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Horsey’s Timely News Posts

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On this day…

A year ago today, MSV posted its very first story.  Thursday at 11:00 am, disgraced ex-mayor Peter Cammarano will face a federal judge in Newark and be sentenced to prison.  Although his extortion guilty plea carries a sentence up to twenty years, the federal prosecutor has recommended a sentence of only two to two and a half years.

Hoboken should consider itself fortunate.  The “for sale sign” was up even before Peter was elected.  The damage he would have done since is indeterminable.  Da Horsey wishes to again thank the boys of summer at Club Fed in Newark, the FBI’s finest.  Salud! Read More...

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BREAKING…

City of Hoboken announces:

=&0=& The City of Hoboken today received a letter from Kenneth Connolly, Director of the Division of State and Local Operations at the New Jersey Civil Service Commission, stating that the layoff plan submitted by the City has been approved. The City will begin implementing the plan and notifying affected employees. Get the latest Hoboken news:

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What I saw at the revolution, Hoboken’s chrysalis

A MILE SQUARE VIEW ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL



Last Sunday, the Hoboken Journal remarked it was just over a year ago Dawn Zimmer took office as Acting Mayor.  That’s also the anniversary when the nightmare of this town being torn apart ended with a resignation: the shocking finality of a short-lived mayoralty for one Peter Cammarano.


It wasn’t going to be an easy day.  The sun was shining but it was anything but lovely with rising heat and oppressive humidity making anyone rushing to a destination hot and uncomfortable.   The anticipated resignation would bring closure but resentments would abound in conversations all over town from the hard core old guard supporters, even after the gift handed out by the FBI – transcripts revealing the truest form of Mayor Peter Cammarano’s character.  
It could of course have been worse.  Just imagine if he had been able to hold on to power and stick around.  Okay maybe his umbrella holder or some of the “locked in” vote liked the idea but most Hoboken voters could not and did not stomach such a thought.  What follows is Da Horsey’s eyewitness account on that fateful day last year of July 31st.


Above: Peter “The Great Condescender” Cammarano a day after getting sprung out of jail unzips his fly and lets loose one final time on the people of Hoboken from City Hall.  

True to form as demonstrated in more than a few City Council meetings, Cammarano displayed a single minded purposefulness after his arrest: an arrogance to hold on to power at all costs.  Perhaps it was the only real bargaining chip he held.  A city official who worked both on the City Council and with Cammarano on his campaign said, “It was more the arrogance than anything (the crime),” adding “I never saw it coming.”  Some may disagree, but that’s a scale with some heavy pull on one side.


Justice delayed by two days from scheduled sentencing or it’s abbreviated form will be handed down on Thursday when Peter Cammarano gets his turn at being ground into powder and is sentenced to prison.  Expectations from an earlier Hoboken Patch story state it will be somewhere in the neighborhood of two years based on a recommendation from the federal attorney. 

At the time of Cammarano’s arrest, Mile Square View had not even posted its first story.  The idea of writing about Hoboken government and politics had been offered by a friend Jimmy the K, a Stevens alumni and Hoboken resident.  At the time, he hadn’t seen anything longer than an email from Da Horsey.  

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Let’s go to the Hop

City of Hoboken announces:

=&0=&=&1=& Three convenient, simplified routes with GPS technology

“The Hop,” Hoboken‘s shuttle system formerly known as the Crosstown Bus, is expanding into a full-fledged mini-transit system to provide residents and visitors with convenient, predictable, and reliable transportation throughout the city. Read More...

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Police union details complaints against City

The police union yesterday announced their opposition to the proposed reductions in the police department.  Here’s their itemized list of concerns:

1) If there are 19 demotions, the City may save $220,000 and 18 layoffs may save $990,000 in salary and benefits for a total of $1.21 million. That’s a $75 per year savings for each of the City’s 16,000 taxpayers. That equates to approximately $1.50 per week. If this cut in policing causes a crime increase, property values will decline much more than $75. Some who would destroy the department made claims on their websites earlier this year that the police demotions would save $5.2 million. That is simply not true. As stated, the fact is that the savings would approximate only $220,000.

2) The Mayor has asserted since her first mayoral campaign in the Spring of 2009 that demotions would take police officers away from their desks and put them on the streets. She has further represented that layoffs and demotions will not reduce the numbers of officers patrolling the streets. It must be observed that 15 of the 19 officers being demoted perform their supervisory duties on the streets while on patrol.

Only 4 of the 19 are in administrative/staff positions. Laying off 18 officers and possibly putting four more officers on the streets is still a NET LOSS of 14 officers working on the streets of Hoboken.

3)Patrol to supervisor ratios are tabulated by calculating first line supervisors to patrol officers. Administrators, managers and other upper level supervisors are excluded from these ratios.. For example, the Chief does not supervise the dispatchers. An Army General does not supervise those who recently completed basic training. A CEO in a company does not supervise the mailroom. We have 97 patrolmen and 30 sergeants which is a 3.3 to 1 ratio. The table of organization calls for 120 patrol officers and 30 sergeants. That is a 4 to 1 ratio. Every police administration book suggests anywhere from a 3 to 5 officer to 1 supervisor ratio. We are well within that range. However, the Mayor and Director Alicea insist on suggesting that we have a 2 to 1 ratio number. This is obviously intended to rally residents against us. Alicea went further and commented on Hoboken Patch that they are following the police audit’s recommendation of a 4 to 1 ratio. That is simply and undeniably false. The City’s audit calls for 60 patrol officers and 26 sergeants–a 2.2 to 1 ratio. Based on that premise, the auditor, former Maplewood Chief Richardella is lowering our ratio, which means he concluded that the department is not “top heavy.”

4) On the same day that Mayor Zimmer announced layoffs, spokesman Juan Melli received a $15,000 raise and Mayoral Aide Daniel Bryan received a $12,000 raise.



5) Hoboken’s Parking Utilities have been hiring new employees regularly and ordering expensive equipment while the police department has suffered cuts to offset those costs. Where are the City’s priorities?

6) Attrition brings a gradual decline in staffing numbers so that there is no sudden impact on the level of public safety. If the City’s plan is implemented 37 officers will be laid off or demoted. In short, 24% of the department will be affected by the cuts.

7) The Memorandum of Agreement which was negotiated with and approved by the State Fiscal Monitor after more than two years of difficult but good faith negotiations would have resulted in 9 givebacks, including a change in healthcare coverage, change in prescription coverage, a reduction in salary differentials at the supervisory and managerial levels, and elimination of many days off. These changes would have saved the City nearly a million dollars per year. Why did the mayor and REVOLT so vigorously oppose an agreement that was settled with a state monitor? One can only conclude that they were motivated by a lack of knowledge and animosity towards the police. So here we sit nearly a year later in binding interest arbitration, creating more legal costs for the taxpayers, an agreement that will not be concluded for another year or two, facing 4 to 5 years worth of retroactive payments, no changes in healthcare, and 37 officers being cut instead. Again, where are the City’s priorities?

8) We understand that the Rockefeller group has been trying to make contact with the Mayor since November without a response. Their development would likely bring an additional $9 million dollars in tax revenue to Hoboken. It appears that Rockefeller was compelled to go to the media due to the lack of response by Mayor Zimmer.

9) The St. Patrick’s Day Parade and 4th of July were events in which our officers acted professionally and proficiently. There has not been to this date one note of recognition by the Mayor. Both days resulted in incidents where the HPD was forced to request more than 50 officers for mutual aid because there were insufficient HPD personnel working due to budget cuts. On St. Patrick’s Parade Day, HPD officers issued over $300,000 worth of fines that have been collected to date, with many cases still not resolved. The combined total cost for police overtime was $150,000.

10) The Hoboken population appears to far exceed the 38,000 reported in the 2000 Census. There are 28,000 residential units in the city and few would conclude that the ratio is less than 1.5 persons per unit. There are 16,000 property owners. Also, there are 130,000 commuters daily when considering all modes of transportation through the City.

11) Again, if the plan is implemented, our total number of officers will go from 153 to 135. We were at 185 six years ago, which helped the department to reduce our violent crime index and to operate our specialized units such as community policing, school resource officers, anti-crime units, traffic bureau, housing bureau, P.A.L., and bike patrol unit just to name a few. We may be headed to a level that is 27% lower than in the early 2000s. It ignores reality to think that service levels will not suffer when such draconian cuts are made.

12) The Public safety Committee Chairman is Ravi Bhalla. Since assuming that position, he has never met with any police union official.

13) Juan Melli states in the Hoboken Reporter that he disputes PBA President Lombardi’s comments because we have to understand that the city is “a hard-working family and tough choices had to be made.” We suppose that it was an equally tough choice for him to accept a $15,000 raise during the same week.

14) The police audit calls for the elimination of the Public Safety Director’s position. That has yet to occur and we doubt that it will ever occur.

15) Have City officials and certain residents chosen to ignore the violent crime indices of Jersey City and Union City as compared with Hoboken? While Jersey City and Union City hire more cops (which may have the effect of displacing crime because it can never be eliminated), the city that borders to the east, north and south of those cities (Hoboken) is cutting police. Is this really in the best interest of Hoboken’s residents and taxpayers?

16) The HPD has confronted a difficult public perception problem due to the SWAT/Hooters case. That incident occurred five years ago and the two people held responsible for the incident are no longer with the department. It is time for members of the administration and a certain few members of the public to move on and move away from their anti-police agenda.

17) On Wednesday, July 14, 2010, the PBA presented each member of the City Council with its own professional analysis from Northeast Labor Consultants which clearly points out many factual data errors, miscalculations and omissions in the state audit. It appears that the Mayor, City Council members, Business Administrator, Public Safety Director and Chairman of the Public Safety Committee Bhalla have purposely and deliberately ignored the PBA expert’s findings and recommendations. At the council meeting, PBA Present Lombardi pleaded with the council members and the mayor to read the report and contact him with any questions or concerns. This has not happened. It is becoming apparent that the Mayor will proceed with police layoffs and demotions, regardless of what actual factual data is presented to her. As Mr. Lombardi has stated, “cuts are what she wants, but not what the city needs.”

The PBA and PSOA are convinced that these actions were motivated by personal and political animosity toward the police unions and their members – not by fiscal necessity
.

Photo: Courtesy NJ.com
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Open thread and the reek of a rotting HudCo Weehawken fish

Everyone needs to stand up now and then, have a good stretch and get something off their chest.  If you’re just dying to tell what your horrible sister did at the Black Bear last weekend or how your neighbor got caught doing the unthinkable in the backyard this is the thread for you.

You can also talk about any issue on your mind in our fair town such as a possible police department overhaul, the police union counterproposal or what you think disgraced former mayor Cammarano’s sentence will be.  It’s anticipated to fall in the two year ballpark although the felony carries a twenty year maximum.  Just do it judge! Read More...

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Mayor’s review marking one year

=&0=& =&1=& =&2=& Restoring integrity and fiscal discipline to government; improving quality of life One year ago this week, on July 31, 2009, Dawn Zimmer became Acting Mayor of Hoboken. Due to the events leading up to that day, many residents had lost faith in their government. The City was under state fiscal supervision managed by a Fiscal Monitor and had suffered a backbreaking property tax increase the year before. “Through the hard work of our City employees, led by our directors, the City Council, and concerned residents who have offered their time and talent to improving our community, Hoboken has come a long way in just one year,” said Mayor Dawn Zimmer. “I’m proud to represent such a resilient community that is so focused on positive change.” Mayor Zimmer made it a priority to restore integrity and fiscal discipline to government while enhancing quality of life for residents. Despite only being free from oversight of the state fiscal monitor for less than three months, Hoboken has already made significant progress under Mayor Zimmer’s leadership. “In just one year, we’ve made incredible progress for Hoboken on so many fronts,” added Mayor Zimmer. “We’ve established a strong foundation for continued progress, and I’m looking forward to working with the City Council and the community to make our City even greater.” Below are highlights of the Zimmer Administration’s accomplishments over the past year. =&3=&

  • Conducted an open interview process, solicited resumes, and hired the most qualified professionals to serve as department directors.
  • Appointed a highly qualified Business Administrator with extensive experience, including a 25 year public safety record.
  • Conducted an open and honest budget process with public workshops that included presentations by every director, as well as the Fire and Police Chiefs. 
  • Successfully argued for Hoboken to be released from state fiscal monitor oversight.
  • Conducted internal audits to end the illegal use of parking transponders and City Hall perimeter parking permits.
  • Returned Zoning Board appointment power back to the City Council.
  • Reestablished City Council advice and consent for Rent Control Board appointments.
  • Implemented free text message and email updates for residents available through Nixle.com.
  • Council meetings are now broadcast on Verizon FiOS in addition to Cablevision and online.
  • Held numerous public meetings to solicit community input for projects including the 14th Street Viaduct, Transportation & Parking, Newark Street safety improvements, playground at the Boys and Girls Club, and Church Square Park. Planned future meetings to discuss Observer Highway safety improvements, a Pedestrian and Bike Master Plan, redevelopment in the Western Edge and Southwest Hoboken, and the design of parks at 1600 Park and Hoboken Cove, among others.
  • Replacing single space meters with multi-space meters that will dramatically improve the auditing and accountability of cash/quarters payments.
  • Invited by the Rutgers Institute for Ethical Leadership to participate on a panel on ways to end unethical practices in the public sector.
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    Getting one more lie out there on the Municipal Garage

    Last week’s big victory on the efforts to find a temporary cost effective solution for the Municipal Garage didn’t come easily.  It came about only through hard work by a lot of people working to identify a solution with minimal impact on residents.

    The process itself was arduous and from a public viewing perspective painful.  Some of the work necessitated quiet behind the scenes negotiations and a steady hand on the wheel to identify better solutions.  Several did eventually come into focus and the City of Hoboken is the big winner. Read More...

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    Hoboken411 saves the day, at least for the disgruntled

    Hoboken411 the local website of distortions, copyright theft, smears and innovative lies in town is proposing giant billboards be used to raise money and maintain the existing size of the police force.  A reader emailed over the proposal as Da Horsey doesn’t go there.  Ask yourself when have I learned something of importance doing so?  Less and less people do, and those that pop by don’t stay around very long.  It’s wham bam thank you ma’m.

    Oversized billboards: a way to keep more police on the streets? 

    The Hoboken Journal has done more timely stories on stores opening and closings of late and Hoboken Patch has been showing readers what a real full time news website in Hoboken can and should be for a while now.  Specialty sites focusing on Hoboken’s food and bar scene are available with theBokenonline.com and the recently revamped and relaunched Eat Drink Hoboken looking to really make some noise. Read More...