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Aaron Morrill

Candidate Kevin Bing: An Interview

March 15, 2021/in header, Journal Square, Latest News, Neighborhoods, News /by Aaron Morrill

Two weeks ago, Journal Square resident Kevin Bing announced his candidacy for the Ward C city council seat currently held by Richard Boggiano. We sat down with Bing to find out why he’s running and what he hopes to accomplish. Here are the edited highlights.

JCT: What do you believe that your qualifications are to be Ward C councilperson?

KB: I’ve lived in Journal Square since 2014. Ever since I moved to Journal Square I’ve spent a lot of time volunteering, serving on non-profit boards, and I was recently the president of the Journal Square Community Association where I was one of the founding trustees.

JCT: Why do you think Rich Boggiano should be replaced?

KB: I’m not trying to run against anyone. I’m running for the people of Ward C and the issues that I think can benefit them. I have a lot of respect for Councilperson Boggiano. He’s been part of the community for a long time, and he’s focused on doing what he thinks is best. We’ve had real policy disagreements, and I know plenty of voters who are ready for a change. I know he stood in the way of street-safety policies that could save lives. We’ve seen a lot of development without appropriate community benefits, specifically the lack of affordable housing. And so I think there’s a real opportunity for change and to deliver on solutions that people are looking for and that you can only do with a change of council seat.

JCT: What do you think the administration is doing right, and what is it doing wrong?

KB: There’s a lot of good that the administration is doing. I would applaud the mayor on the recent announcement around the Loew’s. The Loew’s is a gem. Grove Street has had a good run of it for a while, but Journal Square is Downtown Jersey City, and I think the Loew’s is an important component there. They seem to have a good partner in Devil’s Arena Entertainment, and obviously they’ve brought the Friends of the Loew’s to the table, and I think that’s really important.

I also think that you want a councilperson who is independent, who is accountable just to the voters of Ward C, so that you can make sure that these projects are getting done and that they’re getting done right. If the community brings a concern to me, there’s going to be a very simple political calculus. I’m going to do what I think is best. I’m going to speak up where I need to speak up. I’m going to call out problems where I see them, and I’m going to offer solutions.

JCT: What do you think the administration is doing wrong?

KB: I think there are a lot of places where we need to see improvement. I think on Vision Zero the mayor set an aggressive goal of reaching zero traffic deaths and zero serious injuries. I think if we’re going to hit that goal, there needs to be a big push. We need to get more aggressive in rolling out street-safety policies and new street redesigns. I think on affordable housing we’re not doing enough. What’s happening now is not working. There is a housing crisis that was there before COVID and will be there after COVID. We need to take structural steps to remedy that.

JCT: What would be your top five priorities if you get elected?

KB: There are a few issues people know me for.  Street safety, affordable housing, progressive values and quality of life issues. But I don’t want to list what my top five are. I’m currently engaged in a series of listening sessions with the members of the community, so I have my ideas that I bring to the table. But the campaign is about more than just me. So I want to hold those sessions and get that feedback. Over the summer you’ll see us roll out a strong platform.

JCT: What do you think about property taxes? Are they too low, too high, or just about right?

KB: (Laughs) I don’t think I’m going to pick one of those options. The city’s budget needs to be balanced. There’s only so much of a burden that you can put on small homeowners. At the same time you have a system of abatements that not only changes the way our property taxes are structured, but it’s a system that needs to be audited and maintained to make sure that people are paying their fair share. We’ve seen the payroll tax come in, and that’s changing our finances. And also, as the city grows and new projects come online, you also see the tax base growing there.

So, the city has needs. I think that we need a tax base that covers those needs. But I have no proposals that go further than that right now.

JCT: Are there any areas in the budget right now that you think need to be increased and any you think need to be decreased?

KB: I don’t have any specific proposals there.

JCT: What are your views on public safety and policing?

KB: I think accountability is key. I’ve listened to a lot of leaders around the city, and that seems to be the issue that keeps coming up: the ability to build a layer of accountability into the system that will increase trust between the community and the police. I think a big part of that is the Civilian Complaint Review Board. I’m in full support of the proposal that was put before the council, and I want to see that it gets done.

JCT: How are you going to pay for your campaign? Are you going to take developer money?

KB: I’ve only been fundraising for one week. It’s been one hundred percent grassroots. It’s been neighbors and friends who believe in me and believe in what the campaign can do. That’s where I’m going to be focusing all of my efforts from here until November.

Regarding developers, there are good actors and bad actors in the real estate community. I think everyone should be judged off of their work and their qualities as a responsible neighbor in the community. No one should be judged based on campaign donations.  We’re going to look at every donation that comes in to make sure that we know where the money’s coming from.

JCT: Is there anything you want to touch on that I haven’t asked you about?

KB: Yeah, I’d like to touch a little more on the job of the city council person. I think a councilperson is a representative of a community. And you want to make sure that there’s someone there who has the judgment and reflects the values of the community they’re supposed to represent. In addition to that, you need someone who can deliver on a solution.

So often, we’ve seen council-people or other leaders who are content to point the finger at problems but throw their hands up when it’s time for a solution. I think that finding solutions to our problems isn’t that hard. Through my experience as an organizer and as a community leader there’s a lot of solutions out there. You just have to be willing to listen and bring people into the room and give them a seat at the table.  And that’s what I plan to do with my campaign: not just give people a seat at the table but have them lead right along with me.

The best thing I can do is empower others, empower people who haven’t had a voice.

JCT: You work at your family business? What does your business do?

KB: We’re in manufacturing.

JCT: What do you make?

KB: I’d rather not discuss the business in a political context.

JCT: How does being a businessperson inform being a council person?

KB: I know what it’s like to run a small business. Going through COVID has been one of the biggest challenges of my professional life. We’ve been open the whole time.

A big constituency are the businesspeople; the small shop owners in the community. I know what that experience is like. I know what it means to balance a budget or make sure that payroll is ready at the end of the week.

Through COVID you see people struggling, and I plan to be a helping hand as somebody who knows what it takes to run a family business.

My business is not political. It isn’t tied up in public contracting, and I plan to keep it that way.

JCT: What is your educational background?

KB: I have a bachelor’s in economics.

JCT: And where did you grow up?

KB: In Wayne, New Jersey.

JCT: And how’d you end up here?

KB: Jersey City is the best city in the world.  I first moved here in 2010. I lived on Ocean Avenue, then I moved Downtown. I left for a few years and came back in 2014, and I’ve lived in Journal Square that entire time.

JCT: One last thing. On the issue of “eliminating the line,” [redesigning ballots so that candidates are grouped by the office they seek rather than as part of a team with the official party endorsement] why do you think it’s important?

KB: The county line is a complete aberration. It only exists in New Jersey. The rest of the country has done away with it because it’s unfair and unjust. Political bosses should not get to pick who goes on the ballot.

If you look at the primary for the general election, you had the HCDO [Hudson County Democratic Organization] slate bracketed under Joe Biden. I am fairly certain that Joe Biden did not directly endorse the county commissioner candidates in Hudson County. However, the way the ballot’s designed, it shows the voter the implied endorsement. Meanwhile, the other candidates who are running in a primary who may be more progressive, they’re bracketed off in what’s called “ballot Siberia.” Then you have the Hudson County Democratic Party running posters that say “Stop Trump, Vote Column A.” But it’s a Democratic primary. We’re all opposed to Trump. It’s totally unfair.

 

 

Aaron Morrill

Loew’s to Get Renovation and National Acts

February 22, 2021/in header, Journal Square, Latest News, Neighborhoods, News /by Aaron Morrill

Mayor Steven Fulop has announced a $72 million renovation of the Loew’s Jersey Theater in partnership with Devils Arena Entertainment, the operator of Prudential Center. The announcement represents the realization of a seven year effort by the mayor to bring in a well-heeled professional management company that can book national acts and compete with the likes of the Beacon Theater in Manhattan.

“This one-of-a-kind partnership signifies our long-term planning for a post-pandemic future where we’re confident arts and culture will be a staple of life” said Mayor Fulop.

The project, which is likely to close the theater for at least 18 months beginning in 2022, will result in upgrades to heating and air-conditioning systems and the installation of state-of-the-art audio-visual systems. Interior finishes will be restored, bathrooms repaired, entrances and exits will be reconfigured and the marquee will be rebuilt to resemble the original.

The announcement marks just the latest phase in a continuing revival of the landmark theater that sits majestically across JFK Boulevard from the Journal Square Transportation Center.

The theater was saved from the wrecking ball in 1986 largely through the efforts of the not-for-profit group Friends of the Loew’s. With an investment of sweat equity and grant money FOL was able to partially re-open the the theater in 2001. FOL’s status was formalized under a 2004 lease that gave FOL the right to manage the theater for $1 a year until 2020. Over the ensuing years, FOL continued to restore the theater to the point that it hosted major acts such as Patti Labelle, Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett, Yo La Tengo, Sufjan Stevens, Neutral Milk Hotel, The Decemberists, The Duprees, and Beck.

In 2014, Fulop waged a bitter fight to evict Friends of the Loew’s from the theater and replace them with concert promoter AEG Live. Under that arrangement, AEG was to rent the theater for 30 years and contribute $3.5 million toward its renovation. The mayor’s effort came to naught in 2015 when a judge ruled that evicting FOL would breach the 2004 lease.

If all is not forgotten, all is going in the right direction from the perspective of FOL Executive Director Colin Egan. FOL was heavily involved in putting together the Request for Proposal (RFP) that brought in Devils Arena Entertainment and is confident that the final agreement will allow FOL to continue its mission.

Many details have yet to be ironed out. Devils Arena Entertainment received only “conditional designation” today from the Jersey City Redevelopment Authority (JCRA). Egan explains the plan. “This enables the city, the JCRAm and FOL to go from the conceptual, which is what their presentation was,  to a very specific arrangement.”

How will it work?  “We are still the non-profit partner,” says Egan. “That will allow us to continue with non-profits arts generally.” He also expects FOL to have a “major voice” in the preservation work going forward.

Egan reflected on today’s announcement. “Everyone knows that it’s been a rocky road getting here. It takes people of good will to realize that they can agree.” He says FOL has a good relationship now with the city and the JCRA.

Egan wants Jersey City residents that the things they like about the Loew’s won’t change. “I want to reassure people that that’s not happening. Everyone who wants bigger shows on a regular basis, and that includes us, should be very happy. But for the folks who also enjoy our movie shows to our art shows…that’s not going away. That’s why we’re still in the picture.”

The Loew’s Jersey is one of five “Wonder Theaters” built in the tristate area in the late 1920s by the Loew’s Corporation, which had created and owned MGM Studios and was at the time one of the most important presenters of both live stage shows and movies. In its first years, the Loew’s hosted stage shows with some of the greatest stars of the 1930s, including Cab Calloway, George Burns, Gracie Allen, and Duke Ellington. Movie stars including Judy Garland, Humphrey Bogart, and Jean Harlow made promotional appearances there.  The Four Season gave a concert at the Loew’s in 1967.

“The Loew’s Jersey Theatre is an iconic community treasure that has played a long, distinguished role as Jersey City’s premier arts and entertainment venue. The opportunity to partner with Mayor Fulop, the Friends of the Loew’s, and the local Journal Square community to revitalize this historic venue is a privilege for us,” said Hugh Weber, President of Devils Arena Entertainment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ron Leir

Hunt Is On for New Operator of Loew’s Jersey Theatre

June 15, 2020/in Diversions, header, Journal Square, Latest News, News /by Ron Leir

City hopes entertainment mecca will reopen in 2022

Two former antagonists are uniting in a common goal: to restore the Loew’s Jersey Theatre, one of Jersey City’s last remaining landmarks, and transform it into a state-of-the-art entertainment spot while preserving its historic architecture.

At a press conference held Thursday, June 11, Mayor Steven Fulop  announced that the city will seek a new operator “with international reach” to run and manage the movie palace. Colin Egan, founder of Friends of the Loew’s, which formerly restored and ran the theatre, joined in the announcement.

In tandem with the news, the Jersey City Redevelopment Agency issued a 61-page request for proposals for the project.

“We’re going out for a six-week RFP,” Fulop said. Proposals are due back by July 31, 2020, at 4 p.m.”

The JCRA, the Council, and FOL will review the submissions after the deadline has passed. Once that review is done, the JCRA will award a management contract to the successful vendor, according to City Business Administrator Brian Platt.

“We’re looking for a single entity to restore the facility and to preserve its historical elements,” Platt said, while also booking major performers and professional touring acts and — what Egan described — as “community, nonprofit, affordable” performances.

Platt and Egan both spoke of the desire to maintain the unique ornamental features of the building.  The new operator would likely have to modify the back end, however, to serve as an equipment loading dock.

The Loew’s Jersey Theatre opened in 1929 at a cost of $2 million, according to Mayor Fulop. Redeveloping it, though, could cost $21 million, estimates the city’s consulting architects, HMR Architects of Philadelphia: $4.4 million for life-safety and code compliance; $5.8 million for balcony and production improvements; $9.2 million for theatre improvements; and $1.6 million for optional equipment and upgrades. The theatre will need to be made ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) accessible. And new heating and air conditioning systems will need to be installed, according to Platt.

These expenses will hopefully be made by the new operator as part of an annual lease payment to the city, Platt said further. But the city is not ruling out alternate payment options — or funding sources. The coronavirus pandemic has affected the city’s budget in ways unimagined when financing of the Loew’s project was originally designed. Fulop maintains that the time for the project is still right given all the developments happening in the area. Much residential real estate development is migrating away from downtown and to Journal Square; a building next to the PATH Station on Sip Avenue is being transformed into a new Jersey City Museum and Cultural Center; and the Journal Square transit hub itself is being renovated by the Port Authority.

The mayor concedes the area lacks the ancillary amenities like upscale bars and eateries that are conducive to supporting a big entertainment center. But, he says, the newly renovated Loew’s could serve as “the core” for attracting those types of businesses.

Egan pointed to similar entertainment-related development efforts in other U.S. cities such as Atlanta, St. Louis, Cleveland, Columbus, Providence and Boston. Those projects, he says, have been successful.

The city hopes the Loew’s theatre will open in its new incarnation by late 2022.

What programming will the sparkling new complex offer — and will Friends of the Loew’s maintain any role at all?

As outlined in the RFP, each year the new operator will be expected to produce at least 20 musical shows by nationally recognized artists, at least 10 theatrical or other stage performances and at least 10 comedy performances. An unspecified number of private bookings will also be allowed.

Although the city and FOL had waged a seven-year legal battle over stewardship of the Loew’s – with the FOL’s prevailing after a court validated its lease of the property — the lease expired recently, and both Fulop and Egan said Thursday the time has come to bury the hatchet and look to the future.

FOL will remain involved in both the renovation and the programming. It will have a say in all matters pertaining to the design and construction proposed by the new operator; it will continue relying on volunteers to help with touching up and cleaning the highly detailed ornamental fabric of the building; and it will arrange for inspection of the building at least once a year to ensure that the fabric remains preserved.

The grassroots group will still produce some shows, as well. FOL will have the right to present commercial and non-commercial events with a range of cultural partners on no fewer than 55 days each year.

To review the RFP on the Loew’s Theatre, visit TheJCRA.org and download the relevant posting.

For other articles in our coverage of the Loew’s Jersey Theatre, click here.

 

Photo courtesy of Jennifer Brown/City of Jersey City

Alison Mirenda

Friends of the Loew’s Contract Expiring Though Group to Remain Involved

February 19, 2020/in header, Latest News, News /by Alison Mirenda

Friends of the Loew’s, the Jersey City-based non-profit organization that has worked to keep the Loew’s Jersey theater in operation since 1987 and that has been in litigation with the city since 2013 will cease to have formal ties with the city at the end of this month when its contract expires. Despite these circumstances, the volunteer-run group will remain involved in the Journal Square landmark theater for at least the immediate future.

Professional theater management companies are also vying to run the theater going forward. Just who will get the rights to do so and to perhaps reshape the mission of the theater in so doing has been hotly debated for more than six years now.

In November 2013 Mayor Fulop informed FOL that he planned to replace them with a professional theater management company. This spurred the nonprofit group to file a verified complaint against Jersey City, citing several charges including breach of lease and breach of covenant of implied/explicit good faith and fair dealing. Last year County Superior Court Judge Hector Velazquez sided with FOL, stating its lease was valid and paving the way for them to continue as sole operators of the theater for the duration of its contract.

Photo courtesy Friends of the Loew’s Facebook by Garrett Ziegler

The Landmark Loew’s Jersey Theatre is located at 54 Journal Square across from the Journal Square Path Station. The well-known theatre is one of five movie palaces opened by The Loew’s Corporation in 1929 and features a stage and as well as a movie screen. The building’s extravagant design was meant to inspire moviegoer’s awe. As guests waited for movies to begin, they would be entertained by an organist who would rise from below the stage and play.

To the extent that FOL wishes to remain heavily involved in the theater’s future, it has a lot to do with the group’s history, accomplishments, and priorities. Executive Director Colin Egan attracted volunteers to restore the theater all of who shared a common interest in preserving the movie palace. “That’s a unique bond, and it speaks the kind of emotions that this building and a lot of the old buildings developed in their own communities,” he said.

Equally important to Egan and to Pattie Giordan, Egan’s cofounder and president of FOL, is the culturally diverse nature of the cinema’s offerings. In March, for instance, there will be a Filipino concert at the venue (something FOL is producing despite its contract ending). Dramas created by children are also expected to be shown.

Egan recognizes that should a professional theater management company take over the landmarked venue, it will likely result in further restoration of the property, which is a good thing for everyone. He simply does not want the theater to be “seen solely as just another commercial pop venue palace.” For him as well as for Giordan, the theater’s affordability is also a priority.

While certainly facing a transition this year, FOL remains optimistic.

Giordan noted, “The city has invited us to sit down and talk with them about the next step. “I am certain one way or another FOL will still be here.” Egan confirmed his colleague’s sentiments. “We will be in the position, one way or another to preserve the history, the community involvement, [and] the art programming.”

Header:  Jersey City Times photo

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News Briefs

Today at 2 p.m., the steps of City Hall in Jersey City will become a rally stage for the #StopAsianHateJC rally, to gather community members in solidarity of stopping the rise of violence against the Asian American community that has shocked the nation in recent weeks.

According to a report in the Jersey Journal, a  Jersey City police and fire dispatcher died on Wednesday after being admitted to the hospital with Covid-19. His death, apparently, follows a Covid-19 outbreak at the Jersey City Public Safety Communications Center. A city spokeswoman has confirmed the death but said that it “hasn’t been determined” that it was coronavirus-related.

 

The 2021 tree planting applications are available. Fill out the form and our city arborists will handle it. Apply early! bit.ly/adoptatreespri… @innovatejc @JCmakeitgreen

Mayor Steven Fulop and the Jersey City Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced the opening of the City’s sixth vaccination site located near the Marin Boulevard Light Rail Station to vaccinate frontline workers, including all food and restaurant workers, grocery store workers, porters, hospitality workers, warehouse workers, those in the medical supply chain, and more.

Two of the City-run vaccination sites will dedicate 1,000 J&J vaccines for those interested, prioritizing workers who have limited time off: 100 Marin Boulevard and 28 Paterson Street (Connors Center).   Those interested should call (201) 373-2316.

Vaccine-eligible individuals can make an appointment online by visiting hudsoncovidvax.org.

Keep abreast of Jersey City Covid-19 statistics here.

Governor Murphy has launched a “Covid Transparency Website” where New Jerseyans can track state expenditures related to Covid.  Go here.

For info on vaccinations, call Vaccination Call Center. Operators will assist you with scheduling one: 855-568-0545

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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