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Jersey City Council
Jersey City Times Staff

Council Rejects Lavarro’s Affordable Housing Resolution

September 10, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Jersey City Times Staff

City Council Declines to take up Inclusionary Zoning Resolution, Votes to Supply Free Menstrual Products in all City Buildings, and Approves Additional $50,000 Spend on Lawsuit Alleging Financial Fraud

Last night, the City Council declined to add Councilman Lavarro’s inclusionary zoning resolution to the agenda, voted to supply free menstrual products in all city buildings, and authorized the city to spend an additional $50,000 to defend itself against allegations of falsifying financial records.

Affordable Housing

The city council voted down a motion made by Councilperson-at-Large Rolando Lavarro that would have added to the agenda a resolution referring an inclusionary zoning ordinance to the Planning Board for its consideration. Lavarro was supported by Ward E Councilman James Solomon.

Lavarro noted that the IZO that had been adopted by the council in October 2020 was struck down in court last month in part because it had not been referred to the Planning Board in violation of the state’s Municipal Land Use Law. That ordinance, which passed despite objections from Lavarro and Ward E Councilman James Solomon, allowed certain new developments in the city to set aside as few as 5% of their units as “affordable by utilizing certain exemptions. The plaintiffs in the suit —Fair Share Housing and New Jersey Appleseed — argued that it “created a way of horse trading affordable units for Jersey City residents to developers.”

Lavarro’s new ordinance would have required new developments of ten units or more to have at least 20% affordable housing with “no buyouts or exemptions,” he said. Referring to these exemptions, he added that despite other council members’ “suggesting there be flexibility to accomplish other goals, that’s not my priority or the priority of the 3,000 people who signed the ballot initiative for this ordinance.”

Council President Watterman was one of six council members to reject Lavarro’s motion.

“I know there will be a meeting on Monday with Fair Share Housing and our planning division to see how they can work together to make sure we get affordable housing. So, the reason I’m not voting for this is they agreed it has to go to Planning first anyway. I’m voting no because they are working on it, and they know we want it soon,” she said.

Lavarro contended that “arguments that this ordinance was late or improperly submitted are all false” and “in fact on this council agenda today there are multiple resolutions that were submitted and entered into the system later than this resolution, and I will make sure [this resolution] is added immediately after this meeting.”

The motion to add the ordinance to the agenda was rejected 3–6 with Lavarro, Solomon, and Prinz-Arey voting yes.

Free Menstrual Products

Working with Councilperson Mira Prinz-Arey, Cassidy Gormley, an 11-year-old Girl Scout, advocated for a resolution that would provide free menstrual products in all city-owned restrooms. She did so as part of her “Take Action” scout project.

Cassidy made the point that “menstrual products should not be a barrier for someone who is advocating for a cause or making public comments during public meetings.”

The resolution passed unanimously.

Lubna Muneer v. City of Jersey City and John Metro

The City Council approved a resolution authorizing up to $50,000 for legal services from Calcagni & Kanefsky, LLP to represent the city of Jersey City and Director of Finance John Metro in the matter of Lubna Muneer v. City of Jersey City, et al.

This is in addition to the a previous $50,000 that was paid to Calcagni & Kanefsky last year for representation in the same law suit.

Lubna Muneer, the former Jersey City CFO, had filed a whistleblower suit alleging harassment, retaliation, and egregious conduct, claiming that she was fired by Metro on February 25, 2020, for refusing to falsify financial records relating to the city’s municipal budget.

The resolution was approved 8–1, with Councilperson-at-Large Lavarro voting no.

Crime Scene Tape
Jersey City Times Staff

24 Year-old Jersey City Man Found Dead in North Bergen

September 10, 2021/in Latest News, News /by Jersey City Times Staff

A 24 year-old Jersey City man was found dead yesterday in a North Bergen parking lot.

According to Hudson County Prosecutor Esther Suarez, the man, identified as Marquis McCleod, was found lifeless at approximately 7 a.m. by North Bergen Police in a lot near 3200 Liberty Avenue. Shortly thereafter, he was pronounced dead.

The Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office Homicide Unit and the North Bergen Police Department are investigating.

The cause and manner of death are pending the findings of the Regional Medical Examiner’s Office. 

No arrests have been made at this time. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Office of the Hudson County Prosecutor at 201-915-1345 or to leave an anonymous tip at: http://www.hudsoncountyprosecutorsofficenj.org/homicide-tip/. All information will be kept confidential. 

–

Jersey City Taxi
Jersey City Times Staff

Prosecutor Charges Three Taxi Cab Operators With Insurance Fraud

September 9, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Jersey City Times Staff

Next time you get into a Jersey City taxi, you might want to ask to see the driver’s insurance card and registration.

Aziz Ibrahim Jersey City

Aziz Ibrahim

Yesterday, the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office Insurance Fraud Unit arrested three taxi operators after an investigation that included undercover rides to the airport, revealed that the companies’ vehicles were not legally insured and that the vehicles were being driven by unregistered drivers.

The taxi companies operated by the defendants include A1 City Corp., 4M Enterprises Inc. and AAA City Bergen Inc. utilizing phone numbers (201) 433-6100 and (201) 432-1111.

None of these companies had any vehicles that were lawfully registered with the City of Jersey City.

Theresa Ibrahim Jersey City

Theresa Ibrahim

Aziz Ibrahim, age 63, of Jersey City, was charged with second-degree Insurance Fraud and Conspiracy to Commit Insurance Fraud. 

Michael Ibrahim, age 23, of Jersey City, was charged with Conspiracy to Commit Insurance Fraud and Perjury. 

Theresa Ibrahim, age 47, of Jersey City, was charged with two counts of Insurance Fraud. 

According to the HCPO, the investigation remains ongoing and anyone with any relevant information regarding these companies or individuals should contact the Insurance Fraud Unit at (201) 795-6400, ext. 6634. All information will remain confidential. 

Michael Ibrahim Jersey City

Michael Ibrahim

Prosecutor Suarez credited the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office and the Jersey City Police Department for the investigation and arrest. 

The three defendants are scheduled to make their first appearance in Hudson County Superior Court on Tuesday, September 14, 2021. 

 

Jersey City Municipal Council
Hera Mir

At Caucus, City Council Grills Suez CEO Over Ida Response

September 9, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Hera Mir

At Tuesday’s caucus meeting, Jersey City Municipal Council members castigated Suez North America for its poor communication and “flat-footed” response during last week’s boil water advisory. Council President Joyce Watterman had invited representatives from Suez North America and from the Jersey City Municipal Utilities Authority (MUA) to attend the meeting to address the council’s concerns.

During an eight-hour period last Wednesday, Sept. 1, Tropical Storm Ida dumped 24 inches water on the Jersey City area. Said Jose “Joe” Cunha, executive director of the MUA, of Ida, “I believe it was … along the lines of a 500-year storm.”

According to Cunha the deluge caused a “washout” of soil covering a steel aqueduct in the Cedar Grove area. “A tree fell over as part of the washout, which pulled up a boulder and consequently rolled on top of and cracked a section of the aqueduct allowing surface water with mud and dirt to enter our finished water for an unspecified amount of time.”

This triggered the “boil water” advisory. Suez North America CEO Nadine Leslie explained how Suez’s technology went to work. “When our water quality sensors picked up changes in turbidity and chlorination in the city of Jersey City water system and the area, we promptly dispatched our staff to investigate and take action to resolve the issue.”

Ward D Councilman Yousef Saleh questioned why Suez does not distribute potable water in such emergencies. “With the increase of weather events that are happening, in the event that the water is compromised, shouldn’t you have a contingency plan for supplying water to those [impacted] municipalities?” he asked.

Leslie told the council that, while Suez is looking into increasing its capacity, it is required to distribute emergency water only when there is a cut off to water service such as in a water main break. Nevertheless, Suez did provide fresh water in response to a request from the city, according to Leslie.

Council members were also critical of a of series of miscommunications and delays in the company’s Ida response.

“I was out there all day, and distribution did not start picking up until 11:30. If water was difficult to get, then how did Hoboken receive it earlier than we did?” asked Watterman. “We told residents 9:00. People were out there and frustrated and angry.  They thought we had something to do with it, which was out of our control. Some of the council people purchased water themselves.”

Ward B Councilwoman Mira Prinz-Arey questioned Suez’s logistics, staffing, and communications. “Not only did things arrive late, but there was only one person when they came to Lincoln Park. … If I had not been there, and if the representative from United Way had not been there, it would have taken twice as long for them to offload.  It was already 10:30 by this time, and residents were lined up expecting bottles of water because that was what was communicated out to them.”

Ward E Councilman James Solomon noted that for some, the boil water advisory was combined with the loss of electricity, leading to a loss of boilers and a greater need for water. “Given the size of this city with 300,000 residents, the six stations were simply not enough.

Yet Solomon said there was plenty of blame to go around. “This is partly on the city’s OEM [Office of Emergency Management], too, for a plan for the city’s vulnerable populations where lugging jars of water a mile is not doable,” he noted.

Councilman-at-large Rolando Lavarro said that getting information to some of Jersey City senior buildings was difficult, and expecting seniors to carry large containers of water from a tanker back home was unreasonable.

Adding to the confusion was the length of time it took to announce that the water was once again potable. Suez representative Jason O’Brien stated that even though the first round of sampling came back negative, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection asked them to do another round of sampling and testing, which takes 24 hours to complete.

This was not the first time Suez has faced criticism for poor communication during a water emergency. In August, high levels of E. coli bacteria were detected near Christ Hospital, but the boil water advisory took hours to be established. Solomon recommended Suez improve its emergency alert system.

The sole council member to defend Suez was Ward C Councilman Richard Boggiano.

“You learn from experience,” he said. “I think you guys did a great job. I was on the phone with you 20 times, 30 times … and hopefully this will never happen again. … Nobody expected what happened. We can’t come along and criticize everybody.”

The next regular meeting of the Municipal Council is scheduled virtually for Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021, at 6:00 p.m. Join the meeting here. To learn more, go to JerseyCity NJ.gov.

 

 

Jersey City police car
Dana DiFilippo

Case of Jersey City Cop Highlights Lack of Police Transparency

September 9, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Dana DiFilippo

Republished courtesy of New Jersey Monitor

 

It was a fight that started stupidly enough, as fights at boozy bashes tend to do.

The party’s host got mad at a guest packing leftovers into a cooler to take home. The host threw tomatoes at him — and then went and grabbed a shotgun.

“Today is your day!” he shouted at a few guests as they scurried away.

Then he turned the gun in their direction and fired.

No one was injured in the August 2019 incident at Michael Timmins’ home in Sussex County. State police responded, charging Timmins with terroristic threats and possession of weapons for unlawful purposes, which are both typically felony offenses, records show.

The system seemed to work as it should: Guy breaks the law, guy gets arrested.

But two years later, Timmins’ position suggests just the opposite: that the system failed. Timmins is a police lieutenant in Jersey City Police Department.

The details of his 2019 gun arrest are known only because documents including their details became part of the public record — obtained by the New Jersey Monitor — as exculpatory material prosecutors provided in an unrelated murder case.

Timmins’ department has worked hard to hide the incident, writing recently in a state-mandated disclosure only that Timmins “negligently discharged a firearm while off duty and on his personal property.” That disclosure left out all other details, including that he’d had six to eight beers beforehand, as noted by an earlier departmental report on police discipline that shielded officers’ names.

And despite the criminal charges, Timmins has no public criminal record, because he was placed in pretrial intervention, a diversionary program for first-time offenders that results in no conviction.

Police watchdogs suspect Timmins is just one of countless law enforcement officers statewide whose misbehavior has gone unnoticed — and therefore possibly unchecked — because state law protects the secrecy of police discipline records.

If the public doesn’t know about officers’ wrongdoing, they can’t ensure they’re being held accountable for their actions and the public can’t protect themselves, said C.J. Griffin, a Hackensack public interest attorney who advocates for public records access.

“I live in Jersey City, so it’s insanely alarming to me that there’s a police officer walking the streets with a gun and he’s a person who has the temperament to get in a fight, pull a gun and shoot it,” Griffin said. “He’s in a job that requires him to interact with hostile people, maybe even on a daily basis, and yet he has that short of a fuse.”

 

A legislative issue

 

New Jersey is one of about two dozen states where police internal affairs records are confidential. Two Democrats from Bergen County — Sen. Loretta Weinberg and Assemblyman Benjie E. Wimberly — have introduced bills (S-2656 and A-4282) to make them public. But they stalled, and it’s unclear if they’ll surface for a vote after lawmakers reconvene in November for their brief lame-duck session.

Weinberg, who isn’t seeking reelection, has a “lengthy lame-duck list” of bills she hopes will see a vote, including the records bill. She pointed to New York lawmakers’ quick action on the issue: Within three weeks of George Floyd’s murder by a Minnesota police officer, then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo repealed a 1976 law that shielded police misconduct records from public scrutiny.

“There aren’t many people in our society that we turn over this kind of awesome responsibility as we do to law enforcement,” Weinberg said. “We give them the responsibility of protecting the rest of us, of carrying guns, of being able to arrest any one of us for whatever infraction of the rules. Everyone should support transparency, so that we trust that we’ve given this tremendous responsibility to the appropriate people.”

Sunlight is the best disinfectant. Without transparency, we excuse behaviors, we whitewash things, we cover it up.

– Richard Rivera, Penns Grove Police Department Director

 

Last year, then-Attorney General Gurbir Grewal made a move toward transparency by ordering all law enforcement agencies statewide to report major police discipline twice a year. Police unions resisted, and the New Jersey Supreme Court had the final say, ruling in June Grewal’s directive would stand. The Attorney General’s office compiled the reports in an online database that became publicly accessible last month.

But the disclosures are so brief and vague — as Timmins’ entry shows — they don’t give a full picture of an officer’s offense. They also can be misleading or flat-out wrong, Griffin said.

That’s why making internal-affairs records public is key, Weinberg said.

“Something is better than nothing. This database at least gives the press and others who might be looking for some leads as to where to try to look more deeply,” Weinberg said. “But it doesn’t go far enough.”

Police unions have fought both the move to open discipline records, as well as the major-discipline database, calling both “an attack” on officers. Pat Colligan, president of the New Jersey State Policemen’s Benevolent Association, didn’t return requests for comment. But in a June statement condemning the major discipline database, Colligan said: “Many officers only resolved disciplinary actions because they received specific promises of confidentiality which they relied upon.”

Watchdogs counter that without transparency, the public can’t examine disciplinary actions to uncover systemic issues, identify habitually offending officers, detect disparities in discipline, or discover any other number of potential problems. Opening discipline records ensures the public can judge for themselves the reasonableness of police discipline — and demand accountability, advocates say.

“When things happen in secret, there’s no pressure to get it right. There’s no outrage from the public. Even putting aside the fact that misconduct often is swept under the rug, there are plenty of people that would tell you it’s unfair or discriminatory or used for retaliation,” Griffin said.

One of those people is Asbury Park Police Lt. Kamil Warraich. He’s a whistleblower who has been home on administrative leave — at full pay — for two years after going public with reports of misconduct and racism in his department. His pleas for help to the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and other agencies instead got him internal affairs charges for insubordination and other offenses — and eventually his bosses ordered him to stay home. He now is fighting his whistleblower case in court and has become a vocal crusader for opening police records.

“Internal affairs discipline is a double-edged sword. It’s used to retaliate against cops that administrations don’t like. It’s also used to cover up misconduct for the people that they do like,” Warraich said. “There is no accountability without transparency.”

When things happen in secret, there’s no pressure to get it right.

– Attorney C.J. Griffin

 

Without transparency, troublesome officers can take a job in another agency, where their bosses — and the public — are no wiser about their problematic behavior. That happened in Camden County, where a Woodlynne police officer was suspended last year for pepper-spraying two teenagers without provocation.

Ryan Dubiel pled guilty to simple assault, agreed to forfeit his job, and was prohibited from holding public office or a police position ever again in New Jersey. The incident was one of multiple use of force incidents in Dubiel’s short career, during which he held nine police jobs. That prompted Grewal to hold him up as an example of why police should be licensed in New Jersey, one of only a few states with no licensing in place for police.

Hiding misbehavior also can allow bad officers to preserve their financial futures, off the backs of taxpayers. A group called Libertarians for Transparent Government has filed a lawsuit over records in Cumberland County, after officials allowed a corrections officer, Tyrone Ellis, to retire in good standing even though he admitted to internal affairs investigators that he had sex with two inmates and brought them contraband. Under state law, any public employee convicted of a sex offense involving their employment must forfeit their pension.

 

Counting on the courts

 

Griffin hopes the courts will act where the Legislature has not. She has two cases pending before the New Jersey Supreme Court in which she’ll argue to open discipline records. One is the Libertarians case.

The other stems from the controversial 2019 resignation of James Cosgrove, Elizabeth’s longtime police director, after an inquiry found he routinely used racist and sexist slurs in referring to police officers. The city and investigators repeatedly rebuffed requests to publicly release records in the case, and Richard Rivera sued to get them.

Rivera might seem a surprising person to champion the cause of opening police records. He heads the Penns Grove Police Department in Salem County.

But he came to the crusade the same way Warraich did — he was a whistleblower who found no one wanted to hear his reports of corruption in the West New York police department, where he was an officer. The FBI eventually helped him ensure justice, but Rivera still lost his job. He’s made it his mission since to correct systemic defects in policing.

“Sunlight is the best disinfectant,” Rivera said. “Without transparency, we excuse behaviors, we whitewash things, we cover it up.”

 

 

Jersey City Nutcracker
Elizabeth Morrill

Nimbus Dance Seeks Youth Dancers for Nutcracker

September 8, 2021/in Latest News, News, Performing Arts /by Elizabeth Morrill

Jersey-City-based Nimbus Dance company is holding auditions Saturday, Sept.11, for youths aged twelve to eighteen for its annual production of “Jersey City Nutcracker.” In addition, children aged 4 to eighteen are needed for many small roles in the show.

The production, billed as “Jersey City’s largest, most zany holiday show,” is an adaptation of Tchaikovsky’s timeless classic, which follows two school-age friends from very different backgrounds who share experiences of magic and adventure. In a “Jersey City twist,” all scenes take place in recognizable local spots, such as city hall. The sets also feature construction sites, abandoned shopping carts, even a “magical” Downtown manhole cover.

Tryouts for the leading roles of Maria and Christopher (or Christina) offer “an unprecedented opportunity for growth and exposure,” according to the company’s press release. Children aged four to eighteen are sought to play the non-lead roles of Cookies, Liberty Angels, Rats, Bullies, and B-Boys and Girls.

All roles involve dancing and extended choreography. The roles of Maria and Christopher require the dancers to be emotive and expressive through their faces and posturing but do not involve any speaking. Advance preparation for the tryouts is not necessary; indeed dancers of all backgrounds are encouraged to audition. Tryouts will include some choreography from the show and some acting exercises.

Auditions for Maria and Christopher/Christina will be held at the Nimbus Arts Center (at 329 Warren St. in Downtown Jersey City) on Sept. 11 from 5:30 to 6:30 pm.

Information on how to obtain one of the non-lead roles can be obtained by contacting the company directly. Altogether, three casts will be assembled that will put on numerous matinee and evening holiday shows in December.

The Nutcracker is just one of numerous performances and programs offered by Nimbus. Founded by Artistic Director Samuel Pott in 2005, the organization boasts both a professional dance company and a dance school for children. Pott himself will direct and choreograph Nutcracker with fantastical with animated scenic projections by Jersey City-based video artists Laia Cabrera and Isabelle Duverger and a delightful libretto co-written by playwright Alysia Souder.

Rehearsals for all cast members will take place on Wednesday evenings and Saturday afternoons starting the week of September 13 and during certain weekends (yet to be determined) in November and December. Participants are asked to pay a “performance fee” of $350, but installment plans and “robust” financial aid are available. Absolutely no one will be turned away for lack of funds.

All performances of “Jersey City Nutcracker” will take place in Nimbus’s new 14,000-square-foot state-of-the-art dance center.

For more information on rehearsal times, role descriptions, and registration, visit www.https://schoolofnimbus.org/jc-nutcracker.

Photo by Jennifer Brown
Aaron Morrill

Lavarro to Introduce Inclusionary Zoning Resolution Tomorrow

September 8, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Aaron Morrill

As the saying goes, if at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.

Such, apparently, will be the thinking of Councilman-at-large Rolando Lavarro tomorrow night as he attempts to place a resolution on the agenda that would send an ambitious inclusionary zoning ordinance [commonly referred to as an “IZO”] to the Planning Board for review.

In October of last year, Lavarro failed to get the necessary votes to amend an IZO that was ultimately passed by the City Council. The amendments, which included doing away with “community benefits” waivers and requiring 15% of the units to qualify as affordable, were voted down 7-2 with only Ward E Councilman James Solomon voting with Lavarro.

The ordinance that passed allowed developers to make as little as 5% of the units in their projects affordable and granted waivers whereby developers agreed to provide community benefits, such as swimming pools and parking garages.

Last month, a court threw out the new IZO, finding  that Jersey City officials had violated the state’s Municipal Land Use Law when they rushed to adopt it without first referring it to the city’s Planning Board for review.

The ordinance that Lavarro now wants the Planning Board to consider would up the affordable housing requirement to 20% of a project’s units and, like the prior ordinance, do away with community benefits waivers.

Asked about his resolution, Lavarro said, “Tomorrow, whether it is in morning negotiations or at the City Council meeting in the evening, the Mayor and City Council will have an opportunity to advance real affordable housing in Jersey City, or they can continue to maintain the status quo that has only served to gentrify our City, pushing more and more long-time residents out. For my part, when I sit at the table, I will be on the side of Jersey City. My demand is for 20% on-site affordable housing. No exemptions. No buyouts.”

City Council President Joyce Watterman had not responded to a request for comment at the time of this writing.

Tomorrow night’s virtual City Council meeting begins at 6 pm and can be accessed here.

 

 

 

 

 

World Trade Center black and white
Jersey City Times Staff

Port Authority to Hold Series of Solemn Events Commemorating 20th Anniversary of 9/11

September 8, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Jersey City Times Staff

In commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey will be hosting a plethora of events at the iconic former site as well as at locations throughout New York City.

The agency will also observe moments of silence at its crossings at 8:46 a.m. and 9:03 a.m. marking the moments when each of the two towers were struck. Wreaths will be placed at the New York and New Jersey entrances to the Holland Tunnel and flags at all Port Authority facilities will be flown at half-staff in memory of the thousands who were killed.

Below is a sampling of the memorial activities.

 

Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021

Port Authority Memorial Garden Dedication

Time: 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

Location: Liberty Park (Liberty Street east of St. Nicholas Church)

Event Description:   Port Authority will establish a Memorial Garden on the World Trade Center campus that will be dedicated to fallen Port Authority first responders and rescue/recovery workers. The Garden will be located directly to the east of the Saint Nicholas Greek Church & National Shrine and adjacent to the steps leading up to Liberty Park on Liberty Street.

 

Friday, Sept. 10, 2021

9/11 Boatlift Commemoration with Harbor Carriers of the Port, U.S. Coast Guard and the Port Authority

Time: 1 to 2 p.m.

Location: American Merchant Mariners Monument Battery Park

Event Description: A procession of 30 to 60 vessels and a blessing of the fleet in Battery Park and New York Harbor to honor those who were rescued during the largest sealift in history:  the boatlift of 9/11 when more than 500,000 people stranded in lower Manhattan after the attacks were transported across the harbor to safety.

Water cannons will honor the vessels and U.S. mariners during the procession as they pass Battery Park and the Statue of Liberty. Adm. Karl K. Schultz, the United States Coast Guard Commandant, will be in attendance and Rick Larabee, a retired director of the Port Authority’s Port Department, will speak during the ceremony.

 

Saturday, Sept. 11, 2021

Port Authority Interfaith Remembrance Service

Time: 2 p.m.

Location: North Oculus Plaza, corner of Church and Fulton Streets

Masks will be required for all attendees.

A video of the service will also be available at www.panynj.gov.

Event Description: As part of an annual tradition of remembrance, the agency will honor the 84 colleagues lost on 9/11 with an Interfaith Remembrance Service. The agency will reflect on the memory of these cherished friends and colleagues, including the 37 members of the Port Authority Police who made the ultimate sacrifice in service of saving lives. This occasion will also honor those who perished in the 1993 WTC bombing.

 

Tribute in Lights

Time: Dusk until dawn

Location: Oculus, One World Trade Center, 7 World Trade Center, Ronald O. Perelman Performing Arts Center

Event Description:   Buildings will be lit blue across the New York area as part of the Tribute in Lights, including One World Trade Center, 7 World Trade Center, the Oculus and the Ronald O. Perelman Performing Arts Center.

Website: https://www.911memorial.org/visit/memorial/tribute-light

 

Sunday, Sept. 12, 2021

March of the 9/11 Recovery Workers and Closing Ceremony

Time: 7:30 to 10:00 a.m. (ceremony 9:30 to 10:00 a.m.)

Location: North Moore and Greenwich Streets to South Oculus Plaza

Event Description: March by members of HEART 9/11, the NY Building Trades, and BTEA Contractors in honor of the 9/11 recovery workers.

Website: https://www.classy.org/event/usd20-for-20-years-walk-fundraiser/e335594/

 

Stars of Hope 9/11 Family Resilience Paint Project

Time: 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

Location: Fulton Street (outside Oculus, close to Greenwich Street)

Event Description: A family-friendly paint event inside the “Hope Bus” parked on Fulton Street, outside the Oculus.

Website: https://starsofhopeusa.org/9-11-project/

 

Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2021

Paul Taylor Dance Company’s Promethean Fire

Time: 12:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m. (2 performances)

Location: Main level of the Oculus

Event Description:  The Paul Taylor Dance Company will perform Mr. Taylor’s masterpiece “Promethean Fire” as a gift to New Yorkers on the 20th Anniversary of 9/11. Created in the aftermath of 9/11, this dance poignantly echoes the overwhelming tragedy of the event, the memory of those we lost, and the city’s spectacular demonstration of courage. It reminds us all that even after turmoil and devastation, the human spirit will ultimately find power in community, renewal, and hope.

 

 

 

 

Team USA’s Raymond Martin
Elizabeth Morrill

Jersey City Native Wins Gold in Tokyo Paralympics

September 7, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Elizabeth Morrill
Team USA’s Raymond Martin

Team USA’s Raymond Martin on the medal stand with his gold medal in the 100m September 3, 2021 at the Olympic Stadium at the Tokyo Paralympic Games. Photo by Mark Reis

Jersey City native Raymond Martin earned a gold medal in the men’s T52 100-meter dash in the Tokyo Paralympic Games Friday, Sept. 3. With a time of 16.99 seconds, the wheelchair racer garnered his tenth Paralympic medal since his first such Games in 2012.

In July, Jersey City Times profiled Martin in the lead-up to the games.

“This feels amazing,” Martin reported.  “The last two events [400-meter and 1500-meter] I came out with a silver medal here. It was hard to complain about those events, but it was not where I wanted to be, which was at the top of the podium. So, to get on the top of the podium in the 100-meter is an amazing feeling,” he said.

Martin was born with a congenital condition called Freeman-Sheldon Syndrome, a subcategory of a broader condition called Arthrogryposis, which causes contractures, or stiffening, of joints. His condition has given Martin limited movement in his limbs, neck, and face.  But he has been competing since he was five years old, when he got his first racing chair.

Martin still holds the Paralympic record of 16.79 seconds for the T52 100-meter dash (set in 2012) and the world record of 16.41 seconds for the race (set in 2019).

The events Martin will be participating in are categorized by gender, distance, and mobility. Since mobility can vary greatly among the athletes participating, participants are grouped by similar functional ability. Wheelchair racers are divided into four classes: T51 (least mobile), T52, T53, and T54 (most mobile).

With the Games behind him, Martin will resume his studies at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston to become a physician’s assistant. Speculating as to whether he’d compete in the 2024 Games in Paris, which take place just months after he’s due to graduate, Martin said, “I cannot rule out Paris now.”

Unlicensed Dirt bike and ATV riders in Jersey City
Ron Leir

Outlaw Dirt Bikers Fueling Frustration, Anger in Jersey City and Beyond

September 6, 2021/in header, Latest News, News /by Ron Leir

Call them Easy Riders with an attitude. A plague of loud, unlicensed dirt bikes has struck Jersey City’s neighborhoods, driving residents crazy and fearful that their antics will leave someone crippled or dead.

True to their outlaw image, these would-be Dennis Hoppers generally ride un-helmeted, itself a violation of New Jersey law.

Folks from various parts of the city have spoken publicly and posted a chorus of complaints on the social media site Nextdoor.com imploring city officials to take action to get these bad boys off the streets.

Bergen Hill resident Ozgun Tasdemir says he wrote to Mayor Steve Fulop about the situation and was told “it’s viral in NYC, too.”  Tasdemir says he’s lived in Bergen Hill since 2006 “and it’s been never ever like this.”

Across the river, New York City has actually done something to try and get the problem under control.

This past May, CBS 2 TV reported the New York City Police Department was “using technology, including body cameras, to identify reckless drivers, confiscating illegal vehicles [and] offering $100 rewards for tips for each illegal bike seized” following eight deaths and some 350 injuries caused by the operators of dirt bikes riding illegally on streets and sidewalks just in the first three months of this year.

Shortly after a dirt biker critically injured a 4-year-old boy in Flushing Meadow Park in Queens in July, the NYPD confiscated more than 500 dirt bikes and ATVs (all-terrain vehicles).

“There’s far too many still out there,” said New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea, who urged the public to alert the police if they see any of these vehicles stored in specific locations. New York currently assesses a $500 fine on a first offense for illegally operating dirt bikes and ATVs on city roadways and $1,000 for every subsequent offense.

In Jersey City, meanwhile, residents continue to press for authorities to respond to a situation which, they say, is growing increasingly menacing to pedestrian safety. So far, the efforts appear to have come to naught.

“What’s it going to take to get these bozos from just running through the stop signs on super loud motorcycles and nearly taking down pedestrians, dogs and cars.  Jersey Avenue and Van Vorst Park has become a speedway,” griped Van Vorst Park resident Mitch Mitchell.

Unlicensed ATV rider in Downtown Jersey City

Unlicensed ATV Rider in Downtown Jersey City

Cheryl Gross, who lives in the Berry Hill section of Bergen-Lafayette, says she’s watched “a group of little dirt bikes, mainly on weekends, speed up Union Street between Randolph and Garfield in the wrong direction and pop wheelies.”

Hilltop resident Ted Domski chimed in with this: “Not just motorcycles but cars, cyclists, e-bikes, and pedestrians also, walking against signals. …”

It’s been a problem in Bergen Hill, as well, says neighborhood resident Vincent Czyz, “on Summit Avenue, near the intersection of Astor [Place], for about a year.”

Western Slope resident David Mackey reports one success story, having followed up on “two kids on dirt bikes (who had) no plates, no helmets, racing up and down my street. So, the next time they came by, I followed them until they turned in to their garage and closed the door. (I) called the cops, let them know where to look for two bikes with warm engines and 20 minutes later, the cops were towing the bikes away on a flatbed.”

But Riverview North resident Eric Chapeau suggested folks show patience with younger bikers who “are new immigrants … and we don’t know how terrible their lives were before, and they need to express themselves. You need to share the sidewalk with them or stay home.”

Chapeau appears to be in the minority. At a community meeting in June, residents of a crime infested block on Wilkinson Avenue included unlicensed dirt bikes in a list of unenforced quality of life infractions. Captain Marc Gigante explained, apologetically, that the police were prohibited from pursuing the motorcycles.

Just three weeks ago, during the Puerto Rican Day festivities, an unlicensed dirt bike and an ATV were seen wending their way through Downtown crowds with seeming impunity. (See featured photo.)

BikeJC, an advocacy group for local and area cyclists, is taking no stand on the issue since, according to president Patrick Conlon, “these are not cyclists by any stretch,” but Conlon says he’s well aware of the problems these riders are creating in Newark, where he runs a bike shop and where “we see this happening right down Broad Street through the center of [Newark].”

Conlon described these outlaw bikes as “extremely loud gasoline powered vehicles designed for off-roading – both two- and four-wheeled” and says the riders “tend to make a big showing of how they can ride wheelies on these things, which is part of the dangerous riding practices that I’m sure are upsetting neighborhoods.”

Bike JC, while not taking an official position on dirt bikes and ATVs, does, however, “want all road users, licensed properly or otherwise, to ride responsibly and obey the rules of the road. To do otherwise endangers all the other road users including cyclists, walkers, those waiting for buses, and other vehicle users.”

Meanwhile, if upset residents want to do more to call attention to the problem, Cheryl Gross advises them to “call or email the mayor’s office and your local councilperson. Noise is one thing but running stop signs and playing chicken with motorcycles is another.”

Marlene O. Sandkamp of Van Vorst Park added this: “Sign up and speak at the next (City) Council meeting Sept. 9. You can request to speak on the homepage of jerseycitynj.gov (http://jerseynj.gov). Find the link that says Public Speaking Request.”

 

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News Briefs

Mayor Fulop, Public Safety Director James Shea, and Fire Chief Steven McGill swore in 25 Captains to the Jersey City Fire Department at a ceremony inside City Hall on July 1.

Mayor Fulop joined Public Safety Director James Shea and Fire Chief Steven McGill June 30 to announce two brand new fire companies and officially launch a newly created specialized response team, the JCFD High-rise Unit, to respond to all high-rise fires and all working fires as a Rapid Intervention Crew (RIC).  The last fire company added to the Jersey City Fire Department was in 1937.

The Hudson County Board of Commissioners has provided $195,000 for services provided to inmates through the Housing and Reintegration Program of the Hudson County Department of Family Services. The program provides services that inmates can use for housing, substance abuse treatment, clinical care, mental health, obtain medications and go to job training and job search services.

This program also provides the County Department of Housing and Community Reintegration access to 40 transitional housing beds. The program runs from June 1, 2022 through January 31, 2023.

Mayor Fulop has announced the creation of a $20 per hour Living Wage Statute for all full-time Jersey City employees. As part of the City’s 2022-2023 fiscal year budget, the Living Wage Statute will boost salaries for hundreds of current and future Jersey City residents and workers from $17 (already one of the highest minimum wage rates in the nation) to $20 per hour – which is $7 more than New Jersey’s current hourly minimum wage.

 

Jersey City, US
3:45 am, July 6, 2022
74°F
overcast clouds
Wind: 12 mph
Pressure: 1009 mb

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