Morris Habitat for Humanity 11th Annual Hearts & Hammers Gala Salutes Award Winners and Sponsors

RANDOLPH — On February 27, 2016 Morris Habitat for Humanity will celebrate its’ Eleventh Annual Hearts and Hammers Gala at the Meadow Wood Manor in Randolph.  The Hearts and Hammers Gala is Morris Habitat’s signature fundraiser and a wonderful evening event.

Join Morris Habitat for an elegant evening–all while supporting their work of building houses and creating homes for families in need throughout Morris County.  Come raise a glass and feast on exotic hors d’oeuvres, a delicious full-course meal and tempting desserts.  Take time to shop at the silent auction, featuring unique gift ideas for you and your home.  There will also be live music and dancing, too.

This year awards will be presented to three members of the Morris Habitat family who have given generously of their time and expertise:

Founders Award: Peter Wentworth, Wentworth Associates

Corporate Partnership Award: Travelers Insurance

Beth Everett Award: Jim Mullen, Esquire

Corporate sponsorships have always had a big impact on how much Morris Habitat can accomplish and they are still available for the event. Several that have already signed up to support the gala are:

PremierBayer HealthCare

PlatinumInvestors Bank

Gold Travelers Insurance  and GAF

Silver Stage It 123,  Donald and Teeny Kuhn  and Jeannie and Andrew Tsukamoto, Esq.

Morris Habitat serves the community in a very special way.  As explained by Morris Habitat’s CEO, Blair Bravo,  “Through volunteer labor and donations of money and materials from individuals all the way up to corporations, Morris Habitat for Humanity builds and rehabilitates houses in partnership with families in need. Every dollar raised helps local hardworking families achieve the American dream of homeownership. Our yearly gala celebrates this commitment and those who support us.”

Individual tickets to attend are just $250.00 per person and donating to the Morris Habitat’s Hearts & Hammers Gala will help to achieve the bold plan to serve 200 new families in the next four years. Visit the Morris Habitat website by clicking here for further information or to register for the event.  Support Morris Habitat even further by considering becoming an event sponsor!

The gala will be held at the Meadow Wood Manor on February 27, 2016 from 6-10 pm and tickets are now available.  Visit the Morris Habitat Gala by clicking here  for further information.  Those interested can also contact Kathy Ritchey at (973) 891-1934 ext.122 or email her by clicking here for details.

About Morris Habitat for Humanity
Morris Habitat for Humanity is part of a global, nonprofit housing organization operated on Christian principles by building homes, communities and hope. Morris Habitat is dedicated to eliminating substandard housing locally and worldwide through constructing, rehabilitating and preserving homes; advocating for fair and just housing policies; and providing training and access to resources to help families improve their living conditions. Habitat for Humanity was founded on the conviction that every man, woman and child should live in dignity and safety, and that decent shelter in decent communities should be a matter of conscience and action for all. Morris Habitat welcomes volunteers and supporters from all backgrounds and serves people in need of decent housing regardless of race or religion.

Since 1985 Morris Habitat has served 280 households though home ownership opportunities, home preservation, and international home building programs. Morris Habitat has set a goal of 9 housing starts for 2014, completing 19 homes at 8 different sites during the year. In addition, proceeds from the ReStore, opened May 2007, have built 11 homes and diverted almost 4,000 tons of useable material out of landfills.  Located at 274 South Salem Street, Randolph. Store hours: Tuesday 12:00 to 8:00 p.m., Wednesday and Friday 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Thursday 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

 


 

Parsippany Police swears in eight new officers

PARSIPPANY —  Mayor James Barberio and Chief of Police Paul Philipps swore in eight new police officers in front of a standing room only crowd full of families and about a dozen of off-duty police officers.

The new officers are: Wandely Torres-Czaka; Christopher Konysc; Jao Paulo Domiciano; Sean Abrusci; Shussler Ferguson, Jr.; Scott Baker; Denis DeMuro II and Ryan Taylor.

As mentioned during the ceremony, these new officers are “the cream of the crop” and Mayor Barberio expressed his gratitude for their employment in Parsippany.

Drawing Classes to be held at Parsippany PAL

PARSIPPANY — Learning to draw is learning to see. Drawing is a skill that deconstructs everything our brain take for granted. Students will learn how to capture the shape, detail and shade their subject using pencils, colored pencils, blending tools and erasers. Classes will consist of long duration sketch projects, short exercises and homework assignments resulting in a sketchbook filled with ideas.

Airbrush Weekend Workshop! Winter registration includes an introduction to some fun and easy painting technology! Beginner students will paint a scene in layers highlighted with an airbrush, a machine that sprays a fine stream of paint for a misty effect. Learn the properties of this amazing tool while creating a stunning 12″x16″ piece of art for your wall! 

Classes will be held on Tuesdays, Session 1: January 5 to 26, Session 2: February 2 to 23. Kids (age 6-11): 5:00 p.m. to  6:30 p.m.; Adults and Teens: 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

(Kids are welcome in the adult class with a parent…draw together!)

Five classes, tuition $150.00. Register online at parsippanypal.org.

All supplies provided, materials fee $20.00. Classes taught by PAL artist and instructor John Darvie, please call or email with any questions, please call (973) 335-7332, or email apollo1jd@gmail.com, or for more information visit spaceageart.com.

Letter to the editor: Ordinance 2015:26 Sunshine Law Violations & Corruption

MailboxsmallDear Editor:

Was the so-called “special”/emergency meeting called on November 24, 2015 a Violation of the Sunshine Law?

This meeting somehow negated the Council decision of October 2013 in which RD developer was denied their proposals.

Mayor James Barberio also in front of hundreds of people stated he would have Waterview landscape as open space. Shall we consider this corruption as it overturned a grassroots movement in which overwhelming public opposition defeated a developer’s plan to change forever our master plan, for something which is unneeded, and favors a corporate applicant private economic concern over the public values of community and environment?

The former POD zone will now become a RC zone; and is being called a “minor change” in our municipal master plan’s goals and objectives. This new retail commercial zone is not a minor but a major change and is in direct opposition to several goals, objectives and policies as now written in our Master Plan Update of 2014.

This is what the Sunshine Law says concerning emergency meetings. Emergency meetings, which may be called by a three-quarter vote, may be held only if substantial harm to the public interest would result from a delay and the need for meeting could not have reasonably be foreseen.  Discussion must be limited to the matter which prompted the emergency meeting. The original meeting was scheduled for December 8; suddenly the date was moved up. Subject RD new threatened lawsuit, and their ultimatum to Parsippany, either the rezoning of the former Planned Office District (POD) or they would construct public housing units of 666-478 units.

Let it be stated that NO EMERGENCY existed to warrant this special meeting, and that the threat of public housing was a deliberate precipitation of the threatened event, public housing; without any due diligence in the matter of the very nature of the thing that must or possibly may take place in Parsippany. Waterview landscape would be highly unlikely; or near impossible to fall to such a proposal; and despite Waterviews rezoning to Retail/Commercial public housing responsibilities; if existing must still be forthcoming. Why would Waterview not be such a candidate; because of its recognition as an “existing community zone-environmentally constrained sub-zone. Instead RD along with our Planning Board caused a situation undesirable for their entrusted community, by prematurely and deliberately allowing RD a right of preemption over the people of Parsippany and the grassroots outcome of the No Vote in October 2013.

By corporations being people; RD has usurped all the citizens of Parsippany, by simply being a property owner; somehow not clear in how they exactly came to own and subvert an “existing area” of stability in the community and to undermine, rather than serve and protect prevailing residential character and existing density of the immediate neighborhood. This great undermine was certainly brought about by SuperPac politicians and a Planning Board favoring private economic interest over the community. A planning board that simply amends and makes changes to what they deem a phony and fluent master plan, that easily transforms itself against the benefit of the community and the environment; the so-called “minor change” which adoption of Ordinance 2015:26; rezoning of the Planned Office Zone to Retail Commercial will bring about. (Even the language is deceptive and false.)

This emergency/special meeting appears to be a method of fast tracking a corrupt method employed by the developer and in collaborations with Parsippany’s Planning Board and certain political cronies in their camp. No harm to the public interest existed; builders remedy courts which RD would need to petition if their public housing threat was to be manifest will even be in session until sometime in 2016, in fact the very harm was imposed by the Mayor and his administration beginning in October 2013.

In October 2013 after overwhelming opposition and sound reasoning the Council voted NO to RD proposal, and may it be emphasized not undermining our own Master Plan. Here is what happened next. Mayor James Barberio states he will have to acquire Waterview as Open space; this before the Mayoral Elections. A step further back; in July 2010 Parsippany began its idling within regional conformance of the Highlands Master Plan; volunteering Parsippany to higher standards and protections in its land use policies and standards. Parsippany’s main reason for beginning conformance was the expected lower public housing obligations then thought to be pending.

Under this “conformance” Parsippany apparently did little to improve its Master Plan. However in October 2013 we were still in a state of conformance; under this state a Memorandum of Understanding between the Highlands Water Protection and Planning Council and the Council on Affordable Housing was in effect.

This document dated October 30, 2008 is still valid to this day to conforming Townships, states that environmentally sensitive land should be recognized preserved and encourages redevelopment and economic growth in appropriate areas.  Parsippany being in a state of conformance could simply have guarded Waterview landscape by implementing a “checklist approach”. This would have given Waterview a higher status of recognition as an environmentally sensitive landscape; of which it is; making it harder for any such development proposal that threatened it by RD. The very fact that RD used public housing as a threat and a method of moot circumstance at the time; being the higher courts were deciding and costing Parsippany tax-payers may not have been allowed to play out.

Mayor James Barberio also did not activate the open space, environmental or transparency committees. Rather in June 2014 using the breakdown of the Skyview pumping Station which occurred in June of 2013as a reason opted out of regional conformance. The Engineering firm which received the contract in 2014 became part of Parsippany’s SuperPac donation pool to local candidates. Using this Skyview incident as a reason to end conformance is suspicious to say the least; from October 2013 after the Mayors word he would have waterview landscape as open space; we went to an attempt to commandeer County open space funds to supply RD with a paid for buffer zone, they would be required to provide anyway, calling it open space. The County wisely chose to turn it down and with a reprimand, stating it was one of the worse open space proposals ever. This was the first light that Mayor James Barberio intended not to keep his word concerning Waterview as open space; all 26+ acres of it.

So all the advantages that the Mayor had he tossed away in favor of RD’s interest. Now Rd is positioning itself to gain $3.5 million dollars of our Municipal open Space tax-dollars for their buffer zone; after they are being allowed to make major changes in our master plan, and without just cause or need rezone a former POD zoned area and forever change the character of that immediate neighborhood. Our so-called master plan is not protecting us; and is an ambiguous ‘date dump” of deception favoring large corporate landowners against the benefits is allegedly offers to the community.

Regional Planning Conformance would have simply settled all this brought stability and transparency and most of all if completed to full conformance legal protections, saving tax payers perhaps millions.

Corruption is the word that must be used here; from a definition of the word: Therefore, a critical mass of excessively individualistic agents may have an amplifying effect on corruption as it increases the average value of observed individualism beyond the level consistent with the preferences of the representative agent.

We have RD right above the right of all; and a grassroots democratic organic process that actually occurred turned on its head; in the name of a tax-ratable. What administration can justify changing its master plan; and disregarding its citizens for dollars; the same administration that wastes our tax dollars on frivolous lawsuits like Captain Carifi and the Aurora Securities Bills?

Wake-Up people this is a clear case of taxation without representation. Throw in the BOE and the $2.5+ million for the fields of dreams. We are being used and our Town is not our own.  

Nick Homyak
Lake Hiawatha, NJ 07034

Man arrested for stealing sign from business on New Road

PARSIPPANY — The victim contacted Parsippany Police Department to report a theft at 7:17 p.m. on Saturday, December 19. Patrol Officer C. DeLoatch responded to the victim’s office on New Road at which time he was advised that someone stole the lawn sign advertising their business.

After a brief investigation on Tuesday, December 22 Detective J. Keiling arrested and charged Don Kim, 36, East Hanover, for Theft of Movable Property (4th Degree).

Mr. Kim was released on his own recognizance pending his court date.

Former Hyatt House Hotel Guest steals alcohol

PARSIPPANY — Parsippany Police Department received phone call reporting a possible disturbance at the Hyatt House, 299 Smith Road at 6:27 p.m. on Sunday, December 27.

Upon arrival of multiple patrol units they were advised that Ryan Kelly, a former hotel guest, had a verbal argument with the hotel staff over the sale of alcohol.

After a brief verbal argument the victim advised that Mr. Kelly stole the bottle of liquor and left the building.

Patrol Sergeant M. LaManna, along with Patrol Officers J. Hughes, and R. McGinnis located Mr. Kelly in the parking lot.

After a brief investigation Mr. Kelly was arrested and charged with receiving stolen property. Mr. Kelly was released on his own recognizance pending his court date.

Editors Note: Criminal complaints are merely accusations.  Despite these accusations, the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until he or she has been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Council passes ordinance approving $1.3 Million in Severances

PARSIPPANY — Mayor James Barberio’s administration submitted an ordinance to the Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Council requesting $1,363,584.60 for paying contractually required severance liabilities resulting from retirement of employees.

The ordinance was approved on second reading at the December 15 council meeting.

The authorization to finance the appropriation shall be provided for in the 2015 budget and in succeeding budgets by the inclusion of at least 1/5 of the amount authorized.

The following employees were included on the list:

Employee Amount
Richard G Ala $53,218.18
Greg Clark 28,546.75
Sean Clark 57,003.32
Chief Anthony DeZenzo 120,000.00
Kevin M. Duffy 46,108.78
Charles Harris 25,835.32
James Jasiecki 74,386.00
Michael A. Laslandra 26,500.00
Robert P. Luongo 18,992.00
Peter Makowski 50,259.87
Malcolm 32,600.00
James Masker 48,050.00
Peter Molisso 45,212.90
Joseph Mongiello 72,481.72
Richard Nicoletti 36,866.56
Patel 20,573.40
Anita Polhemus 28,291.74
Michael Ruggier 98,732.00
Glen F. St. John 48,540.26
Steele 16,307.50
Steinert 16,019.90
Jeffrey Storms 124,651.00
Douglas Weidanz 23,695.00
Robert Whiteman 103,850.00
Lynn Yaccorino 6,718.52
Total $1,363,584.60

 

 

 

Car strikes Tractor Trailer on Route 46

PARSIPPANY — On Tuesday, December 8, at 6:30 p.m. Mr. Rafael Polanco-Caraballo, 28, was driving a 2003 Freight Liner Tractor Trailer westbound on Route 46, when a vehicle driven by Mr. Mohajit Vaishanav, 67, Piscataway, came too close to the trailer and cut in front of the trailer causing the accident.

Mr. Vaishanav was driving a 2008 Lexus ES350, which was towed from the scene by Eagle Towing.

Rockaway Neck Volunteer First Aid Squad provided assistant at the scene, although no one was transported to the hospital. There were summons were issued.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Police Officer David Roman investigated the accident.

Roads could turn dangerous as winter storm approaches

For New Jersey commuters, the December fun is over — at least for one day. Drivers could face slick, and dangerous, road conditions Monday night and early Tuesday morning in northern and western counties, thanks to a storm that will be delivering a nasty mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain before changing to all rain…

Hoverboard bursts into flames inside home

LACEY — A popular holiday gift that has had problems with catching on fire struck a home in the Lanoka Harbor section of town on Sunday. Fire department officials said the hoverboard went up in flames while it was charging — which is consistent with reports of hoverboard fires across the country. “Be careful when charging…