Author: SmartyJones

News

Reconsidering the motion to foul up Hoboken in 20/20

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The Robert Rules of Order, the procedures used by many legislative bodies is front and center in another Hoboken governing body’s decision.

The Hoboken Housing Authority joined the City Council last Thursday where the latter saw the politically staged absences and abstentions by MORTe to circumvent the rules and impose an outcome using the courts could repeat itself at the HHA – but this time arising from a real error not a faked one to sue the City taxpayers.

Last month in the City Council, a motion to reconsider was attempted to give the late arrival of Beth Mason a second shot at the apple and vote on resolutions earlier handled.  Urged by Councilman Michael Russo with a straight face, he said Mason should be given an opportunity to vote on the earlier resolutions, rules be damned.  He saw no irony in how Beth Mason hid from the council meeting in early October with no excuse to vote on the critically important matter of Jim Doyle’s appointment to the City Council. Read More...

News

ALTERNATE SIDE PARKING & GARBAGE PICKUP RESUMES MONDAY

City of Hoboken announces:

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In order to allow plows to clear as much snow as possible from parking lanes, enforcement of alternate side parking rules will resume on Monday, February 11. 


Vehicles may resume parking along emergency snow routes. Parking rules are in effect, including parking meters. 


The regular recycling and garbage pickup schedule is in effect. Pickup will take place on Sunday night.

News

Carmelo Garcia attacks MSV to start HHA meeting

Da Horsey isn’t the most popular animal with the Old Guard.  Sometimes one forgets how problematic the disinfectant is akin to garlic hung around a vampire’s neck.  At the HHA meeting, the garlic was an MSV camera filming the proceedings.

After completing the roll call, Executive Director Carmelo Garcia launched right into an attack on both the filming of the meeting and the content of MSV which he called a distraction and a distortion.

Garcia claimed Da Horsey’s camera parked next to a pillar on the left side of the room was problematic for him to speak to his staff sitting at a table far further to the left and easily out of the line of sight. Read More...

News

A secret contract deeming a contractor god over the HHA?

In the contentious ongoing power struggle over separation of powers last night, questions were posed on the appointing powers and the respective roles both the Executive Director and the HHA commissioners hold.

According to the attorney to the HHA, Charles Daglian, the HHA commissioners only retain advise and consent power while the Executive Director holds “sole appointing authority.”  Daglian would agree with Greg Lincoln’s question concluding the commissioners only have a “veto” authority. Read More...

News

Question on bid coordination hijacked by Carmelo Garcia counterattack

HHA Chairman Jake Stuiver poses a question to HHA board attorney Charles Daglian on the bidding process and if he has had any interaction with any other employee or contractor of the HHA in submitting a series of lower bids.

The video begins with Charles Daglian responding to Stuiver’s earlier question if his bid lowering through the process is due to overcharging the Authority in previous contracts.  Daglian calls the question “defamatory” and then concludes with a personal attack on Stuiver. Stuiver’s question to Daglian is never answered.  Executive Director Carmelo Garcia hijacks the meeting and launches his own attack on Stuiver. The board attorney never answered the question.

News

Chaos and confusion reigns at HHA meeting ending in possible illegal attorney reappointment

=&0=& In a chaotic and tumultuous meeting of the Hoboken Housing Authority, confusion on the governing authority to appoint local counsel ended in a first thought deadlock when HHA commissioner Greg Lincoln voted against a contract for the law firm Florio Perricci Steinhardt & Fader.

Much later in the meeting, Lincoln would vote across the board’s existing lines to reappoint HHA attorney Charlie Daglian.

The 4-3 vote came with a resurrected motion to reconsider likely acted on illegally with motions by HHA commissioners Eduardo Gonzalez and Jeannie Rodriguez.  In order to execute a legal motion to reconsider, it must be made by a board member who voted in the negative on the matter prior. Daglian’s reappointment had been tabled early in the meeting in an extremely contentious disagreement between Executive Director Carmelo Garcia and Chairman Jake Stuiver.  Garcia would claim an email he obtained from local HUD officials made any vote other than for current board attorney Daglian “criminal and unethical.” A vote later followed with a convoluted and confusing discussion on who held appointing powers, the Executive Director or the HHA’s board. The public portion at the end of the meeting would be interrupted with another vote likely improper to reconsider before the questionable vote reappointing HHA attorney Charlie Daglian. Greg Lincoln reading a handbook at the meeting earlier on the responsibilities of commissioners would read aloud a section stating the board was the appointing authority.  Attorney Charlie Daglian handed Garica a copy of his contract pointing to a clause he read claiming he held the authority.     Daglian would answer questions from the commissioners stating Garcia’s contract was the guiding federal law and the board fell into line in advice and consent.  Garcia’s contract repeatedly requested by Stuiver to view quickly found its way into board attorney Daglian’s personal bag.  (The contract has been a mystery for a long time with no board member able to obtain it although Garcia claimed to Stuiver’s inquiry copies would be made available.) Greg Lincoln in the first shocking vote of the night accepted the board attorney’s argument and began the decisive vote for Florio by voting no killing any chance of passage.  The Florio appointment failed in a 4-2 vote.  Voting yes: Dave Mello, Jake Stuiver.  Voting no: Greg Lincoln, Judy Burrell, Eduardo Gonzalez and Jeannie Rodriguez. That unexpected vote outcome didn’t end there. A later vote to reconsider bringing back Daglian’s contract would occur twice, once in undoing the earlier successful motion to table. It’s unclear if that is legal as the HHA bylaws are not available. Garcia has not provided them to the board and that issue would come up with a complaint from Stuiver on that point. HHA commissioner Rob Davis who tried unsuccessfully to participate by phone would make a surprise arrival during public portion late in the meeting and yet another vote would take place with a questionable vote to reconsider.  It’s a little unclear who made the initial motion but HHA commissioner Eduardo Gonzalez and Jeannie Rodriguez are believed to have put forward the motions.   Again in another surprise, Greg Lincoln would make the decisive vote in the possibly illegal reappointment in a 4-3 vote. The vote came in a circus atmosphere with police stationed throughout the room struggling to maintain basic order and decorum throughout. Here’s the first vote where the stunning series of events began with Florio going down 4-2. =&1=&: Maybe the most ugly, unruly and bizarre meeting ever attended in Hoboken. Something is most definitely rotten in Denmark.   Out of the gate a visibly tense Executive Director Carmelo Garcia issued an order that the camera for MSV be moved from six feet to the left of the room to the right side repeatedly claiming the presence of Da Horsey was a “distraction.”

Da Horsey made like a donkey and didn’t budge.

More on this and the wilting reform votes later.

Correction: The Executive Director told the commissioners voting to approve the Florio resolution was against HUD procedure.  He would describe a vote in favor of that resolution and against his resolution for Charles Daglian “criminal and unethical,” not illegal and unethical. Read More...

News

Showdown at the HHA attorney selection hoedown

The buzz on the street is there’s a showdown to take action on appointing an attorney to the Hoboken Housing Authority.  It’s been a six month war trying to move a relatively simple process to completion.

Why?

Executive Director Carmelo Garcia favors the status quo.  Reports are he’s been opposing efforts to have an open bid process where multiple choices would become available by setting the mechanisms so that there is no alternative but the status quo.

That’s what MSV has been hearing on the grapevine for quite a while. Read More...

News

MORTe continues suing Hoboken in emergency appeal to stop Doyle appointment

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The City Council last night had nothing of substance to compare in the way of the continuing lawsuit by the Mason family with the Russo clan and Tim Occhipinti costing the City of Hoboken big dollars according to one report in an emergency appeal initially approved.

The appeal was ruled stayed by an appellate judge who will likely hear the matter again within two weeks joined by his two colleagues on the court.

According to Hoboken Patch, the City is already facing a bill in the tens of thousands of dollars. That legal bill is a direct result of a staged political operation last October, what =&1=&  The political operation went from the council to the courts late last year after planned absences and abstentions designed to prevent Mayor Zimmer from casting a fifth decisive vote in favor of decades long Hoboken activist Jim Doyle. Should the first appellate judge’s stay be upheld, further appeals by Beth Mason with Russo, Castellano and Occhipinti could tie up the council seat for months with Jim Doyle unable to take his at-large chair even with an affirmative vote and an outstanding legal ruling in favor of the appointment. It’s premature to conclude MORTe’s appeal will be upheld in the appellate court.  Their previous appeal was denied.
Beth Mason is excited with the latest delay in the lawsuit against the people of Hoboken.
Both she and her allies lost the case and a vote was confirmed to appoint Jim Doyle to
the City Council but an emergency appeal keeps it in limbo for at least two weeks.
Tim Occhipinti the occupant of the fourth ward council seat saw his pro-developer ties hit a snag when questions were raised about the controversial restaurant in that ward built illegally extending onto City property.  The matter before a court and the Hoboken Zoning Board will now move to conclusive action before the City Council. The Old Guard council all voted on the ordinance’s first reading in favor while most of the reform members agreed to look at the question “on first reading.”  A discussion of the ordinance will be held at the next council meeting. Tim Occhipinti denied he had spoken before the Zoning Board but according to a transcript from an earlier MSV story (below) he had briefly done so and appeared to be looking to support a developer who contributed thousands to his campaign.

Occhipinti actually left a City Council meeting in progress to speak at the Zoning Board meeting where the matter was on the table.  It appears his intent was to speak on behalf of the restaurant developer.  He was stopped by the board’s lawyer who refused to allow him to do so. Read More...

News

Should he “stay” or should he go? Councilman-in-waiting on the bubble

By the time the City Council meets, a decision on the Mason-Russo hydra’s emergency appeal yesterday to stay the appointment of Councilman-in-waiting Jim Doyle may be in the offing.

Will the all but reappointed councilman “stay” or not?

MSV will keep you tuned with the best ongoing coverage on the issue!

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6:55 PM

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A single member of the NJ Appellate Court has agreed to stay (hold) the legal decision by Assignment Judge Peter Bariso to allow the appointment of Jim Doyle.

The “hold” on the appointment puts Hoboken and Jim Doyle in limbo status. Read More...

News

Yea or Nay? City Council full house?

Update: An emergency appeal filed yesterday to stay the confirmation of Jim Doyle to the City Council at-large seat is pending with the NJ Appellate Court. There should be an answer to MORTe’s chuck into the end zone by the time of the meeting tonight.

Update 2: This afternoon MSV has learned the City on behalf of its taxpayers and 50,000 residents will respond to the Mason family and MORTe allies opposing their emergency appeal.  A decision will likely come just before the City Council meeting tonight at 7:00. Read More...