At the Fourth Ward Candidates Debate Tim Occhipinti proposes spending cuts that amount to a quarterly savings of 29 cents per taxpayer. Mike Lenz explains how cuts have to come from salaries, which constitute 80% of the City budget, and by maintaining a surplus to minimize interest payments.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Friday, October 22, 2010
Tim Sings
The election for 4th ward council seat in the upcoming election is an important one for Hoboken. The reformer candidate Mike Lenz must win in order for reformers to maintain a majority on council. Mike Lenz's opponent, Tim Occhipinti, has proven himself at the recent candidate's debate to be thoroughly oblivious to the issues facing 4th ward residents and Hoboken at large. His only reason for being a candidate is that he was hand-picked by the same team that backed former disgraced Mayor, and now convicted felon, Peter Cammarano. The team constitutes the old political guard responsible for awarding contracts to friends, taking kickbacks and driving this city into near bankruptcy and its infrastructure to the point of collapse. It also includes developers intent on building over-sized buildings in a city that is struggling to maintain services and infrastructure for its current residents.
The 4th ward is notoriously ambivalent towards elections but perhaps the message will get out to residents whose cars and property have been damaged by the flooding problem that, only since reformers have taken control of council, has started to be solved. Perhaps the message will get out to property owners who were upset about last year's 48% tax increase. Perhaps the message will get out to parents who would like a nearby park for their kids to play in. If you live in the 4th ward please vote for Mike Lenz on November 2. If you know anyone who lives in the 4th ward, please nag them to vote and get them to nag their 4th ward friends to vote. Hoboken has come a long way in a year. Let's not step back into Hoboken's dark ages.
The 4th ward is notoriously ambivalent towards elections but perhaps the message will get out to residents whose cars and property have been damaged by the flooding problem that, only since reformers have taken control of council, has started to be solved. Perhaps the message will get out to property owners who were upset about last year's 48% tax increase. Perhaps the message will get out to parents who would like a nearby park for their kids to play in. If you live in the 4th ward please vote for Mike Lenz on November 2. If you know anyone who lives in the 4th ward, please nag them to vote and get them to nag their 4th ward friends to vote. Hoboken has come a long way in a year. Let's not step back into Hoboken's dark ages.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Tim Occhipinti on Flooding in Hoboken
Tim Occhipinti questions the importance of dealing with Hoboken's flooding problems at a Hoboken City Council Meeting, June 22, 2010. Fourth Ward Councilman Mike Lenz thinks solving the flooding problem should be a high priority.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
The Road to the Penn Relays
Video Synopsis: As a Hoboken High School student, Judy Burrell was scouted at the Penn Relays which got her a full scholarship at Utah State. Today she's a math teacher and the head track and field coach at Hoboken High. For the first time in 7 years, the Hoboken High track team has qualified for the Penn Relays, one of the biggest track and field meets in the world. But with a School Board election only a few weeks away the team finds itself the focus of a slate of cost-cutting School Board candidates.
I felt this video had to be made. I was in the audience at the Board meeting when Judy Burrell made her appeal and I was impressed that Hoboken students had qualified for such a prestigious event. I was even more impressed when Judy so eloquently told her own story. And then, I was completely dumbfounded when Maureen Sullivan decided to take issue with the track team's request and vote against funding the team's expenses.
Some may say that it's not right to involve the students in a video with a political message but these students know that it's politics that determined whether or not they would receive their funding. They were in the audience when Maureen Sullivan voted against them. And, with only a week to go in a hotly contested School Board election, the students also recognize that if Maureen Sullivan's tax-relief slate is elected then their future is threatened. So this isn't just a story about athletic accomplishments, it's also a story about politics.
The Kids First slate has done an admirable job of maintaining a positive message during this campaign. But Maureen's slate has been negative right out of the gate. Being a Kids First supporter, and knowing all the good they've done for the school system and taxpayers in just one year, it's been frustrating for me to watch Maureen and her slate endlessly spout mistruths and uninformed prescriptions for the school system.
After that School Board meeting I realized that this was a story that perfectly captures the danger posed by Maureen's slate. This was a story that perfectly illustrates what's at stake in this election. While her slate has been vague overall about about what they intend to cut if elected, Maureen's vote that night and her slate's website make it abundantly clear they intend to cut athletics. And this gets to the heart of the matter. While tax relief sounds like a great idea, tax relief without regards for the students is destructive. It strikes a blow at the heart of our city. This city will grow stronger as the city's public schools grow stronger. Making them weaker in favor of tax relief weakens the city and ultimately harms taxpayers.
In contrast to Maureen's slate, the Kids First slate is taking a sensible approach that balances cost-cutting and fiscal responsibility with the strength of the schools and the well-being of their students. This approach goes beyond the vague proclamations of Maureen's slate - it's a proven approach that's been in place for a year now. The budget has decreased, the schools are stronger, and Hoboken is all the stronger for it.
I felt this video had to be made. I was in the audience at the Board meeting when Judy Burrell made her appeal and I was impressed that Hoboken students had qualified for such a prestigious event. I was even more impressed when Judy so eloquently told her own story. And then, I was completely dumbfounded when Maureen Sullivan decided to take issue with the track team's request and vote against funding the team's expenses.
Some may say that it's not right to involve the students in a video with a political message but these students know that it's politics that determined whether or not they would receive their funding. They were in the audience when Maureen Sullivan voted against them. And, with only a week to go in a hotly contested School Board election, the students also recognize that if Maureen Sullivan's tax-relief slate is elected then their future is threatened. So this isn't just a story about athletic accomplishments, it's also a story about politics.
The Kids First slate has done an admirable job of maintaining a positive message during this campaign. But Maureen's slate has been negative right out of the gate. Being a Kids First supporter, and knowing all the good they've done for the school system and taxpayers in just one year, it's been frustrating for me to watch Maureen and her slate endlessly spout mistruths and uninformed prescriptions for the school system.
After that School Board meeting I realized that this was a story that perfectly captures the danger posed by Maureen's slate. This was a story that perfectly illustrates what's at stake in this election. While her slate has been vague overall about about what they intend to cut if elected, Maureen's vote that night and her slate's website make it abundantly clear they intend to cut athletics. And this gets to the heart of the matter. While tax relief sounds like a great idea, tax relief without regards for the students is destructive. It strikes a blow at the heart of our city. This city will grow stronger as the city's public schools grow stronger. Making them weaker in favor of tax relief weakens the city and ultimately harms taxpayers.
In contrast to Maureen's slate, the Kids First slate is taking a sensible approach that balances cost-cutting and fiscal responsibility with the strength of the schools and the well-being of their students. This approach goes beyond the vague proclamations of Maureen's slate - it's a proven approach that's been in place for a year now. The budget has decreased, the schools are stronger, and Hoboken is all the stronger for it.
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