Letter to the Editor: 39% Increase Scheduled for Water and Sewer Utilities

parsippany focusDear Editor:

On Tuesday, October 6, Parsippany’s Town Council will conduct a public hearing and a final vote for passage of Ordinances 2020:28 and 2020:29, which will increase water and sewer rates by 39%, effective immediately upon passage. I believe that the ordinances, as written, require improvements in several areas before the council considers them for adoption. These areas include reducing the proposed rates to just what is necessary, transparency, and clarifying wording that deals with the rate effective date.

First, and most importantly, I believe that a 39% rate increase is excessive, based on the revenue that needs to be raised. To illustrate this point, $3.4 million must be withdrawn from the sewer utility fund in order to make ends meet in the 2020 sewer budget. However, if a 39% rate increase is enacted, sewer fee revenues will increase by $5.6 million annually. This $5.6 million is enough to cover the $3.4 million that is currently being withdrawn from the fund balance, with $2 million left over. When the 39% rate increase was originally proposed by the utility consultant, at least two members of the council objected to the size of the increase. Well, their initial reaction was warranted and is supported by the numbers. The council should scale down the size of the rate increase to an amount that is just sufficient to cover the fund balance withdrawals, plus a little extra to cover contingencies.

Regarding transparency, how can the public comment on the rate increases when the amount of increase is not even specified on the ordinance summaries that appear in the council meeting agenda? The ordinance summaries should clearly state that there will be a 39% increase across the board for both utilities. A rate increase of that magnitude will surely generate a lot more feedback than a standard 2% increase. In addition, the full text of the ordinances mentions several reasons why the utility rate increases are necessary, but perhaps the biggest reason is conspicuously absent. There is no mention of the almost $18 million that has been transferred from the utility budgets to the general budget over the last ten years. I think that the public would also like to know that the proposed 39% rate increases do nothing to eliminate these transfers.

Lastly, I think that the wording which says that the ordinance will take place immediately upon the final passage needs to be more precise. Specifically, the wording needs to describe what will happen when part of the quarterly bill is for usage at the old rate and part at the new rate. If the entire bill will be charged retroactively at the new rate, the ordinance should make that clear.

Before the council members cast their final vote on these ordinances, I ask that they consider the suggestions listed above, and amend the ordinances accordingly.

Bob Venezia
Parsippany

Council Meeting Tuesday, October 6; Residents Can Join Virtually

PARSIPPANY — Please be advised, the Township Council of the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills is scheduled for  Tuesday, October 6 at 7:00 p.m. Formal action may or not be taken, and any other action reasonably related thereto may also be taken. Click here to download a copy of the proposed agenda.

Due to the recent COVID-19 pandemic Council Meetings will be held via web conferencing.  This program will allow the public to listen to the meeting and to participate during the public portion session only.

Please be advised that in order for a member of the public to participate they must fill out the registration information using their real name and address, anyone not using their real name and address will not be allowed to speak during the public portion.

To join the meeting click here.

Surrogate Darling Reopens the Morris County Surrogate’s Office for In-Person Appointments

MORRIS COUNTY — Morris County Surrogate Heather Darling announced that effective Monday, October 5, the Morris County Surrogate’s Office will begin accepting appointments for in-person probate in our newly designed COVID-19 compliant probate rooms.

No walk-in appointments will be permitted and all appointments must be scheduled in advance by calling the Morris County Surrogate’s Office at (973) 285-6500.

Please be advised that to maintain public safety during the COVID-19 pandemic, appointments will be limited considerably, as compared to the past. They will be accepting a maximum of four appointments in the morning and four appointments in the afternoon each day, Monday through Friday. Clients are limited to having a maximum of one additional person at their appointment (usually their attorney) and no one under the age of 18 will be permitted in the probate rooms. Clients will be required to go through Morris County screening procedures upon entering the building, which includes a temperature check as well as passing through a metal detector. COVID-19 protocols require that masks are worn in the building at all times for everyone’s safety.

“The Surrogate’s office serves some of Morris County’s most vulnerable citizens, including those who have lost a loved one, and I am pleased to again offer these citizens the in-person services that many have been requesting,” said Surrogate Darling.

The Surrogate’s office has been operational and serving Morris County citizens throughout the COVID-19 pandemic by telephone appointments and mail. Surrogate Darling looks forward to bringing back the convenience of in-person appointments as one of the options for probate. “Our online probate platform will be in place at the beginning of November, as previously announced, which will allow our citizens the option of fully remote services from the Surrogate’s Office, providing more options and efficiencies to Morris County, especially our citizens with mobility issues,” the Surrogate said.

For more information click here.

Parsippany Hydrant Inspection & Flushing Program Begins October 5

PARSIPPANY — On Monday, October 5, the Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills Water Department will begin its annual Hydrant Inspection & Flushing Program in the following areas of town:

  • Lake Intervale
  • Hills of Troy
  • Glacier Hills

The work will be conducted during overnight hours, when water consumption is at a minimum and is expected to conclude on or about October 16.

This program is essential to maintaining the water system which involves systematically opening fire hydrants to increase water flows, therefore allowing to flush any minerals and deposits from the water mains. While flushing the system won’t interrupt your water service, when crews are working in your neighborhood you may notice a temporary drop in your water pressure or discolored water. This is normal and is not a health hazard. If this occurs, simply let your cold water tap run until it is clear. Check for discolored water before using the washing machine or dishwasher. If water pressure or water volume seems low after flushing has been completed, check your faucet screens for trapped particles.

If you have any specific questions about the hydrant flushing in your area you may contact the Water Department at (973) 263-7099 Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m.to 3:30 p.m.

Lakeland Hills YMCA Annual Winter Coat Drive

MORRIS COUNTY — Lakeland Hills Family YMCA began its annual coat drive now through October 15, in conjunction with The Community Church of Mountain Lakes.

Bring gently used winter coats, jackets, hats, scarves, gloves, and mittens to the lobby of the Y, located at 100 Fanny Road, Mountain Lakes.
All winter clothing supports the Market Street Mission with their coat giveaway.

Surrogate Darling Applauds Reopening of Extended Employment Programs for People with Disabilities

MORRIS COUNTY — Morris County Surrogate Heather Darling joined the many program participants, their families, and guardians in celebrating the reopening of state-funded extended employment programs for people with disabilities.

Surrogate Darling has been very vocal in calling on Gov. Phil Murphy and Department of Labor and Workforce Development (DOL) Commissioner Robert Asaro-Angelo to restore the programs that employed thousands of individuals with disabilities until they were shut down in March under the Governor’s COVID-19 state of emergency directives.  Extended employment providers were recently notified by Commissioner Asaro-Angelo that the re-opening process has begun.

“I am very pleased that the state will reopen these crucial programs that provide employment, jobs, and skills training to people with disabilities,” Darling said, thanking the Governor and Commissioner.

The programs will be reinstated as their written COVID-19 protocols are individually accepted by the DOL  Providers are required to have approved re-opening plans to ensure that all appropriate precautions are being implemented to safeguard extended employees and staff.

On August 21, 2020, Surrogate Darling sent a letter to the Governor and DOL Commissioner requesting the programs be reopened.  The Governor responded on September 2, 2020, by offering federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding to reopen the programs, but no reopening dates were provided.

On September 3, 2020, Surrogate Darling issued a joint statement with Assemblywoman BettyLou DeCroce (NJ-26) urging the Governor to provide a specific date for the reopening.  Surrogate Darling also worked with extended employment programs, their directors, and advocates in a campaign for the reopening, sharing posts and videos on social media and calling for others to write letters or sign onto existing letters in support of reopening the programs.

“The lives of people in the disabled community have been severely impacted. It is crucial that they be able to return to work and resume as much of a normal life as every other citizen in New Jersey, and now they will,” Darling said.

Two Car Motor Vehicle Accident Sends Four to Hospital

PARSIPPANY — On Wednesday, September 23, at 10:49 a.m., Ms Mamie Friday, 58, Morristown, was travelling on Route 46 west and attempted to make a left turn onto South Beverwyck Road and failed to stop at the red left turn signal and crossed the path of a vehicle driven by Aakash Jethva, 29, Parsippany, which was travelling east on Route 46 and had a green traffic light.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Police Officer Damon Farms determined Ms Friday failed to observe a red traffic signal and failed to yield to Ms. Jethva which caused the collision.

Ms. Friday’s passenger, a 5-year-old Morristown resident and Ms. Jethva’s passenger a 52-year-old Parsippany resident was transported to Morristown Medical Center along with both drivers. Due to HIPPA laws, Parsippany Focus is not provided with the conditions of the patients.

Ms. Friday’s vehicle, a 2014 Nissan Murano was towed from the scene by Ajaco Towing. Ms. Jethva’s 2016 Honda Accord was also towed from the scene by Ajaco Towing.

The New Jersey Police Crash Investigation Report did not indicate any charges to either operator.

Ms. Jethva’s 2016 Honda Accord was also towed from the scene by Ajaco Towing

Reynold Fauci Retires After Nearly Half-Century at Mennen Arena

MORRIS COUNTY —  Reynold Fauci, Director of Recreation Facilities for the Morris County Park Commission, is hanging up his ice skates after overseeing operations at the William G. Mennen Sports Arena since the time it was being constructed in 1974.

Following a 46-year career with the Park Commission, Fauci will officially retire tomorrow, October 1, taking with him a lifetime of memories at the arena, where he hosted everyone from National Hockey League players and Olympic champion skaters to world-class tennis players and pop-music stars.

“I remember our opening day like it was yesterday. They were lined up out the door and we had to stop the rest from coming in. It was a popular place right from the start,” Fauci recalled of the arena’s Jan. 12, 1975 dedication.

He also recalled a litany of historic events and athletes, including visits from skating and tennis greats.

Reynold Fauci

“We had the first state high school ice hockey championship between Chatham and Brick. Standing room only. We had major tennis matches here, too. I remember I had to go to the airport to pick up Björn Borg, Ilie Năstase, and Rod Laver,” he said. “We also had the Eastern Figure Skating Championship for the amateur skaters who would go to the Olympics back in 1982, and in that group was Scott Hamilton, Elaine Zayak and Kitty and Peter Carruthers – all of them top skaters who went on to win.”

Fauci’s work with the Park Commission was rooted in his love for ice hockey.
Born in Morris County, he attended Morristown High School and played for the original County College of Morris ice hockey team, scoring their first goal before moving on to play semi-pro hockey for the Essex Comets and the Newark Brewers. When news broke in 1972 that the Park Commission and Morris County Board of Freeholders were considering construction of an ice-skating rink on donated land in Morris Township, Fauci began pursuing a job with the commission.

He was hired Sept. 17, 1974 as assistant manager and witnessed the official opening of the arena when it had just one rink and was designed with a ceiling high enough to qualify as a venue for professional tennis.

“The thinking then was that it had to serve a dual purpose, that it couldn’t be just for skating and ice hockey, so the ceiling was built to be 30 feet high to qualify for it to be used as a tennis court, too. We used to have to put big covers down on the rink,” recalled Richard Seabury III, a Morris County Park Commissioner since 1970 who joined Fauci at the arena yesterday for an impromptu farewell gathering.

Fauci was promoted to manager of the arena on September 1, 1980, and oversaw the expansion of the arena to include a second ice-rink in 1986 and a third in 2002, the same year he was promoted to Director of Recreation Facilities. The position expanded his responsibilities to include Lee’s County Park Marina at Lake Hopatcong and Mahlon Dickerson Reservation Campgrounds in Jefferson Township.

So why retire?
“After 46 years, it’s time,” said Fauci, explaining that he stayed on for so many years because he loved his job and especially his co-workers, most of whom retired before him.
“One of the keys that made us successful all these years is my administrative staff. I was very fortunate,” said Fauci. “They were such a great staff and we worked so well as a team here together. I mean we were all on the same page. It was a pleasure to come to work with that administrative staff and now, most of them are gone.”

Morris County Freeholder Director Deborah Smith visited the arena yesterday to present Fauci with a resolution on behalf of the full board to recognize his many years with the Park Commission.

“Thank you for your dedication and your many years of service to Morris County, and congratulations on your retirement. We wish you the best,” said Director Smith, handing Fauci the framed resolution inside the arena’s original rink.

The resolution said the board: “Congratulates Reynold Fauci for his stellar tutelage of the Mennen Arena and additional recreational facilities over nearly five decades and extends their best wishes on a long and happy retirement. To a job well done, we say Thank You!”
Seabury was joined by two other Park Commission members are the farewell gathering, including Betty Cass-Schmidt, and Julie C. Baron.

Fauci lives in Randolph with his wife, Denise. They have a daughter, Jennifer, and son, Reynold A. Fauci, who also played high school and minor league hockey.

Mr. Fauci now has two grandchildren as well, and he said he watches his family skate at the Mennen Arena from time to time.

Morris County Park Commissioners Julie Baron and Betty Cass-Schmidt, retiring Director of Recreation Facilities Reynold Fauci, Morris County Freeholder Director Deborah Smith, and Park Commission Vice President Richard Seabury, III

NewBridge Services Dedicates Group Home to Its Longest-Serving Leader

MORRIS COUNTY — NewBridge Services Board of Trustees honored Robert L. Parker, the nonprofit’s longest-serving leader, by naming its original group home after him.

“Providing homes and support for people in need was so near-and-dear to Parker’s heart that we felt this was an appropriate way to honor him,” NewBridge Board of Trustees President Debbie King said.

NewBridge Services emeritus trustees Sharon Hollick and Jeff Gillman attended the SeptEMBER 30 ceremony honoring retired CEO Robert L. Parker

Parker retired in March after 42 years with the nonprofit. He served 28 years as NewBridge’s leader.

A Key to Inclusiveness
NewBridge bought the property in 1981 and converted the residence into a group home for six seniors who’d lived at Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital. It became one of New Jersey’s first long-term community residences for older adults hospitalized five years or more.

The state initially saw the group home as a place for former Greystone patients to live out their lives, Parker recalled. Instead, many residents improved and were able to return to the family or move to a place with less supervision. Parker House is now home to 10 adults of various ages.

When Parker took charge of NewBridge in 1992, he furthered the nonprofit’s housing efforts, seeing it as a key to inclusiveness for people with mental illness.

“The philosophy that Parker has always had is: these are people who have rights, and desires, and needs. We need to be there to give them the leg up that they so deserve, to have a home in the community they can call their own,” said NewBridge CEO Michelle Borden. Borden served 22 years as Parker’s second-in-command before taking the helm in April.

Housing Initiatives Grow
“This is not about Bob Parker. This is about an organization — all the staff, volunteers, and partners — who recognize that people can recover from mental illness when they live in the community and receive treatment and support,” a teary-eyed Parker said.

In 1993, Parker spearheaded a program to provide 18 hours a day of intensive treatment services to former psychiatric hospital patients living in boarding homes. “I have no doubt that without Parker’s unique enthusiasm and selling of the concept to state officials, the program would not have happened,” said Jack Muzikowski, who retired as NewBridge’s director of Housing Services in 2005.

From there, NewBridge expanded case management and supportive housing programs that allow people to live and work in their communities, Muzikowski said.

Today, 53 adults live in NewBridge’s five group homes, making strides toward their goals in mental health, physical health, socialization, and daily living skills. Another 87 people diagnosed with persistent and chronic mental illness live on their own with support services from NewBridge. NewBridge, in collaboration with other nonprofits and local governments, also provides affordable housing to 100 people with special needs.

Robert L. Parker, who retired as CEO from NewBridge Services after 42 years with the nonprofit, talked about the inclusiveness and empowerment of housing for people with mental illness

Parker’s Legacy
“Under Parker’s leadership, we developed so many residential opportunities for people with disabilities, affording everyone the chance to participate in our society,” said Carolyn Dean, NewBridge Director of Community Outreach and Support. “That’s a wonderful legacy to leave.”

Parker joined NewBridge in 1978 as director of its newly created youth services bureau. He led the nonprofit’s transformation from a local mental health agency into a multi-service community nonprofit.

NewBridge tackles some of society’s toughest issues, including mental illness, addiction, isolation, and homelessness, with a strong emphasis on prevention and early intervention. Last year, NewBridge helped nearly 8,000 children, adults, and seniors through its three pillars: counseling, housing, and education.

NewBridge Services, a 501c(3) nonprofit, is a leading provider of counseling services, housing, and educational programs in northern New Jersey serving nearly 8,000 adults and seniors last year alone. NewBridge treats mental illnesses and addictions; teaches skills for coping with stress, grief, and challenging relationships; helps children who have been abused and neglected — and their families — heal; builds and manages affordable housing; offers school-based programs that teach children and adolescents resiliency skills for healthy emotional development; helps young adults succeed in their education and prepare for careers; and supports seniors so they can remain independent. Throughout its 57-year history, NewBridge has remained true to its mission of bringing balance to people’s lives by tracking shifts in communities’ needs and providing innovative, effective programs to meet them.

Pennacchio: As Bodies Keep Piling Up, New Jersey Senate Does Nothing

MORRIS COUNTY — The COVID death toll at New Jersey veterans’ homes has been increased by almost 50 after a review of state records, a development that exemplifies the need for more investigation, said Senator Joe Pennacchio.

Pennacchio, since May, has been calling for a Senate Select Committee with subpoena powers to scrutinize the Murphy Administration’s policies and decisions impacting coronavirus in long-term care facilities.

“The situation in the veterans’ homes may be emblematic of all the nursing homes in New Jersey,” said Pennacchio. “The state has full control over the veterans’ facilities. While the Administration has been quick to point fingers at private homes, the loss of life in veterans’ centers has been far worse.

“The state’s hypocrisy is troubling, blaming other actors when they are the worst actors of all.”

With 47 additional COVID deaths, the loss of life from two state-run veterans’ homes in Menlo Park and Paramus is now 190.

“The numbers are heartbreaking. We have lost one of every three veterans’ home residents,” Pennacchio said. “In nursing homes, 1 in 10 residents died, but the actual number of dead souls, if reflective of what happened in veterans’ homes, maybe much, much higher. Without getting truthful answers, we must consider the worst.”

Pennacchio said the Senate should look into whether state policies that forced nursing homes to accept COVID-positive residents contributed to the catastrophic results.

“The Senate’s failure to call a select committee with subpoena powers is indefensible, especially after it was announced they would do exactly that. On three separate occasions, the procedural move to allow this select committee was voted down by the Democrats. The state can’t even keep track of how many residents died. That alone should signal the need for an investigation,” Pennacchio said.

The Senate Republicans created a petition calling for the Legislature to investigate the more than 7,000 deaths in veterans’ and nursing homes. The petition is available by clicking here.

“We had a commitment to launch an investigation in May. How many more dead bodies have to be discovered before the Legislature follows through with its fiduciary and moral responsibilities,” said Pennacchio.

“Instead of circling the wagons to protect the Governor, the Senate should act now to ensure this never happens again.”