Year: 2013

News

HHA counsel contract rejected 4-3

Two resolutions returned by HHA Chairman Rob Davis at the direction of the Board Secretary Carmelo Garcia to re-appoint Charles Daglian failed in consecutive 4-3 votes.

Reform members Mello, Lincoln, Stuiver and Burrell (via phone) voted against the re-appointment.
Stuiver called the act of bringing back the resolutions illegal.

Garcia read a legal review from an external lawyer on redoing a motion to reconsider or reintroducing a motion.

But the vote was on resolutions voted down at the prior meeting. Garcia’s reading of a legal motion being returned was inert to the failed resolutions being reintroduced at the meeting. Read More...

News

Guest of the Stable: Kurt Gardiner tackles HudCo’s proposed 10% tax hike for Hoboken

Last week, the spending juggernaut know as Hudco supposedly did Hoboken a huge favor by hosting a Freeholder 2013 Budget workshop meeting in Hoboken’s City Hall. Mayor Turner of Weehawken and Mayor Zimmer of Hoboken attended and politely expressed their concern over the tax increase and overall expenditures. They have to be polite since they have to work with the county. As a private citizen I don’t have to be so polite so here goes my stance on behalf of the Hoboken taxpayer…. Kurt Gardiner Remarks on 2013 Hudson County Budget=&2=&

I am writing this as a resident and taxpayer of Hoboken to speak out on the 2013 proposed Hudson County budget first revealed to the public on May 7th 2013. The initial version presented has an approximate tax increase on Hoboken residents of 10% versus prior year or an increase of about $5 million in the levy inflicted upon Hoboken residents. It is time to say enough is enough and that Hoboken in my opinion and that of other taxpaying residents I have spoken to, it has been taxed too much by the County. This is especially true due to the scant level services it receives in return on a levy which in 2013 is projected to be over $50 million raised from Hoboken residents. Read More...

News

City partnering with Dept. of Energy, NJ utilities to develop resilient electric grid

Agency Logo
Thursday June 13, 2013

City of Hoboken

   

Community: City of Hoboken, US Dept of Energy, NJ Board of Public Utilities & PSE&G Partner to Develop Resilient Electric Grid

The City of Hoboken, U.S. Department of Energy, N.J. Board of Public Utilities, and PSE&G are partnering to design an energy resilient “smart grid” to improve Hoboken’s resiliency to power outages.

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability is supporting Sandia National Laboratories to aid the City of Hoboken in boosting the resiliency of its electric grid. This critical partnership brings the deep expertise of the national labs to address the critical needs of our nation’s electric grid.

“We are honored to partner with the Department of Energy, Board of Public Utilities, and PSE&G to make Hoboken a model for resilient electric grids using 21st century technology,” said Mayor Dawn Zimmer. “Through this partnership, Hoboken will build on its proud history of innovation in technology by becoming one of the first non-military applications of Sandia’s design methodology.”

“We are proud of the reliability of our system, which has been nationally recognized,” said Ralph LaRossa, PSE&G president and COO. “But the extreme weather in the past two years calls for extraordinary measures to harden our systems. PSE&G is pleased to support this unique effort to improve the resiliency of the city’s critical infrastructure. This effort is a perfect complement to our proposed Energy Strong filing, which would protect Hoboken’s substations from the type of water damage we had during Sandy.”

“Today’s agreement is yet another step in the State’s continuing efforts to address safety and reliability concerns related to the delivery of electric and gas service to New Jersey ratepayers,” said Bob Hanna, President of the N.J. Board of Public Utilities. “This collaboration will enable us to assess the potential benefits and costs associated with implementing distributed generation and smart-grid technologies to improve energy reliability and resiliency in the Hoboken service area and to apply the lessons learned to other cities and towns across New Jersey.”

Sandia will bring their Energy Surety Design Methodology to partner with the City of Hoboken, N.J. Board of Public Utilities, PSE&G, Greener by Design and other stakeholders to develop a comprehensive plan to meet the critical needs of Hoboken in future events such as storms and other disruptions to the electric grid.

The design methodology uses advanced, smart grid technologies and distributed and renewable generation and storage resources as a way to improve the reliability, security, and resiliency of the electric grid.

Signing event remarks from Mayor Dawn Zimmer:

“Today, as we sign our energy agreement, we officially launch an energy resiliency partnership between the City of Hoboken, the U.S. Deparment of Energy, Sandia National Labs, PSE&G and the N.J. Board of Public Utilities.

Thank you so much to our DOE representatives, Ravi Gorur and Dan Ton, Ralph LaRossa, President & COO of PSE&G, and Robert Hanna, President of the BPU for being here with us today and making a commitment to collaborate on this smart grid energy project that could help to ensure communities like Hoboken are safer through future storms.

Thank you also to my Resiliency Team members Stephen Marks and Brandy Forbes and the Greener by Design team headed by Adam Zellner for working so hard on this crucial project.

As we all heard, Hoboken was devastated by Hurricane Sandy, so when HUD Secretary Donovan and Bill Bryan from the Department of Energy came to visit our City, I shared our residents’ challenges and eagerly offered Hoboken as a learning laboratory for energy resiliency. I have had the honor of serving on Secretary Donovan’s Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force, and I want to thank Michael Passante and his team for being here with us, and I thank them all for choosing Hoboken as an energy learning center. They wanted to do a pilot program for a smaller scale City impacted by Sandy, and Hoboken was a perfect match. After all that we went through, I was more than happy to partner with them on this exciting project.

I also want to give a huge thank you to Governor Christie for supporting this project through the BPU’s involvement. Ultimately, I am determined to implement a smart grid and microgrid system for Hoboken. The State and the BPU are very important partners for this hefty energy goal of mine since it could involve the need for some adjustments to the regulatory process in order to achieve our objectives. Thank you to Senator Menendez and Congressman Sires for their support of this project – they wanted to be here but they are in Washington today.

Finally, I want to give a very special thank you to the senior from Church Towers who made me even more determined to fight harder for Hoboken. One evening in the midst of Sandy, I went knocking on doors to bring food and tell residents about how Brad Paisley’s chef was going to be cooking up a storm in Church Square Park. He heard about Hoboken on the news and drove up from Pennsylvania with a truck filled with food and rolled out his portable kitchen.

This senior thanked me for the food, but asked incredulously in tears about the management of her building: “How could they leave us completely in the dark? Look, not even the exit sign is lit up,” she exclaimed. “I am afraid to go down the stairs because I could fall.” As she cried in my arms, I assured her I would fight to find a solution. With her story and so many others like hers in mind, I am proud that a little over seven months after Sandy, we have created an energy partnership and agreement that will help to keep everyone safer through the next storm.

As we stand here today, in this basement conference room that was the pulsing heart of an emergency command center, I want to briefly explain what we mean by a smart energy grid and how it could help our community.

Having a smart grid means designing an electrical grid that keeps the power on through the storm for our most essential services. Our first responders at the Police and Fire Departments and here at City Hall must have power through the storms so they can effectively respond to all of the emergencies. It means keeping the power on at Hoboken University Medical Center so residents have an emergency center open and available when that emergency situation strikes. It means keeping North Hudson Sewerage Authority operational so that our flood pump keeps pumping out flood waters and our sewage can be treated instead of backing up onto our streets.

Having a smart grid means making sure the hallway lights and exit signs are lit for my seniors who may not have the resources to evacuate. This smart grid, possibly connected to a microgrid system, could power emergency LED hallway lights and the community rooms where seniors gathered every day to share meals and shelter together through Hurricane Sandy. It could possibly power the elevators to make one trip down in the morning and one up at night so seniors are not stuck in their apartments waiting for the power to go back on.

It could power the fire suppression system so we can avoid the unbelievably dangerous situation we had throughout Hoboken: Apartments filled with candles, no fire suppression or alert system, and irresponsible property owners who failed to even implement fire watches.

Build stronger, and yes, communities like Hoboken could safely shelter in place. During Hurricane Sandy I was on a conference call with President Obama together with other State and community leaders, and the President was discussing the need to move people into shelters. I pointed out that in urban communities like Hoboken we needed to shelter in place because most people simply would not go to the shelters. President Obama listened and got us generators as quickly as he could, and now we are building on the sheltering in place approach with this project.

This energy resiliency partnership is an essential component of a comprehensive approach designed to protect Hoboken. Our plan includes more flood pumps along our waterfront, large detention basins to retain rainwater under land we are trying to buy for parks, and expanded implementation of city-wide green infrastructure to capture rain water in every way possible. It also includes a series of protective barriers and hardening of existing buildings to protect Hoboken at the north and south from future storm surges.

Since Sandy, Hoboken has had several major flood events. Unfortunately, when heavy rains and high tide come at the same time, we get flooded, including our PSE&G substations. We have applied for grant funding for our comprehensive flood plan, and I am very glad that PSE&G’s Energy Strong program includes a proposed action plan for Hoboken’s substations. I am a huge fan of that plan.

As I participated in a crisis simulation workshop at a UN Conference on Resiliency a few weeks ago, I reflected on that fact that in addition to getting funding for the pumps, ensuring that Hoboken is energy resilient has to be my top priority for both our residents and our businesses that were so hard hit by the loss of power and the flooding. One way or another, I am determined to get this done by some combination of grants and public-private partnerships.”

News

Hoboken Housing Authority cleared in investigation of $100,000 federal stimulus expenditures

The odd trumpeting of HUD’s Office of Investigation unit’s examination into three areas related to expenditures on the federal stimulus has been the subject of some extracurricular spin in recent days. MSV obtained the report.  Here’s the three items related to the investigation in the May report:

No one is arrested on the HUD investigations of $100,000 in federal stimulus fund expenditures.
Based on the political operative commenting here and crowing elsewhere, you’d think it’s akin to earning a medal.
Tonight a definite round of law breaking is on tap when HHA counsel Charles Daglian will see a vote if
Director Carmelo Garcia has his way with five attempts to ram him down his boss’ re: the HHA board’s throats.
=&0=&: It’s unclear what prompted the investigation unit of HUD to look into how stimulus funds were spent. This clearly goes back several years when the almost trillion dollar package was passed in 2009 and has nothing to do with the controversy over spending more than $300,000 on elevator floors.  Or the documentation-less Vision 20/20 project. After celebrating there’s no convictions on expenditures from the federal stimulus program (it’s unclear how much employment stimulus the expenditures created) let’s move on to an illegal appointment again of the HHA Director’s personal consiglieri – =&1=&.

How is a contractor in the form of Director Carmelo Garcia respecting the wishes of his employers by attempting to circumvent the obvious will of that body which has repeatedly rejected his insistence Charles Daglian remain as the HHA counsel? Read More...

News

Mayor Zimmer to Assemblyman Ramos: Help Hoboken protect its waterfront from construction piers development

Office of the Mayor announces:

Today the Assembly Environment & Solid Waste Committee is considering A-3933/S-2680 which would enable urban coastal communities to build residential and commercial development on existing piers in coastal high hazard areas. The attached letter is being read to the Committee today by Mayor Zimmer’s Chief of Staff in order to convey Hoboken’s position with respect to this legislation and opposing Hoboken’s inclusion in the legislation. Mayor Zimmer letter to Assemblyman Ruben Ramos 6-12-13

Talking Ed Note: MSV as a matter of policy doesn’t comment on official government releases but will here to the extent of emphasizing the important intervention the mayor is taking to protect Hoboken.

Mayor Zimmer became aware of this statewide legislation barreling ahead and is seeking assistance from Assemblyman Ruben Ramos to adopt an amendment and stop Hoboken’s waterfront from being targeted for further development re: the Monarch.

Hobokenites will look toward cooperation in seeing this exemption here through as it is already flying out of the station with passage in the State Senate and Assembly assured. Read More...

News

Battle anticipated on HHA legal counsel contract Thursday – for fifth time!

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The Hoboken Housing Authority Agenda yesterday reveals its legal counsel contract is up for consideration this Thursday night.  Again, as in for the fifth time the past year.  After the resolution to rename Charlie Daglian failed in the prior meeting on a 3-3 vote,  it was thought a public bidding process would again start as required by state law. The four prior votes failed to produce a legal vote for a HHA counsel and months long holdover Charles Daglian saw his participation on the board leading to a vote for his own contract questioned by a HUD review of the vote reappointing him held last March, calling it legally flawed.   The scathing indictment of the counsel contract by HUD under HHA Executive Director Carmelo Garcia has seen no compromise candidate/law firm emerge since.  A critical memo requested by then Chairman Stuiver of the City’s Corporation Counsel last February was met with derision by the Garcia faction of HHA commissioners who voted it not be released to the public.  The memo deemed the vote in March to reappoint Charles Dagalian invalid. The HHA finds itself deadlocked as the Hoboken City Council on an appointment with Garcia refusing to allow a replacement to Daglian to move forward in the procurement process with a vote.   The vote planned Thursday night with no restarted procurement process since the last meeting is sure to cause more strife in the struggle between the Executive Director Carmelo Garcia who is again challenging commissioners for questioning the “sole appointing” powers in his contract.  The controversial contract was thought to be subject to renegotiation when a questions on the contract’s status was raised in a meeting earlier this year.  A vote on his termination was withheld with the agreement of updating the terms more to the current board’s liking.  

Garcia’s contract hidden from public view and the full HHA board of commissioners was first published on MSV in early February Read More...

News

Mason implosion incomplete without final Russo push in the back

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Beth Mason’s 24 hour Senate campaign has made her the butt of jokes but she’s not out of trouble if the simmering embers of recall are carried out by the Old Guard with the new HudCo powers entering the fray.  While there’s been no evidence to date a real on the ground effort is underway, it won’t be a secret for long if they throw down.  


Nothing happens however until there’s a decision in the Jim Doyle case.  Can’t act against the lead weight in Mason unless the fool’s money bags have been completely emptied.  With a 2-1 decision either way the most likely outcome in the NJ Appellate Court, an appeal to the NJ Supreme Court will follow and more legal fees all around. Since the Mason family underwrites suing the people of Hoboken, Beth Mason is safe from any backstabbing bloodletting from the Russo clan.  (Michael Russo supported Steve Fulop and will stick with a rising star not a loser drowning in the spiraling toilet water in Beth Mason.)



Councilwoman Terry Castellano along with the other MORTe members have no problem ringing up legal bills suing the people of Hoboken well into the tens of thousands and counting. After all, it’s power their after and they’ve neutralized an at-large vote they never won at the polls in 2009. Read More...

News

Carmelo Garcia endorses Gov. Chris Christie for re-election

Carmelo Garcia, second from right joined in endorsing Gov. Chris Christie for re-election today with
State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian Stack.  Here’s the photo op in Vision 20/20 in Union City today.

PolitickerNJ covered the endorsements for Gov. Christie today writing:

Today, Stack, a renegade Democrat, his 33rd District ticketmates, Assembly candidates Carmelo Garcia and Raj Mukherji and the Union City commissioners, declared their support for the incumbent Republican governor.”



photo courtesy Facebook NSAjacked

News

State Senator Brian Stack and assembly pick Carmelo Garcia to endorse Gov. Chris Christie for re-election

According to PolitickerNJ, State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian Stack will endorse Gov. Chris Christie today for re-election this November.  The endorsement is not a surprise considering the positive relationship between the State Senator and Governor such as state pension reform.

Of interest though is Brian Stack’s handpicked selections for Assembly who are expected to also join in endorsing Gov. Chris Christie.  Hoboken’s Carmelo Garcia who holds multiple paid positions in the public sector should be on hand when the announcement is made. He’s expected to deliver his Hoboken Housing Authority followers vote for the popular Governor. Read More...