Our state is what’s known as a “donor” state. That means that we send more money to Washington than we receive. In recent years, for every dollar we pay in federal gas taxes, we receive about only 92 cents back.

I have fought hard to make up for this discrepancy during my time in Congress. For example, I was able to direct a $1 million appropriation toward a study to focus on bus and transit service in four northern North Jersey counties. Even so, the process isn’t completely just. Washington bureaucrats simply don’t know how to spend your money wisely or fairly.

That’s why, I’ve come up with what I think is a simple solution to this problem—it’s called the START Act, which stands for Suspend Taxes And Revitalize Transportation. This bill, which I’m in the process of introducing, would suspend the federal gasoline tax until the end of the year. After December 31, state legislatures would decide if they would like to again resume paying federal gas taxes. I believe many states, especially donor states like New Jersey, wouldn’t want to re-join the federal system. Instead, they could keep the money within the state and direct it toward the transportation projects that are most important. This legislation would save you money at the pump and improve the roads in New Jersey.”

Sincerely,

Scott Garrett

1318 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-4465
fax: (202) 225-9048 210 Route 4 East Suite 206

or

210 Route 4 East Suite 206
Paramus NJ 07652
(201) 712-0330
fax: (201) 712-0930

Posted on Leave a comment

>Act Now To Make School Choice A Reality

>You can join tens of thousands of concerned taxpayers in supporting historic school choice legislation in New Jersey. This proposed law — S-1607, The Urban Enterprise Zone Jobs Scholarship Act — will help low-income students to access effective private schools, while reducing the skyrocketing cost of public education.

We need you now to help pass S-1607. This landmark education reform would allow New Jersey corporations to receive a 100% tax credit for contributions to local scholarship funds. The math makes great sense for taxpayers. The S-1607 scholarship would cost taxpayers about $6,000 in tax credits for private education. But it would save taxpayers about $18,000 for every student it keeps out of urban public schools.

To make this happen, please contact Senator Buono, Chair of the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee, and Senate President Richard Codey to urge them to post S-1607 for a hearing.

Take Action Now!

Many Thanks.

Sincerely,
Steve Lonegan
Executive Director, AFP-NJ

Posted on Leave a comment

>Low turnout expected for Tuesday’s NJ primary

>By GEOFF MULVIHILL

Associated Press Writer

June 1, 2008

MOORESTOWN, N.J.

By moving its presidential primary to February, New Jersey gained a bit of clout in picking candidates and drew a higher percentage of voters than any primary since 1940.

Now, for the downside: Because the presidential primary was moved up, voters don’t have as much incentive to turn out for Tuesday’s primary, which features a slate of candidates for U.S. Congress, county and local offices.

Political observers and campaign insiders expect a low voter turnout despite some intriguing intraparty races and an environment where politics is dominating the news.

They say many voters may be either worn out or confused by the higher-than-usual number of elections in New Jersey. In a handful of towns, it’s the fifth election since the beginning of the year.

Here’s one possible harbinger of turnout trouble: Some of the politically astute retirees who gathered for breakfast at the Heart to Heart Cafe in Moorestown on Friday were debating whether it would be worth voting in the primary.

They said they’re tired of voting and leery of politicians. Besides, some of the registered Republicans would like have a chance to cross party lines and support a Democrat _ something they can’t do under New Jersey’s primary rules.

And, a few admitted, they didn’t realize the primary was coming up until a few days earlier.

“The only reason you’d know there was a vote was that you got a sample ballot (in the mail),” said Rick Young, a retired heating oil distributor.

Some campaigns are preparing to spend more money than usual on election-day efforts to drum up votes. That means you should brace for a lot of last-minute phone calls reminding you that the vote is coming up.

Rutgers University political scientist Ingrid Reed says this year’s primary season reminds her of a primary eight years ago, when 17 percent of the electorate turned out.

“If we had that many this year, that would be good turnout,” she said.

Since 2000, about 1 in 10 of New Jersey’s registered voters have participated in June primaries.

This year’s presidential primary was different. New Jersey, like many states, moved up its voting to try to have more influence on the presidential nominations, and turnout was heavy at 35 percent _ the best turnout in New Jersey since 1940.

While the presidential primary brought out new voters, Reed said it’s largely the party loyalists who will show up Tuesday.

“This is more like an insider’s primary,” Reed said.

The Democratic State Committee is doing something it’s done before only for this year’s presidential primary: Mounting a campaign to remind its members when the election is.

The party, though, is not endorsing any of its candidates.

Democratic State Chairman Joe Cryan, who is also a state Assemblyman, said he expects the two big-spending U.S. Senate candidates, incumbent Frank Lautenberg and U.S. Rep. Rob Andrews, to give extra attention on get-out-the-vote efforts. Cryan didn’t expect the same kind of push for the third candidate, Morristown Mayor Donald Cresitello.

“There’s a lot more focus on election day as opposed to putting that extra TV ad up,” Cryan said.

He said those Election Day efforts will include paying people to direct voters to the polls.

Bill Caruso, a spokesman for Andrews, said the campaign will have workers on volunteers around the state on Tuesday.

Julie Roginsky, a spokeswoman for the Lautenberg campaign, said she wouldn’t divulge her candidate’s Election Day strategy. She predicted turnout might not be so bad _ thanks to the interest generated by the presidential primary between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. “We’ve got so many newly registered Democrats,” she said.

The Republican campaigns might not be able to do as much because the three candidates for U.S. Senate have raised far less than their Democratic counterparts. None of the three _ Joe Pennacchio, Murray Sabrin, or Dick Zimmer _ has been able to advertise heavily on television.

Republican State Committee Chairman Tom Wilson said that a big get-out-the-vote effort may not help lesser-known and lesser-funded candidates in his party.

“I don’t know whether Pennacchio or Sabrin would have the luxury of being able to say, ‘My message has been heard, now I’ve got to turn people out,”‘ he said.

Besides, he said, in primaries it can be tough to guess which partisans are on their side. “You can’t just turn people out randomly” and expect it to help, he said.

Wilson expects candidates in his party to focus on building name recognition until the end, and most campaigns are doing something to get voters to the polls. For instance, Pennacchio’s campaign has said it will have a phone bank set up to encourage supporters, while Sabrin has had a get-out-the-vote drive online.

With all the angst over primary turnout, there’s some renewed concern over whether the separate presidential election _ with a cost to the state of about $10.5 million this year _ is worth having again.

“I would say, keep it in June,” said U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., a Democrat from Paterson. “You’ve got too many elections.”

___

On the Net: www.njelections.org

Posted on Leave a comment

>State League of Municipalities faces public records challenge

>Tuesday, June 03, 2008

BY TOM HESTER
Star-Ledger Staff

A state Superior Court judge has directed the New Jersey State League of Municipalities, the lobbying arm for New Jersey’s 566 municipal governments, to show why it should not be subject to the state’s Open Public Records Act.

In what is considered a unique case for New Jersey, the Fair Share Housing Center, a nonprofit Cherry Hill-based affordable housing activist organization, has gone into court in Trenton to argue that the League of Municipalities is, among other things, taxpayer funded. The organization says the league should be ordered to make public records detailing its opposition to new affordable housing regulations being shaped by the state Council on Affordable Housing.

Judge Linda Feinberg has set a hearing on the issue for July 18 in Trenton, it was learned yesterday.

Kevin Walsh, Fair Share Housing Center counsel, said the league, with input from local officials, recommends actions for local governments to take, including opposition to affordable housing.

“The league has two committees that include mayors set up to study” proposed housing regulations, he said. “League employees are part of the state pension system. The league was established by an act of the state Legislature and has members covered by the Open Public Records Act. The league is actively involved in fighting the regulations and we are interested in what they have to say about them.”

League of Municipalities officials strongly disagree.

“We are not a government agency,” said Bill Kerns, league counsel. “The league has no governmental powers, no governmental authority. It’s a volunteer organization.”

“It’s a frivolous lawsuit,” said William Dressel, league director. “It has absolutely no standing. Quite frankly, it’s kind of annoying.”

Walsh is hoping Feinberg will consider a 2005 state Supreme Court ruling in a case brought by the Times of Trenton against the Lafayette Yard Community Development Group, which said a private nonprofit body created to assist the city of Trenton with the development of a new hotel is subject to OPRA.

Yesterday was also the court-ordered deadline for so-called “third-round” affordable housing regulations to go into effect for some 300 municipalities under COAH jurisdiction as it attempts to provide 115,000 new or refurbished houses and apartments by 2018.

Under the new rules, COAH director Lucy Voorhoeve said, the towns must ensure there is one affordable unit for every four market value houses constructed or one unit for every 16 new jobs created by commercial development in the town.

But proposed amendments to the regulations that will not be settled until late October, COAH’s decision to grant the towns an extension until Dec. 31 to submit their new affordable housing plans, and a potential lawsuit by the League of Municipalities are expected to delay serious action on providing the housing into 2009.

The league has sought $500 from each municipality to finance a lawsuit. “We are considering a lawsuit,” said Mike Cerra, the League’s senior analyst. “It’s no secret we may challenge the regulations.”

Tom Hester may be reached at [email protected] or at (609) 292-0557.

Posted on Leave a comment

>Joseph Ferriero’s tenure as Bergen County Democratic chairman may depend on the outcome of a low-visibility county committee race on Tuesday.

>Democratic chairman’s job may be in jeopardySunday,
June 1, 2008
BY KAREN SUDOLSTAFF WRITER

Joseph Ferriero’s tenure as Bergen County Democratic chairman may depend on the outcome of a low-visibility county committee race on Tuesday.

Democratic voters in Bergen will go to the polls to choose members of the county committee, an 1,100-member body that essentially decides which Democrats get to run for public office in the county. Committee members also are responsible for electing the leader of the Bergen County Democratic Organization, and they are scheduled to do so on June 10, one week after the primary election.

The primary election comes a week after Ferriero surrendered documents subpoenaed by federal authorities involving a consulting firm in which he and Dennis J. Oury, the attorney for the Bergen County Democratic Organization, shared an interest. Over the last two weeks, U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Christie has issued 14 subpoenas requesting information about Oury or the consulting firm, Governmental Grants Consulting, sometimes called Government Grants Consulting.

In most Bergen municipalities, there is no contest for county committee. But in Englewood, Bergenfield and Teaneck, among other towns, candidates affiliated with Ferriero, running under the banner of the BCDO, are squaring off against members of a slate called the Real Bergen Democrats, which is affiliated with state Sen. Loretta Weinberg, a Ferriero rival.

And some Real Bergen Democrats are suggesting that if enough of them secure seats on the county committee, they will work to remove Ferriero as chairman.

“The point is to elect enough Real Bergen Democrats and enough organization people who are sick and tired of Ferriero,” said Robert Gulack, a Fair Lawn county committee member running for reelection.

But Bill Maer, a spokesman for the Bergen County Democrats, said the primary isn’t about Ferriero and his reelection.

“It’s about Bergen County Democrats having a successful primary and putting into place individuals who will share the organization’s beliefs,” he said. “It’s about getting good Democrats in position so we can win elections and better serve the citizens of Bergen County.”

Maer said he doesn’t anticipate the document subpoena will have any effect on Tuesday’s vote.

“Voters are going to look at the records of the individual candidates running throughout the county and decide to elect them based on those facts,” he said.

Weinberg, D-Teaneck, said, “My hope is, we elect enough county committee people who want to run a fair, open, inclusive party with the proper leadership and who, in fact, are tired of seeing the kinds of people leading us that we’ve been reading about in the newspaper the last several days.”

Gulack said he can’t predict whether the subpoena will have any effect on choosing a chairman — a post Ferriero has held since 1998. Gulack wants to challenge Ferriero again for the position.

Elaine Rabbitt, chairwoman of the Bergenfield Democratic Municipal Committee and a Ferriero supporter, said she found the timing of the subpoena suspect, given its proximity to the primary.

“Why should we [Bergenfield county committee members] let this interfere with what we’re planning on doing if we really don’t know if this is legitimate?” she said of the subpoena.

She said she supports Ferriero because “he took the Democrats and put them on the map in Bergen County.”

But Carol Hoernlein, a Tenafly councilwoman running in the Democratic primary for a Bergen County freeholder seat, said Ferriero’s link to the subpoenas may affect the county committee race and his reelection chances.

“For a long time, a lot of people from the county committee were afraid of Joe,” Hoernlein said.

“Now, I think maybe they’re realizing that … now is the time where they can make a difference.”

She is encouraging write-ins in districts where Real Bergen Democrats are not on the ballot.

Ferriero has been credited with reviving the county Democratic Organization through aggressive fund raising and rigid party discipline. But he has been criticized for encouraging a system under which political contributors are rewarded with lucrative county and municipal contracts.

E-mail: [email protected]

Posted on Leave a comment

>Assembly approves big changes in schools, orders cost-cutting

>Assembly approves big changes in schools, orders cost-cutting
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Last updated: Tuesday May 20, 2008, EDT 9:29
AMBY ELISE YOUNGTRENTON BUREAU

New Jersey schools would see major changes — including a mandatory 10 percent cut in administrative costs for scores of districts — under legislation approved in the Assembly on Monday.

But whether any of the legislation will become law is uncertain. None of the three bills has been scheduled for a vote in the Senate.

The Assembly also voted to move the date of school-board elections to November from April. In the same bill, lawmakers eliminated the voters’ right to approve multimillion-dollar budgets.

“The fragmentation of our voting calendar has resulted in voting fatigue,” said Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts, D-Camden, seeking to explain New Jersey’s typical school-elections turnout of 15 percent.

He rejected critics’ arguments that a move to November — when voters are at the polls for general elections — would inject party politics into non-partisan school races. And he said that voters’ input on the annual spending plans was “part of a charade,” because municipal governments have the power to override their decision.

“In some cases, every single cent that [voters] cut can be reinstated,” Roberts said.

He pointed out that voters still would have to approve spending above a limit, and that decision could not be appealed.

Assemblyman Richard A. Merkt, R-Randolph, said he agreed with the change to November, but he argued unsuccessfully against taking away voters’ power.

“It’s fundamentally undemocratic,” Merkt said.

Senate President Richard J. Codey on Monday did not indicate when the measures might arrive in the Senate.

“These are important issues, particularly the matter of participation in school-board elections,” Codey said. “We’ll be giving these bills a thorough review when they come over to our house for consideration.”

The bills were designed to address New Jersey’s runaway property taxes, the highest in the country.

About 55 percent of homeowners’ local tax payments are channeled to school districts. In North Jersey, where the 2006 median tax bill was $7,169, that means $3,943 went to education.

Some lawmakers said some of the measures could harm smaller districts.

Assemblyman John E. Rooney, R-Northvale, said many in Bergen County could not afford a 10 percent reduction in administrative costs, because state law mandates a superintendent for each district and a principal for each building. Northvale alone would have to do without $80,000, he said.

“When you have a small school district of 500 [students] or less, the ratio of administrators to pupils is extremely high. It doesn’t make sense to do this ratio nonsense,” he said.”

The 10 percent reduction would be based on a complicated formula involving regional comparisons, per-pupil administrative expenses and a cost-of-living increase. By the 2011-12 school year, affected districts could spend no more than 90 percent of their 2008-09 administrative figure.

The third bill would eliminate the state Board of Education from hearing appeals in cases decided by the state education commissioner. Those appeals would go directly to the Appellate Division of state Superior Court.

Other areas of state government also are trying to reduce school costs.

Within weeks, the state Department of Education is set to approve a 205-page rulebook on how districts must design their budgets. The rules would empower executive county superintendents to override local budget expenditures they deem excessive; increase public review of proposed budgets; set policies on nepotism and pay-to-play; and encourage consolidation and shared services.

E-mail: [email protected]

Posted on Leave a comment

>Federal probe targeting Bergen Democratic chairman

>Federal probe targeting Bergen Democratic chairman
Posted by jappezza May 28, 2008 18:41PM
Joseph Ferriero, one of the state’s top Democratic power brokers, has become the focus of a new federal criminal investigation in connection with consulting contracts that were awarded by a number of municipalities to a company he controlled.

An attorney for the Bergen County Democratic chairman confirmed the probe late today, after subpoenas were sent to at least eight towns and a county agency. The subpoenas seek information about payments to a politically connected lawyer with ties to Ferriero.

In a statement, Ferriero’s attorney, Joseph Hayden, said: “A document subpoena has been served on Joseph Ferriero for records pertaining to a company in which he has financial interest, specifically, Government Grants Consulting LLC. He has promptly provided all records requested in this matter.

“He is confident that this inquiry will demonstrate no wrongdoing on behalf of the company. Further, this company has only provided services for one or two of the nine governmental entities reportedly subpoenaed by the government,” the statement said.

The subpoenas issued last week by the U.S. Attorney’s office did not mention Ferriero. Instead, they sought information about payments to Dennis J. Oury, an attorney with close ties to Ferriero who does legal work with government agencies throughout Bergen County.

But while the initial round of subpoenas made it seem as though Oury was the focus, two people familiar with the investigation said it was really centered on Ferriero. Oury and Ferriero are partners, along with Leonard Kaiser, executive director of the Bergen County Utilities Authority, in the consulting company.

It is not clear exactly what federal prosecutors are looking into, but Ferriero holds the reins of a political machine able to raise huge sums of money, and long considered an arena for “pay-to-play,” the practice in which companies seeking public work donate to the political officials who could have a hand in awarding contracts.

Posted on Leave a comment

>Bolger Rules the Roost at Ridgewood Village Hall

>In a bone chilling display of the immeasurable power local philanthropist and real estate magnate David Bolger commands, Village Council member Jacques Harlow was publicly rebuked this evening by Mr. Bolger’s attorney, Thomas Wells when Harlow suggested that Council members should have input regarding architectural and engineering plans related to the Bolger funded Pease Library renovation project.

Attorney Wells brashly informed Councilman Harlow, Mayor David Pfund, and Deputy Mayor Betty Wiest that Mr. Bolger was “calling the shots” with respect to the renovation project, and that “Mr. Bolger’s preference” was to deal with one individual (Village Manager James Ten Hoeve) and not the entire Council.

The only response to Wells’ tirade was calmly made by Pfund, who conceded that it indeed might be beneficial to both sides if Mr. Ten Hoeve acted as the Village’s “point person.” However, he politely informed Wells that Council members would be providing input on the project via Ten Hoeve, and expressed his view that further project updates would be presented to the entire Council during future open public meetings.

Needless to say, Wells did not appear pleased by the Mayor’s remarks, and stated several times during the course of his project update presentation that he was “personally tasked by Mr. Bolger to speed the process along,” and asked for the Council’s assistance in removing as many bureaucratic roadblocks as possible (including a expedited Planning Board review of architectural and site plans).

The Fly was left with the distinct impression that Mr. Bolger wants a contractual funding agreement and all project plans reviewed, signed, and approved prior to the new Village Council’s investiture on July 1.

Match.com

Posted on 1 Comment

History Lesson on Pease Library

May 28,2008

the staff of the Ridgewood Blog

Ridgewood NJ, During the last Maple Ave library expansion,the library patrons went to the Pease. When the new library opened, the Portrait of George Pease and some other pictures, memorabilia was moved to the main floor of the renovated libary; the section was renamed “The George L. Pease Memorial Library” Once that was done, the library board, headed by Nancy Greene, and with Janet Fricke on the board, the council went to court and voided the will, because “the functions of the Pease were being served at the new library building” This was done in 1999.the Library Board (not the Village) and Sidney Stoldt, who argued the case for the Library,were in agreement that the building be closed to the public as no longer necessary.The 911 emergency center rent goes directly to the library board, and not one cent to repairs. The village residents have paid twice: once in library budget, and once separately for all repairs, including the roof. All rent from upstairs tenants, e.g. realtor, lawyer, etc. would go directly to the LIbrary Board, not the public. No member of the public was alerted to the court appearance.

All was readied for commercial rent when, in the Fall of 1999, Hurricane Floyd hit, and the police were moved into the building since it was so high and dry. The police worked closely with the Historic Preservation Commission to make certain that no part of the wood structure was ruined; they kept it as pristine as possible.

This entire lawsuit was done under the radar; in fact, when one resident attended a council meeting in 1999, and the title of a resolution was read, the resident questioned what it meant and was told that she couldn’t ask questions “at that time”.

Nobody cared, and to this day, most residents don’t care, so we have what we deserve.

Yes, I wish we could all chip in to save the building; that was the plan agreed upon by the Council when the historic grants were supposed to be applied for. Most of the matching grants would have been paid for by private funds, it was privately promised; and this was told to the Council. The promise was made that the building would be open to the public. For David Bolger to appear 24 hours before a promise to keep the building open and apply for grants is no mystery. The fix was in from the beginning. Now the council could look as if they really were considering public use, but they weren’t. All the Council members voted to accept the Bolger money.

Is it too late? Its up to the readers of this blog. Others have done more than their share; if more people would stand up, things could be reversed. But if only a dozen people are interested, the building will be stolen.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car

Posted on Leave a comment

>Did Lame Duck Deputy Mayor Betty Wiest Fire A Public Shot At The Ridgewood Blog?

>In an open “thank you” Letter to the Editor published in today’s Ridgewood News, Ridgewood Deputy Mayor Betty Wiest included this sentence:

“Literary license should be molded to frame issue resolution, not creative narrative that can be sent with a keystroke.”

Sour grapes being sent via pony express by Betty, or is The Fly reading too much into her comment?

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=56753

Posted on Leave a comment

>John Lornez Leaving Ridgewood High School? – New Schools Superintendent Selected?

>As previously reported by a Ridgewood Blog correspondent, a “for sale” sign is now prominently displayed in front of Ridgewood High School principal John Lorenz’s home.

Today, unofficial reports are that Mr. Lorenz will indeed be leaving Ridgewood High School following the end of this semester. Reportedly, Mr. Lorenz was disappointed with the fact that he did not receive due consideration for the open Schools Superintendent position, and will return with his family to the Chicago Illinois area this summer.

In other BOE news, it is rumored that Board members have finally selected a new Schools Superintendent. The candidate is reportedly currently serving as a Schools Superintendent in another Northern New Jersey school district. He/she is said to be well known to many Ridgewood residents.

Stay tuned . . .

Match.com