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Messages - just watching

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871
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Rev. Brian Laffler
« on: August 09, 2008, 12:59:59 PM »
I can't believe who was selected as the BISHOP of the Episcopal church overseeing this part of NJ.

Someone with REAL Christian values and community-mindedness, like Rev. Brian Laffler, would have been a far better choice.  As far as I'm concerned, the current bishop is not a Christian, but rather an ultra-left POST-CHRISTIAN.

872
No mention of Egan during tonite's CNN report on North Korea. 

However, let's look at the results.  The Bush administration recently removed North Korea from the list of countries that sponsor terrorism.  Some of us appreciate what Egan has helped to accomplish behind the scenes.  Keep up the good work, Bobby.  And keep those ribs' coming.

873
Hackensack History / New Bridge Landing
« on: June 24, 2008, 02:48:22 AM »
Looks like Hackensack's original courthouse from 1819 will be rebuilt, this time just over our northern border.  Within 2 years, this park will connect directly to Hackensack via the river walkway project currently under construction.  See article.

HISTORIC PARK IS READY FOR RENAISSANCE
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Last updated: Thursday June 19, 2008, EDT 8:21 AM
BY ASHLEY KINDERGAN
STAFF WRITER
The Historic New Bridge Landing Park is ripe for a renaissance.
 
DANIELLE P. RICHARDS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Renovation of the Steuben House, above, and a visitor's center modeled after the old Hackensack Courthouse, below, are planned for New Bridge Landing Park.
Three major projects at the site are planned by the Bergen County Historical Society and Historic New Bridge Landing Park Commission, a new museum, a new visitor’s center and restoration of the 18th-century Steuben House.  The park touches four municipalities and has as many historic buildings. At a critical point in the Revolutionary War, George Washington retreated over the Hackensack River crossing with his troops.
The push to get the projects done came from last year’s nor’easter, which flooded the Steuben House and damaged important artifacts housed there.  “The flood was a transformative experience,” said Kevin Wright, secretary of the Park Commission. “It made us rethink everything.”
 
Wright and Mike Trepicchio, chairman of the Park Commission, said the flood made it clear that immediate action was needed on two long-term goals: the artifacts needed a safer home and the commission needed direct control over spending and administrative decisions.
State Sens. Loretta Weinberg, D-Teaneck, and Gerald Cardinale, R-Cresskill, have introduced a bill that would transfer fiscal and administrative control from the state to the commission, which is composed mostly of local residents. The bill is at the environment committee.

About 600 items were damaged and the rest are in storage without a permanent home, said Bergen County Historical Society President Deborah Powell. They were briefly housed at the nearby Campbell-Christie House, but had to be moved when repairs started there.
A conservator is restoring some of the most critical pieces, including some drenched documents and a rare 1815 grandfather clock. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has committed about $160,000 to “stabilize” the artifacts, Powell said.

A new home, modeled after the Veldran Mill that used to stand in Oradell, is also in the works. “Collections need a stable environment, and you can’t provide that in an 18th-century building,” Powell said. “We need a building where we can control the light and control the temperature.”
The museum would be designed to stand above the floodwaters of the Hackensack River, which often inundate the Steuben House. “The advantage of selecting a mill is not only that it would be an icon of the rural past,” Wright said. “Mills were raised on stilts or pilings.”

The historical society hopes schoolchildren will play a large part in raising the $1.25 million in estimated building costs.  Anthony Vouvalides, principal of Roosevelt School in River Edge, said teachers and students disappointed by the shutdown of the Steuben House will hold a penny drive this fall to raise money for a museum. The school will shoot a video this summer to help publicize the fundraiser to other school districts and corporate sponsors.
“We think one of the goals is teaching kids to become activists in the community,” Vouvalides said. “The Steuben House used to be one of the premier sites to come and talk about American history. Since it’s been closed, it’s really a lost gem.”

The state Department of Environmental Protection has budgeted $70,000 for a study to assess what the Steuben House would need for a makeover.
Trepicchio said the commission wants the house open so the public can watch restorers peel back the plaster to reveal original moldings, repaint the walls to original hues and rip out modern heating systems.
A new visitor’s center modeled after the original Hackensack courthouse, built in 1819, would tie the site together.
Amy Cradic, assistant commissioner of natural and historic resources at DEP, said the agency will pay for the visitor’s center, but a timeline and cost estimate are not yet available.

The land for both the museum and visitor’s center, a former auto parts junkyard and pizza store purchased by the state and commission three years ago, must first be cleaned of lead and petroleum contamination by removing 20,000 cubic yards of soil, said DEP spokeswoman Darlene Yuhas. Trepicchio said he has been told the work will begin in the next few months.

Officials hope that the improvements at the site will lure tourists looking for a slice of history, to be followed with trips to local malls, shops and restaurants.
“We could have our own mini-Williamsburg here,” said state Sen. Loretta Weinberg, D-Teaneck. “We’ve got everything to support it all around us.”
E-mail: Kindergan@northjersey.com

874
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Hackensack River Pathway
« on: May 19, 2008, 12:34:12 AM »
On Sunday afternoon, the City of Hackensack held its first annual River Pathway cleanup.  We had about 15 people attend, despite some light showers. It was the threatening of rain that kept others away. Special thanks to Hackensack teacher Linda Flynn for securing the volunteers, and to Charlotte Panny of the City of Hackensack for officially organizing the event.

We walked from the FDU footbridge past Route 4 to the edge of the Shops At Riverside.  We cleaned up about 10 full heavy-duty garbage bags full of litter.  We got a couple of tires, too. Some of the litter was washed up, but most of it was literally thrown from the rear of the Lukoil on Route 4 westbound. We got 2 tires and several long flourescent lightbulbs thrown from Lukoil. We can't say we found everything except the kitchen sink, because we removed one of those as well.  We had a lot of fun. A couple of the young girls there complained about muddy feet, but seemed to enjoy it anyway.

There was litter all along the paved pathway, including bottles, balls, and pieces of styrofoam.

The students also viewed the County's ongoing efforts to plant marsh grasses behind Bergen Tech.  The grasses were staged in small containers stacked next to the path, and covered by a blue tarp. They were dying due to lack of light and water, and half were already brown and dead. We uncovered the tarp, just in time for a light rain.  Hopefully the remaining plantings will survive to be planted.

The simple dirt pathway connecting Bergen Tech to the Shops At Riverside is very rough, but definately walkable. Local environmentalist Eric Martindale, formerly of Hackensack, showed the way to the students and other volunteers. He was familiar with the trail, which is used mostly by the homeless, plus an occasional hiker. None of the other volunteers had ever walked this particular dirt trail, and some had never walked along the riverfront anywhere in the city.

The most exciting find of the day was "a dead human body" that actually turned out to be a pile of clothes and a mattress. This was left by a homeless person living under Route 4. Martindale suggested that we leave the clothes and mattess there, since they are somebody's possessions, not litter.

By the end of 2008, the County will be making a "real" Riverwalk connecting Bergen Tech to the Shops At Riverside. It will be boardwalked over the wetlands. The survey stakes for the new trail are in place. The dirt trail will likely be abandoned except perhaps for litter cleanup purposes.  North of Route 4, the new trail will run through the marsh grass right along the water's edge. The mud there is knee-deep, so we didn't walk there. The existing dirt path is more inland, generally along the edge of wetlands and uplands. The kids were told that they'll be able to say they walked the riverfront under Route 4 before the pathway was constructed.  We paused at the northern terminus of the recently built pathway section, where Martindale explained to the volunteers how the Pathway project is linking up throughout the City of Hackensack. The kids are looking forwards to the Hackensack River Pathway being completed, especially the link under Route 4 where the cleanup occured.

The debris is now staged in bags which were left at the very northern end of Bergen Tech property.  The exact location of the debris is about 100 feet northwest of the paved trail terminus, just east of the chain link fence.  For pick-up purposes, the debris is accessible from the rear parking lot of some industrial buildings adjacent to Bergen Tech. The rear building is called HVAC, and the city's PAL building is in the same complex, but along Hackensack Ave. The DPW knows where the PAL building is. Charlotte Panny will arrange for the city DPW to pick up these bags.

By the end of 2010, everything in Hackensack from Anderson Street to the New Bridge Landing Historic Park in River Edge will be completed, a distance of approximately 3 miles along the winding river. Further south, over 7 acres of land formerly occupied by Hackensack Ford-Mazda has been cleared for 361 luxury apartments. This will include a section of pathway linking from the Foschini Park to the foot of Passaic Street. On Saturday, Councilwoman Karen Sasso said that the city's efforts to link Johnson Park to the foot of Passaic Street are on hold because the NJDEP didn't approve the city's plans to cantilever the pathway over the river embankment. The decision to secure narrow strips of land from a few objecting businesses hasn't been made. "A few of them are resisting", Sasso said. The pathway was completed last year in Johnson Park, and the Foschini Park link is under construction now.  Sasso said that the city is talking actively with the Ice House, and it is anticipated that the Record campus will be redeveloped, including a pathway there. Two other multi-unit complexes have been approved between Brosses Creek and East Kennedy Street, adding more links to the pathway.  Within 2 years, it appears that 90% of the riverfront in the City of Hackensack will have a riverfront pathway.

The following properties appear to be emerging as the final links:  (1) Anderson Street to Passaic Street (2) The Susquehanna Railroad crossing and the adjacent Record campus. The latter will likely be redeveloped by 2013, (3) J. Fletcher Creamer construction yard and headquarters, (4) Self-Storage facilty (5) oil tanks and abandoned industrial properties from near East Kennedy Street to the Shop Rite Riverfront Plaza, and (6) the Truck Sales company at the Little Ferry border.

Which will be the last two properties to resist a pathway link?   If I could place my money on this, I'd say that J. Fletcher Creamer will be the last commercial property, but the Susquehanna Railroad will be the last holdout. The railroad will resist an at-grade crossing of the pathway along the river.  Railroads are notoriously difficult to deal with. They generally refuse to negotiate anything or consider community issues. They often feel they can remain totally above all local and state laws. The Susquehanna in particular has already proven this in their other dealings with the State NJDEP and environmental organizations regarding a controversy in the swamps of North Bergen in Hudson County.  We'll see what happens.

875
Hackensack Discussion / Hackensack River Pathway
« on: April 30, 2008, 08:56:41 AM »
I copied Record article of April 30, 2008. This affects the continuation of Hackensack's River Walkway.  County officials told me on the 29th that the pathway is funded and will be built from Bergen Tech to Riverside Square "this year", and the next phase is up to the Steuben House/New Bridge Landing. The path will then cross the historic bridge and go north along the New Milford side up to the Waterworks Conservancy site.  The County held the hearing to get input from New Milford. The longer the pathway is, the more it benefits Hackensack.

I attended the hearing in New Milford.  As usual, The Record article doesn't reflect what really happened. The issue is bogged down in partisan politics, with the 2 Republicans on the borough council firmly opposed, and a few Democrats feeling political pressure.  The residents want all studies and all funding to be DIVERTED from the pathway project and instead used to resolve their flooding issue. That's what is really going on here, in addition to the usual "nimby" complaints about anything unknown.  Senior citizens dominated the meeting.

A few residents of New Milford spoke and said that there will be a beautiful park "like the Dunkerhook section along the Saddle River" right here in our own town. There was also significant and very unfair bashing of Hackensack, with references to Hackensack residents walking up the river into New Milford, including pedofiles, drug dealers, and potential criminals that will steal bicycles off of people front lawns.

It is likely that the County will come up with a revised route that totally avoids Columbia Street, by diverting at the foot of Henley Ave to the River Edge side where there are no residents affected.

River walkway gets thumbs down from New Milford
Wednesday, April 30, 2008

BY ASHLEY KINDERGAN
STAFF WRITER
   
NEW MILFORD — Residents of the borough's most flood-prone neighborhood blasted the county's proposed river path Monday night.

"The people who are most affected by this are here, and they don't want it," declared Karl Schaffenberger, a member of the Environmental Commission and zoning board chairman. "The river's got nowhere to go." Senior project manager John Biale and Brian Hague, chief of staff to the county executive, said the meeting was intended only to gather input and that the route can change.

Construction in New Milford is not expected before 2010. Hague said the county would not proceed if a committee of residents and officials could not come to an agreement. "We're not here to shove something down your throats," Biale said.

The walkway is part of a larger project allowing pedestrian access to the Hackensack River. The county has already built a walkway from Johnson Park in Hackensack to the Bergen Academies.  In the next two years, officials plan to extend the trail north to the Steuben House in River Edge. The next phase would place a 2.5-mile path through neighborhoods and wooded areas in New Milford.

Concerns about flooding

Many of the 100 or so people who opposed the project Monday night live on Columbia Street, where the county has proposed a dedicated pedestrian lane. Some pointed out that the route doesn't provide much access to the river. "Ninety percent of your path on your proposed walk is not along the river. Why are you calling it a river walk?" said resident Bob Leonard.

Columbia Street received some of the worst flooding in last April's nor'easter. Residents said they are worried that the trail would make flooding worse, even after Biale said the path could be made of stone dust, which is porous.  "There is no way on God's green earth that you are going to convince the people of this town that any building or construction in this area is not going to exacerbate the flooding," said Sal Tralongo, a Columbia Street resident.

Residents also said they are worried that the lighted path would attract drug users and crime, or at least more litter.

Bill Sheehan, the Hackensack Riverkeeper, predicted the opposite: "Once people come to the water's edge, they take ownership," Sheehan said at the meeting.

The council also said they oppose the idea. Mayor Frank DeBari said he liked the idea of river walks in general, but that the strong objections of residents made the plan a bad one.

E-mail: kindergan@northjersey.com

876
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: April 23, 2008, 09:10:45 AM »
I think it's objectionable that The Record reporters, editorialists, and columnists are portraying the administration in Hackensack as anything less than the good-hearted civic-minded persons that they are. Hackensack officials have made the correct decision to enforce the codes, and to advance economic development on State Street which is in the best interests of the neighborhood, the city, and to all city taxpayers.  I have to post it here, because The Record refuses to post my reader comments at the end of their articles.

Yes, Robin Reilly does good work. Since the rest of the homeless advocacy community respects her work, she'll have no problem getting a position at another agency, public or private, to continue her mission in life. That might be in Hackensack, or it could be somewhere outside of Bergen County entirely. If she reads "The Secret", she'll know that this is true. I picked up my own copy of "The Secret". It is not a continuation of Wattles' thinking, and it is well worth reading for anyone who feels they have a mission in life. Reilly has a mission in life, as do I.  I would love to see Robin Reilly implement her mission in some big city setting where she could help so many more people.  She could help 100 times as many people than she could in Hackensack. In some ways, she's like a modern-day Mother Theresa.  God bless her, and may her good work continue somewhere, where it is most needed. As described in "The Secret", the thoughts of those in need will pull her to whatever destination that may be.

877
Hackensack History / Re: Hackensack Street Cars/Trolleys (Photos)
« on: April 23, 2008, 05:24:43 AM »
Regarding the very first post in this string, where in Little Ferry is there a railroad.  Was there one that formerly existed, and has since been ripped up ? 

878
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: April 13, 2008, 04:34:20 PM »
I did some investigating into "The Secret" because 2 people have recently suggested that I read the book.

It turns out that Rhonda Byrne credits Wattles' 1910 book with giving her inspiration.  The charges of plaguerism are flying all through the internet. Most of the charges are focussed on evidence that she has copied her work from Christian theorist Norman Vincent Peale's book "The Power of Positive Thinking", but she took out all the God references and made a New Age version of Peale's work.

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2007/mar/24/bthornb-the-secret-has-a-very-familiar-ring/

And there's another author who is also crying plaguerism, which is Vanessa J. Bonnette.  She seems to have less evidence.

879
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: April 11, 2008, 06:56:15 PM »
Of course there are multiple different types of homeless, and your point is well taken.  I bet that Wattles would also have been against FDR and the New Deal, had he lived long enough to experience that era.

Remember that homeless guy that made himself famous stinking up the library in Morristown, NJ about 15 years ago.  That's the type of homeless person that Wattles is probably referring to. That guy in Morristown (Kreimer ?) just didn't want to work and just didn't want any responsibility.  He was educated and intelligent and made himself a spokesperson. A small percent of the homeless are of this stereotype.

880
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: April 10, 2008, 10:22:37 PM »
Here's a quote from 19th century philosopher and successful businessman Wallace D. Wattles:

 "Do not spend your time in so-called charitable work or charity movements; most charity only tends to perpetuate the wretchedness it aims to eradicate. I do not say that you should be hard-hearted or unkind and refuse to hear the cry of need, but you must not try to eradicate poverty in any of the conventional ways...The poor do not need charity; they need inspiration.  Charity only sends them a loaf of bread to keep them alive in their wretchedness, or gives them an entertainment to make them forget for an hour or two. But inspiration can cause them to rise out of their misery. If you want to help the poor, demonstrate to them that the can become rich.  Prove it by getting rich yourself. The only way in which poverty will ever be banished from this world is by getting a large and constantly increasing number of people to practice the teachings of this book".

Interesting food for thought. I'm sure more than a few people will choke on it. I'm reading his book right now. I don't agree with everything in it, especially his beliefs regarding science and the power of human thought, but he does put an interesting perspective in some modern problems.

881
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: April 09, 2008, 06:28:19 PM »
Well, it's time for someone to step up to the plate and give Robin Reilly another job caring for the homeless.  Perhaps the County or some private organization. And if she takes a position helping the homeless in some other County, that's fine too.  Could you imagine how many homeless would be herding towards Paterson if she took a position there.  Hackensack would lose half its homeless.

Even her critics (I am one of them) readily admit that she is dedicated to her mission.

882
Hackensack History / Re: GAMEWELL Fire Alarm Telegraph Station Box
« on: March 22, 2008, 09:12:41 PM »
Thanks for the great research on Kansas Street.  Sounds like Huyler was one of the Copperheads.  It's interesting that he was a NJ Congressman who supported slavery.  Perhaps HE is the primary source of indignation against Hackensack, that made us an infamous place.  What's scary is that he was VOTED INTO OFFICE, so a majority of citizens in the Congressional District that included Hackensack and surrounding areas of NJ must have supported his positions.  What a disgrace.

Mr. Editor, please enlighten us on Union Street ?

Sure, it is possible that it was named for Union County, as irons35 stated. What do historic sources say on this.  All of the other streets named for Counties, except Hudson, go east and west. Actually the beginning of Hudson Street goes generally east as well before bending to the south generally towards Hudson County.  None of the other County-named streets go exclusively north and south.

I thought it was State Street for the state, and then Union Street for preserving the Union of States that we call the USA.  These are parallel streets, and there is some logic there. 

Well, if Union Street was called Union Street BEFORE the Civil War, I'll concede the point that it was named after Union County.  If it was named just after the Civil War, then I'm not so sure.  Aren't you the city historian ? I bet you have any old maps with dates on them, what do they say ?

883
Hackensack History / Re: GAMEWELL Fire Alarm Telegraph Station Box
« on: March 18, 2008, 08:01:07 AM »
Gamewell must have been one of the "Copperheads" when he lived in Hackensack.  I'm told Hackensack's notoriety dates all the way back to the Civil War when a great many residents here supported the Confederacy and gave large sums of money to the southern cause.  These were reportedly some of the same families that were the major land holders. Someone by the name of Cooper, from Hackensack, was a General and a senior military advisor to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

It's interesting that they named a street after him, how ironic is it that the street starts at UNION Street.  Union as in The North.  Is that what Union Street stands for, can anybody shed light on that.

884
Hackensack Discussion / Re: HUMC Expansion
« on: March 16, 2008, 12:11:00 AM »
I thought HUMC would be handling this directly ???

Now I'm reading that HUMC would subcontract out this service.  What's the real deal. And if it is sub'd out, will the ambulances be dispatched out of HUMC, or if not, from where.  If it is sub'd, what are the credentials for the sub ?

885
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Services for the homeless...
« on: March 14, 2008, 06:04:10 PM »
Let's hope that the building is sold and that a taxpaying ratable will be constructed there.  Usually a vacant lot is a bad thing, but not this time.  Better to have a vacant lot than a squatters residence, drug den, and God knows what else.  I'll take a vacant lot over what was there any time

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