Councilman Steven Fulop to Introduce Municipal Election Legislation
Proposal to Move Jersey City Elections from May to November

 

Jersey City- Friday, January 8, 2010: Councilman Steven Fulop (www.stevenfulop.com) announced today that at the second Jersey City Council meeting in January he will introduce an ordinance based on yesterday’s exciting and groundbreaking legislation. Both the Senate and the State Assembly passed legislation that was sponsored over one year ago giving municipalities the ability to move elections from a lower turnout May election to a higher turnout November general election. 

 

The new legislation allows, for the first time ever, municipalities with nonpartisan forms of government, such as Jersey City, the option of holding their May elections on the same day as everyone else – during the general election in November. Before this, state law called for New Jersey nonpartisan elections to be held–at significant cost and with lower voter turnout–during the second week in May.

 

“This will not only save Jersey City significant cash, but it makes sense. It is challenging to get the people to come out for each election, when they are held at incongruent times,” said Councilman Steven Fulop. “We should move the elections to the people. I have been watching this legislation for the past year and believe it could fundamentally change how cities like mine are run. This is crucial for Jersey City to reach beyond the political machine to have a more representative election.”

 

In the Jersey City 2009 May election approximately 30,000 voters participated while in the November election nearly 39,000 voters came out representing a 33% increase in turnout1 . Throughout the rest of the State, 86 of the 566 municipalities hold non-partisan elections in May, and are now eligible to move those elections to November. Those include Newark and Jersey City, the two largest municipalities in the state along with Trenton, Hoboken, Clifton, Nutley, and Cedar Grove among others.
 



Councilman Fulop Introduces Tax Payment Plan to Help

Struggling Jersey City Families

 

Jersey City- Monday, January 4, 2010: Councilman Steven Fulop (www.stevenfulop.com) announced today that he will introduce an ordinance at the next council meeting, on Wednesday January 13th, creating a Jersey City tax payment plan for struggling Jersey City families.

 

“2009 was a very hard year for Jersey City. This ordinance is being introduced on the heels of not only at 11.25% tax increase for residents, but many controversial tax abatements for developers, and a municipal budget that is more than 6 months late. I believe that this tax payment plan is crucial to helping the many struggling families in Jersey City.” Councilman Steven Fulop said.

 

Some specifics of the tax payment plan ordinance include:

 

-       Provide homeowners the option  to set a payment plan, for up to 3 years for qualified families, for taxes prior to the city pursuing a tax lien on the property

-       Allow homeowners that are currently collecting unemployment or have fallen on a difficult personal financial situation and have applied to a bank for a loan that has not been granted, an opportunity to qualify for the program

-       Ensure the city  can only  accrue interest on the delinquent payment rather than the entire tax bill

-       Establish a Council-created  subcommittee to review resident applications with a recommendation from the tax collector

 

“Every single day we hear of struggling families in Jersey City.. Nearly half of all Jersey City homeowners pay their own taxes directly to the city rather than through a mortgage company. As a government we need to do everything can in order to make sure that hardworking families don’t lose their homes.”

 

 

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3 Days of Boricua Pride

 

3 Days of Boricua Pride

 

By Charles Hack / The Jersey Journal
August 24, 2009 

 

 Starting with a banquet Friday night and ending with a festival of music, dancing and good food last night, the 49th Annual Puerto Rican Heritage Parade and Festival was punctuated yesterday by a parade of 30 floats from Lincoln Park to City Hall.

Thousands converged in Jersey City over the three days to celebrate Boricua pride.

"It gives us a chance to see friends," said Ivette Ruiz, 35, who marched with the Jersey City-based Metropolitan Family Health Care network. "It is a sense of pride I feel about Puerto Rico and it makes me feel happy."

Yesterday’s parade attracted a gaggle of politicians, including the two leading contenders in this year’s governor’s race, Gov. Jon Corzine and his Republican rival, former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie.

Before he boarded his float with his lieutenant governor running mate, Mommouth County Sheriff Kim Guadagno, Christie reflected on being in Hudson County, ground zero for last month’s corruption arrests.

"I am proud of the work that my office did and it all began under me," Christie said. "But it was executed by professionals in the U.S. Attorney’s office, the FBI and IRS and those folks deserve the credit."

Corzine arrived after the parade departed Lincoln Park at 1:15 p.m. and ran a few blocks with his security guards to catch up with the Democratic headliners, which included Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy, U.S. Rep. Albio Sires, state Sen. and Union City mayor Brian Stack, state Sen. Sandra B. Cunningham, Jersey City Councilman Steven Fulop and Freeholder Jeff Dublin.

"I think everyone wants to celebrate the Puerto Rican community in our great state," Corzine said as he marched along Kennedy Boulevard.

Sires, who is a Cuban native, took particular pride in a Puerto Rican Latina being placed on the highest court of the land.

"It’s a great day. Everybody today is Puerto Rican," said Sires. "Especially now that Justice Sonia Sotomayor was appointed to the Supreme Court."

The weather held out with the first few drops of a downpour coming just after the last group passed the reviewing stand.

 



Who did not take Dwek’s bait?

 

Who did not take Dwek’s bait?

 

By Ricardo Kaulessar / Hudson Reporter
August 23, 2009 

 

Jersey City Council President Mariano Vega won a council-at-large seat in the May 12 municipal election, running with seven other candidates on Mayor Jerremiah Healy’s election slate. But that victory seems fleeting in light of his arrest on July 23 as one of the 44 religious and political leaders in New Jersey and New York who’ve been tagged with public corruption or money laundering charges.

Vega has not resigned his council post, although Councilman Steven Fulop and some members of the public have called for him to step down.

But Vega’s arrest has raised suspicions that other council members either met with the federal government’s “cooperating witness” Solomon Dwek, or were approached indirectly, even though they were not accused of crime.

Dwek (employing the first name David with varying last names) allegedly went to various local officials with FBI-provided bribe money, saying he wanted approval for a purported condo project on Garfield Avenue.

At least two City Council members told the Jersey City Reporter in recent weeks that they had contact with Dwek, directly or indirectly, but did not take the bait.

Three other council members said they did not meet Dwek, while another three were not available for comment. 

 

‘Testing people’s greed’

Councilman Bill Gaughan is the city’s longest serving council member, first elected in 1993 to serve Ward D, which covers most of the Jersey City Heights. Gaughan is also chief of staff for Hudson County Executive Tom DeGise, making him a powerful figure in local politics and a potentially big fish for the FBI’s corruption bait.

Gaughan said after the Aug. 12 council meeting that he had been approached by Dwek about the purported development project on Garfield Avenue that would call for a condo tower.

Gaughan was not named in any of the complaints pertaining to the 44 arrested.

Gaughan did not reveal the date of the meeting, although it is believed they met during the election season. He remembered that Dwek offered no paperwork or details about his project, which made Gaughan suspicious.

“It was very obvious,” he said. “I asked for plans; I asked for site control; [Dwek] had nothing,” Gaughan said. “All he had was a good line of [expletive].”

Gaughan also blasted Dwek as a “con man entrapping people into a situation” who was “testing people’s greed.”

Viola Richardson was recently reelected to a third term to represent Ward D, encompassing most of the city’s Bergen-Lafayette section. Richardson last week said Dwek allegedly approached an “intermediary” (whom she did not name) before and after the May 12 election to set up a meeting with her, although no name was given other than a “rich Jewish developer.” [...]

Read more at HudsonReporter.com

 



Plan to Fix Animal Control Raises Questions

 

Plan to Fix Animal Control Raises Questions

 

By Shane Smith / The Jersey City Independent
August 14, 2009 

 

Months after revelations surfaced in late February that at least two Animal Control officers were dumping cats they’d collected into wild areas of Lincoln Park rather than taking them to the appropriate shelter or animal hospital, the city’s Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has submitted its plan detailing ways it hopes to improve the service of the Animal Control division, which DHHS oversees. 

The plan is a long time coming, and the result of much wrangling between animal advocates, the City Council, city attorneys and the Healy administration.

In March, Ward E councilman Steven Fulop called for a 19-member independent commission “to develop and track measurable objectives to ensure a competent Animal Control program,” as well as the creation of an Animal Control Ombudsman. The Healy administration and the City Council were resistant to Fulop’s proposal and challenged it at every turn, preferring to allow Animal Control correct its problems on its own.

Over the course of the next few months, Fulop’s plan was amended to provide for a nine-member commission, blocked by the Law Department, saw a downgrade to a 13-member committee, and was finally abandoned by the council in June. 

Instead of voting on Fulop’s whittled-down ordinance, the council sent a “directive memo” to DHHS director Harry Melendez, requesting he submit a corrective action plan by Aug. 1. In response, Melendez submitted a memo to the city council on Aug. 5. In it, Melendez lays out 11 initiatives that Animal Control has already implemented or plans to, including increased staffing, additional documentation requirements, new software and the creation of an Animal Welfare & Population Control Committee to provide advice and recommendations for best practices to Animal Control. 

No council member commented on the plan as it was received by the council at their meeting on Wednesday. Speaking after the meeting, Fulop told JCI that he had asked Melendez to provide additional specifics regarding the plan, including a timeline for the implementation of the initiatives it describes. As of Wednesday afternoon he hadn’t heard back. Our calls to Melendez were not returned this week.

In an email to JCI, city spokeswoman Jennifer Morrill says the initiatives described in the plan are those already “generally in place,” with the exception of establishing a second shift “to respond to calls received after regular working hours.” She adds that Animal Control already operates around the clock, but the creation of a second shift, which is slated to happen “within the next few weeks,” will help the division reduce overtime costs. [...]

Read more at The Jersey City Independent

 



Jersey City re-development pay-to-play ban passes on introduction 7-0

 

Jersey City re-development pay-to-play ban passes on introduction 7-0

 

by Amy Sara Clark / The Jersey Journal
Wednesday August 12, 2009, 11:42 AM

 

The Jersey City City Council passed a redeveloper pay-to-play ordinance, sponsored by Jersey City Councilman Steve Fulop, that would bar campaign donations from a developer to municipal officials while the developer is negotiating to be named the "designated" builder for a project.

Although the ordinance passed on introduction, it still has to get through the final vote — by no means a certainty — which is slated for the next council meeting on Sept. 9.

There’s a good chance it the measure won’t pass a final vote, or will be severely weakened, because at Monday’s City Council caucus, several councilmembers expressed reservations that "the average Joe" wouldn’t be able to run for office if they couldn’t get redeveloper money.

"There has to be a way for ‘Joe average citizen’ to raise money," said Councilman Bill Gaughan, who said that even if all politicians were banned from taking money, it would still be hard for the average candidate to compete against those with personal wealth.

The council decided to create a committee — composed of Councilmen Bill Gaughan, Fulop, Jersey City’s head attorney Bill Matsikoudis and a representative from Mayor Jerramiah Healy’s office — to revise the ordinance between now and September.

If the ordinance is substantially changed, it will have to be re-introduced. Gaughan said he wasn’t sure what kind of changes he hoped to make.

Council President Mariano Vega, who was arrested July 23 in the FBI corruption sweep, was absent, as was Councilman Peter Brennan, who is recovering from surgery for prostate cancer.

During the public portion of the meeting, Dan Levin, who ran for mayor in May and founded Civicjc, a good government group, praised the vote, saying the ordinance is one of the strictest pay-to-play bans in the state.

"This ordinance will eliminate not just conflicts of interests but also the appearance of conflicts of interest," he said.



Fulop’s ‘pay -to-play’ ban on Jersey City Council agenda today

 

Fulop's 'pay -to-play' ban on Jersey City Council agenda today

 

by The Jersey Journal
Wednesday August 12, 2009, 10:18 AM

The Jersey City Council will consider at its meeting this morning a "pay-to-play" ordinance that would bar campaign donations from a developer to municipal officials while the developer is negotiating to be named the "designated" builder for a project.

The ordinance is sponsored by Ward E Councilman Steve Fulop.

Fulop said in a news release last week that the July 23 arrests of City Council President Mariano Vega and eight other Jersey City officials and employees on charges that they accepted bribe money from FBI-informant Solomon Dwek, who was posing as a developer, make the ordinance more relevant.

"It’s a hard argument for anybody to say that it’s not necessary," Fulop said yesterday.

Read more of Fulop’s ‘pay-to-play’ ban on agenda today in today’s Jersey Journal.



Another developer wants to revise his tax deal

 

Another developer wants to revise his tax deal

You might expect Jersey City to think twice about granting another revised tax abatement for a condo building on the downtown waterfront, especially after a similar deal recently approved by the City Council for the Crystal Pointe project on Second Street prompted public outrage.

But the city is considering revising a previously granted abatement for the $250 million 77 Hudson St. project. 77 Hudson is a 901-unit two-building project (420 condos, 481 rentals) on Hudson Street in Jersey City, overlooking the Hudson River, and construction is nearing completion. Units are selling from $300,000-plus for one-bedroom to $1 million for three-bedrooms.

An abatement is an agreement with the city to exempt a developer from paying regular, fluctuating property taxes. Developers often negotiate a deal to pay a stable, separate fee to the city in lieu of taxes, a payment which may sometimes be equal or nearly equal to current taxes. Those payments benefit the city because they go straight to city coffers, and do not include paying school and county taxes.

Recently, several developers have asked to revise their original agreement with the city because of the tough economy.

According to Councilman Steven Fulop, the city’s Tax Abatement Committee, with a push from Mayor Jerramiah Healy, is considering revising the deal for 77 Hudson that would change the terms of the 20-year abatement approved for the project in March 2006.[...]

Read more at HudsonReporter.com



 

FBI sting sheds negative light on NJ development

 

FBI sting sheds negative light on NJ development

NEWARK, N.J. — Federal authorities couldn’t have picked a more fertile target than New Jersey’s Manhattan-facing waterfront towns for a fake cash-for-development undercover sting, longtime observers say.

The majority of those arrested in a sweeping FBI bust that netted 44 people on corruption and money laundering charges had ties — real or feigned — to development along the Hudson River.

The criminal complaints paint a picture of building and zoning departments where influence, connections and payoffs determine who gets a prompt hearing and a smooth approval process on their applications and who is left at the mercy of a process so seemingly dysfunctional that developers sometimes budget for bribes.

Jersey City, where more than a dozen of those arrested in the corruption probe either lived, worked or had connections, has been at the epicenter of a development boom that has transformed former polluted industrial rail yards and warehouses into gleaming waterfront high-rises with unparalleled views of the Manhattan skyline.

Certain developers have made fortunes off the city and received tax abatements that continue today, even though there’s little open space left along the waterfront, where luxury housing and office buildings housing large Manhattan firms have earned it the nickname "Wall Street West."

"Everybody knows developers run New Jersey," said Joe Morris of the Interfaith Community Organization, which has been pushing for environmental remediation of contaminated land in Jersey City. "The developers run local government in every place in the state."[...]

Read more at AP.org



Jersey City residents protest at City Hall

 

Jersey City residents protest at City Hall

August 05, 2009

Hundreds of Jersey City residents crowded the steps of City Hall calling for elected officials arrested in the FBI’s massive corruption sweep to step down. The protest coincided with the National Night Out, a rare occasion when law enforcement and local communities mingle in an effort to raise awareness about crime prevention. Jersey City Mayor Jeremiah Healy, who attended an event honoring three policemen injured in a fatal police shootout, said the protesters were hijacking the annual event with their political agenda. But Ward E Councilman Steven Fulop, who organized the rally, said that crime in City Hall is as important as crime on the streets. Fulop demanded council president Mariano Vega, who was indicted in the corruption sting, to resign. (Video by Nyier Abdou/The Star-Ledger

Watch more videos at NJ.com




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