Parsippany High School Band Boosters Held Carwash Fundraiser

PARSIPPANY — Parsippany High School Band Boosters held a Carwash Fundraiser.

Sarvajit Karanth, Neil Patel, and Deric Yoon

PHS Band Booster members were washing all cars big and small to raise money to help finance the PHSBB Scholarship Fund. Each year, PHSBB awards scholarships to graduating students who have participated in the band programs at PHS.

Anusha Hiremath washing the car

Parsippany 19th Annual Fall Festival Draws Large Crowd

PARSIPPANY — The “19th Annual Fall Festival” returned after a three year hiatus due to COVID-19 pandemic drew large crowds on Sunday, September 25 on North Beverwyck Road. The rain held out most of the day and the fall weather made it a beautiful day to enjoy the many activities offered.

The township canceled the Fall Festival for the past two years because of COVID concerns. Officials planned to hold one last year but canceled in early September because of a local rise in COVID cases.

The town-wide celebration not only provided an opportunity to highlight township programs, services, organizations and businesses, but also encourages community spirit.

The generosity of the business community has played a large role in the success of the past festivals. Parsippany’s 19th Annual Fall Festival was one of the most successful festivals yet. There was entertainment for everyone, rides for the children, and other attractions.

Project Labor Agreements: A Winning Formula for Parsippany Construction Projects  

parsippany focusDear Editor:

When you’re driving by a construction site, do you ever wonder how all those moving parts meld together in an organized and coherent effort?

How do all those construction workers seem to approach the task with a single-mindedness that later results in a grand new structure?  On a well-run project, the secret is a Project Labor Agreement.

Project Labor Agreements (PLA) bring order and specific responsibility to public construction projects. PLAs are binding agreements that call for collective bargaining between labor and contractors. In addition, they define the terms and conditions applicable to all workers – union and nonunion — on public construction projects.

It’s what they deliver – an agreed-upon concerted outcome – that makes them so effective. They provide stability to larger construction projects while ensuring compliance with workplace safety and health laws, wage protection and equal opportunity.

The Township of Parsippany and its taxpayers can see the benefits of a PLA throughout the state of New Jersey. Many counties and municipalities in the state have supported Project Labor Agreements, including Morris County.

PLAs have existed since the 1930s because their components provide cohesion to each project.

These include:

Stability and Predictability.

PLAs add order by clearly defining each contractor and craft worker’s responsibility. They address labor issues, designate cost standards, prevent shutdowns and are mindful of maintaining completion schedules. Construction sites might seem chaotic to outsiders, as trades work independently. PLAs provide coordination and leadership to this process while acting as a mediator to prevent any disputes.

During the construction cycle, there is little that decision makers – municipal leaders, developers, builders and contractors – find more problematic than misunderstanding and chaos. They both lead to an argumentative merry-go-round affecting timelines, costs and effective management. PLAs virtually eliminate these issues, often beforehand, because the solid relationship between labor and management prevent tension from escalating.

Diversity and Local Jobs

Nothing helps a project gain allies with public officials and the community at large than promoting the hiring of workers that are local constituents. And when a project can attract women or minorities, both of whom the industry has underserved, their enthusiasm increases. PLAs can vigorously encourage hiring efforts from small businesses, minority contractors and local workers while emphasizing government-required safety training.  For example, a PLA can stipulate that a worker has undergone and obtained OSHA certification. This reinforces the “safety first” attitude of the workers and reduces accidents.

Training and Advancement

Most contractors want the most highly skilled, well-trained worker available. PLAs pay considerable dividends by preventing costly errors and accidents because of their emphasis on training. Union carpenters, for example, spend a minimum of four years with in-class and real-work experience before becoming a journeyperson. Union members are continuously trained in ever shifting technologies in the construction industry. Across all building trades, 150,000 union members work with thousands of contractors to build the best quality product for the residents of New Jersey.

Some anti-PLA rhetoric denounces PLAs by spawning myths.

They include:

  • PLAs apply only to union workers.They apply to union and nonunion workers, and they don’t mandate that workers must join a union.
  • Some critics claim that PLAs reduce the number of bidders on public projects, thus raising costs. A 2020 study in the “Public Works Management & Policy” journal reviewed 263 bid openings for community college construction in California from 2007 to 2016. This first-ever study of its kind concluded that the presence or absence of PLAs did not alter the number of bidders on a project.

Why do PLAs myths exist, and why do certain companies object to using PLAs? It’s simple. Because some companies want to reduce the competition. Without PLAs, they can skirt hiring mandates, disregard the need for certified skills among workers, and ignore efforts to provide job opportunities or training for women and minorities. Yet all these reasons pale against the most frequent motivation: worker exploitation. Worker exploitation is rampant in the construction industry. The unethical practice of paying below standard wages or paying workers off the books is eliminated when entities utilize a project labor agreement.

The core value that PLAs offer is transparency. It is a public document. Anyone can review it – municipal officials, organizations, construction companies and the general public – to assess whether the agreement is fair and makes sound business sense. Indeed, it raises the obvious question of why anyone would not support a PLA.

PLAs remain the fairest, most transparent and productive approach for conducting business in Parsippany and Morris County’s construction industry. It also benefits taxpayers because PLAs control costs and ensure the availability of highly skilled talent for all local building projects.

And the added benefit in Parsippany and throughout New Jersey is that thousands of union trades people, with the best training in the industry, are prepared to meet any construction needs.

Cyndie Williams, Director, Carpenter Contractor Trust

Editor’s Note: The Carpenter Contractor Trust (CCT) is a labor-management trust formed to bond the relationship between the trained talents of union carpenters and their qualified signatory contractors to gain market share within the Eastern Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters.

Zoning Board of Adjustment Meeting – September 21, 2022

PARSIPPANY — Zoning Board of Adjustment Meeting – September 21, 2022.

Click here to download the Regular agenda.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Zoning Board of Adjustment
2022 Members and Term Dates

  • Robert Iracane    Chairman    12/31/22
  • Dave Kaplan    Vice-Chair       12/31/23
  • Bernard Berkowitz    Member      12/31/24
  • Scot Joskowitz    Member        12/31/25
  • Nancy Snyder    Member        12/31/23
  • Sridath Reddy    Member        12/31/22
  • Davey Willans    Member        12/31/24
  • Casey Parikh    Alt. No. 1        12/31/23
  • Chris Mazzarella    Alt. No. 2        12/31/23
  • John Chadwick, Planner, John T. Chadwick IV P.P.
  • Chas Holloway, Engineer, Keller & Kirkpatrick
  • Peter King, Attorney, King Moench Hirniak & Collins, LLP
  • Nora O. Jolie, Board Secretary

Empire Diner Receives Morris County Small Business Grant

PARSIPPANY — Two more $15,000 checks were delivered to small business owners in Morris County this week, as the Morris County Small Business Grant program prepared to wind down and close the application period is on Friday, September 30.

Morris County Commissioner Stephen Shaw presented the checks during visits yesterday to the popular Empire Diner and P.J.’s Plumbing Supplies, a venerable heating and plumbing parts shop on West Clinton Street in Dover that assumed new ownership three years ago.

“We bought the business in 2019 – right before the pandemic – a hard year to start a new business. It was difficult, so we are very grateful for the grant. We are just starting to move forward with some new marketing,” said Holly Mastrian, who runs P.J.’s with her brother, John G. Hosking.

A grant is delivered by Commissioner Shaw, with Parsippany Councilwoman Gragnani, to Frank Shizas at the Empire Diner

The family business is owned by their father, John F. Hosking.  Empire Diner also is a family run business, owned by Bobby Shizas.

“We are very thankful for this. It is very helpful,” said Frank Shizas, his son, noting the restaurant industry was hard hit by the pandemic and establishments are still working to recover.

Parsippany Township Council Vice-President Loretta Gragnani joined Commissioner Shaw in presenting the grant to Frank Shizas at the diner yesterday.

Offering grants of up to $15,000 per entity, the Morris County Board of County Commissioners will have approved 723 applications by the time the program is closed for submissions on Friday, September 30.

The Commissioners dedicated $10 million to the program, which opened on Valentine’s Day, and designed the grants to assist small businesses and nonprofits with pandemic related expenses incurred after March 3, 2021, including rent and mortgages payments. The Morris County Small Business Grant Program has been a unique use of federal funds issued to the county through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which was designed to offer pandemic-related aid.

Federal guidelines covering the grant program will determine exactly which expenses qualify for coverage and which applications may be approved. The grants are capped at $15,000 per applicant. However, business owners and nonprofits have been encouraged to submit applications that include all costs they believe may qualify for the grant, even if the total amount of a single claim exceeds $15,000.

A final review may determine that some costs submitted for consideration are not covered under the program guidelines. However, by submitting all expenses that may qualify, applicants increase the possibility of getting the maximum amount of grant dollars possible.

For more information on the Morris County Small Business Grant Program, click here.

Parsippany’s Public Labor Agreement Mandate Will Cost Taxpayers Millions

parsippany focusDear Mayor Barberio and Town Council members,

Since I have not had a response from any of your offices to my recent email on the subject of PLA’s for Parsippany, and the next Town Council meeting is scheduled for October 4, which is the holiday of Yom Kippur and the holiest day of the year for people of my faith, and I therefore cannot be in attendance at Town Hall to speak directly to you, I feel compelled to again amplify my thoughts on this issue. more publicly.

Since you all took office I have been very supportive of your community activities.  I think you have begun to recast your images and accessibility (as well as that of the local Republican Party) in a great way and I applaud you all for that.  However, this new action of making taxpayer funded projects only open to union shops in Parsippany is so
wrong in it’s concept that I must ask you to please reconsider this move.

Implementing a Project Labor Agreement (PLA) mandate is so clearly political and serving of the large company and Union labor interests, that it almost boggles the mind that any Republican administration would even consider such a move unless there were underlying and unexplained reasons for going in such a direction.  It seems to me that such an action would surely ultimately backfire on any administration that imposed PLA’s additional costs for public projects on it’s taxpayer/voter citizenry (via higher Union wages while negating smaller local businesses from being able to participate in local projects).

I’ve looked into information on PLA’s and it clearly shows that each taxpayer project increases costs by 30-40% to come to completion.  In order for Unions to get their higher wages, they must first restrict competition of bidding through eliminating non-Unionized shops.  I have read denials of these facts but in the end, that is how it works and often local smaller contractors who might have earned important business and do good
work, and paid a fair wage, are eliminated from the process.  This sends more money out of the community instead of helping local business to keep money in the community by paying local workers.

PLA’s WILL benefit Union leadership and perhaps even some Union members, and I recognize that Unions command large blocks of voters.  However, I strongly believe that Union support is nothing compared to the silent majority; among the voters of Parsippany.  Please do not underestimate the intelligence and commitment of your citizens to recognize issues that do direct and personal damage to themselves and their families (in increased costs for projects and increased tax levies).

I urge you to rethink this PLA effort.  It will do nothing but damage you, your administration, your party and the Township of Parsippany, if you carry out this mandate.

As 52 year resident who loves Parsippany, I am offering to each of you the most sincere and heartfelt advice/request.  PLEASE DO NOT DO THIS!  The cost to all involved will be massive.  You have all earned a great deal of personal affection and loyalty from your citizenry.  I believe it would be a great miscalculation to throw this into doubt.

Respectfully submitted,
Hank Heller
Parsippany, NJ 07054

Parsippany Planning Minor Site Plan & Subdivision Committee – September 19, 2022

PARSIPPANY — Parsippany Planning Minor Site Plan & Subdivision Committee – September 19, 2022.

Click here to down agenda.

Edward Mosberg Dies at 96

Edward Mosberg

PARSIPPANY — Edward Mosberg, a Polish Jew and Holocaust survivor, an active promoter of Polish-Jewish dialogue died at the age of 96. He passed away on Wednesday, September 21, 2022.

Mosberg was born on January 6, 1926, in Krakow, Poland. He was only 13 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. In 1941, he and his family became prisoners of the Płaszów concentration camp, and he was later transferred to the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Austria. Sixteen of his relatives, almost the entire family were killed in the Holocaust. In 1951 he left Poland for the United States together with his fiancee, where they lived in New York and then New Jersey.

Mr. Mosberg was an active promoter of awareness about the Holocaust and of the Polish-Jewish dialogue, as well as a fierce defender of historical truth. He was always critical of media and political figures, including Israeli ones, who tried to capitalise on anti-Polish sentiments by promoting the false narrative of “Polish death camps” and the Polish nation’s complicity in the Holocaust.

“My day of Holocaust remembrance is every Monday, Tuesday, every Wednesday and Thursday. Every day of my life,” Mosberg said in 2018 during the annual March of the Living organized on the grounds of the Nazi German Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. “Germans murdered 6 million Jews and several million gentiles, who stood up to the Nazi party. […] We should not forget, that there were no Polish death camps or Polish[-engineered] Holocaust.”

For his activism in “building a dialogue in the spirit of memory about the Holocaust” the From The Depths Foundation named the prize their award for saving Jews from the Holocaust after him.

In June 2019, Polish President Andrzej Duda awarded Edward Mosberg the Commander’s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland for “outstanding merit in developing the Polish-Jewish dialogue and promoting knowledge about the role of Poles in saving Jews.”

“To return to the city where I was born at the age of 93 and receive such an honour is incredibly moving for me,” said Mr Mosberg when he received the order. “I accept on my own behalf, and on behalf of my wife, my children, and grandchildren and most importantly to honour my mother, father, siblings, and 6 million Jews, brutally murdered by the German Nazis during the Holocaust. It is important that those who come after us serve as our witnesses, who will ensure that the memory of the Holocaust is never forgotten.”

Edward was the beloved husband of the late Cecile (ne Storch), father of Beatrice, Louise (Stuart) Levine, Caroline (Darren) Karger. Adoring grandfather of Barry (Jacqueline), Jocelyn (Gregory), Alexander (Lara), Jordana, Zachary & Matthew. Treasured great-grandfather of Juliana, Sydney, Levi, Caleb and Charles.

Burial was held on Thursday, September 22 at Mt. Freedom Jewish Cemetery, 100 South Road, Randolph.

Contributions in Edward’s memory may be made to Yad Vashem by clicking here and United States Holocaust Museum by clicking here.

Parsippany Remembers Former Mayor Frank B. Priore

PARSIPPANY — Parsippany-Troy Hills Mayor Jamie Barberio presented a plaque and proclamation to the widow of Frank Priore at Tuesday’s Council meeting.

The current Mayor honored the former Mayor appreciating his past service to the Township which dates back to January 1982 when Priore first became Mayor. Priore went on to serve two more terms in that capacity.

Councilman Justin Musella, Councilman Paul Carifi, Jr., Joyce DeSpirito, Mayor James Barberio, Councilman Frank Neglia, Council Vice President Loretta Gragnani and Council President Michael dePierro

Priore also saved Craftsman Farms from demolition and was instrumental is it’s receiving Historical Landmark.

Mayor Barberio spoke highly Priore, as a friend and public servant as he stood with Priore’s widow, Joyce. He mentioned many of Priore’s accomplishments which included his rank converted the abandoned racketball club building at the Knoll into Parsippany’s community center into the vibrant center of activity that it still is today and the first handicap accessible park in New Jersey.

Council President Michael dePierro spoke fondly of the former Mayor, recounting the time he ran for office together with him in 1981. He mentioned the large amount of time spent together walking the town, talking with residents and sharing many of the same priorities to make the town a better place to live.

One of Priore’s passions was saving Lake Hiawatha from potential flood damage. He also created the famous slogan ‘Pride in Parsippany’ and according to Barberio lived that motto every day, in every aspect of his life and service.

Mayor Barberio also presented Joyce with a “Pride in Parsippany” sign which was in Joseph Jannarone, Sr., office, the former Director of Parks and Forestry and Recreation. Upon his retirement, Joseph Jannarone, Jr., took possession of the plaque and it was hanging in his office.

The Council Chambers was packed with supporters of Frank Priore

A copy of the Proclamation appears below.

After the proclamation was presented the Mayor then moved the audience to the hallway and unveiled the permanent plaque on the wall in Town Hall.

The plaque was covered until Joyce DeSpirito uncovered the plaque for the public
Unveiling of Frank Priore’s plaque at Town Hall
Frank Priore’s plaque at Town Hall

Hazardous Waste Drop Off Scheduled for this Weekend

PARSIPPANY — The Morris County Municipal Utilities Authority (MCMUA) will conduct a Household Hazardous Waste Disposal event on Saturday, September 24, from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Morris County Public Safety Training Academy, 500 West Hanover Avenue, Parsippany.

Morris County residents will be able to drop off unwanted hazardous materials from their households. Businesses are not allowed to participate.

Reminder, electronic devices (e-waste) will no longer be accepted at MCMUA one-day household hazardous waste events. The authority advises residents to call (973) 829-8006 for information and to discuss recycling options.

Acceptable materials include: pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, oil-based paints, stains, paint thinners and removers, solvents, automotive fluids, rechargeable and button cell batteries, pool chemicals, darkroom chemicals, aerosol cans (not empty), propane cylinders, small quantities of asbestos (wetted, double bagged and sealed with duct tape), driveway sealant, roofing tar, fluorescent bulbs, PCB-ballasts, mercury thermometers and switches, household cleaning products, and muriatic acid.

Latex paint will not be accepted, nor will explosive or highly reactive materials, such as picric acid or nitro compounds. For information about safe disposal of explosive or reactive material.

There is a $5.00 fee for each barbeque-sized propane cylinder. Payment must be made by check only.

For more information, call (973) 829-8006 or click here.