With news of the Ashley Madison dating site hack leading the news for the past week and making many spouses nervous, Parsippany Focus decided to conduct an unscientific poll. Tell us how you think?
[polldaddy poll=9042694]
With news of the Ashley Madison dating site hack leading the news for the past week and making many spouses nervous, Parsippany Focus decided to conduct an unscientific poll. Tell us how you think?
[polldaddy poll=9042694]
Puppy Luna Luna, a Rottweiler who was found dead Saturday in the trunk of a car being repaired in a Paterson lot, plays with another dog in a video provided by her owner. PATERSON–It’s still unclear who locked a baby Rottweiler in the trunk of a car last week, but whoever did it, says Paterson Animal…
PARSIPPANY — The Sons of Italy Lodge 2561 held its annual Golf Outing on July 9 at the Knoll West Country Club.
The event was very successful and well attended with over 125 golfers and even a larger draw for dinner.
All of the money raised will be donated to needy organizations. Just recently, the club donated $1,500 to the Parsippany food Pantry. Parsippany-Troy Hills Acting Director Human Services Michele Picone was given the check by Sons of Italy President Joseph Jannarone.
The club will be donating to different organizations in the coming months.
The club has been a great supporter of The Valerie Fund which was established in 1976 by Ed and Sue Goldstein in memory of their daughter Valerie after her battle with cancer. According to the fund’s website, the organization provides “support for the comprehensive health care of children with cancer and blood disorders.” The club donates to support the walking team, “Bella’s Bunch,” named after two-time cancer survivor, Bella Rocco.
PARSIPPANY — On Wednesday, September 30, the Parsippany PAL will be celebrating a major milestone in the history of of the Parsippany-Troy Hills Police Athletic League – it will be their 50th Anniversary.
For fifty years the organization has provided various programs (sports, intellectual, life skills) to fit the many needs of the youth and adults of our community. All of this has been accomplished as an independent, volunteer organization funded by aid and donations from the community.
In order to recognize the many individuals and organizations who have contributed to this success, a Dinner Celebration will be held at the Knoll County Club on September 30 starting at 5:30 p.m.
The dinner is in honor of the work by the volunteers who conceived, built, and operated the PAL organization over the last 50 years, they will be honoring specific PAL founders and supporters at at the dinner in a brief ceremony.
This year’s honorees will include: Select – Morris County Building & Construction Trade Unions: Carpenters Local 254, Electricians IBEW Local 102, Laborers Local 3, Asbestos-Insulators Local 32, Bricklayers & Allied Crafts Local 4, Iron Workers Local 11, Operating Engineers Local 825, Painter Local 711, Pipefitters Local 274, Plumbers Local 24, Roofers Local 4, Sheet Metal Workers Local 22, Sheet Metal Workers Local 254, Sprinkler Fitters Local 696, Tile Marble & Terrazzo Local 7.
2006-2007 PAL Board of Directors: Carmine Catalano, Joseph Serrao, Jeff Hale, Sharon Magnussen, Joseph Plescia, Mayor Michael Luther, Chief Michael Filippello, Jayne Beline, Andrew Berns, Joseph Bevacqua, Leon Downes, Billy Boes, John Bucciarelli, Kevin Pizzuta, Michael Ruggier, Dr. Philip Santiago, Dick Schlenger, Tom Tuite, James Weathersby, Dr. Joseph Weisberg, Bob Wilhalme and Fred Zimmerman.
The current Board of Directors include: Dr. Joseph Weisberg, President; James Garrick, Vice President; Peggy Clayton, Secretary; Beth Tutty, Treasurer; James R, Barberio, Mayor; Paul Philipps, Chief of Police Township of Parsippany-Troy Hills; Brian Stanton, Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Council Liaison; Frank Neglia, Board of Education Liaison; Tony Bonavitacola, Executive Director; Det. Dan Cicala, Parsippany-Troy Hills Police Department Liaison; Dr. Karl Alorbi; Rosemary Linder Day; Mike Whalen; Bob Wilhalme and Anthony Abrantes.
Honorary Directors include Joseph P Plescia, National PAL Board Member; Mike Pulsinelli, IBEW Local 102 and Steve Rosacha, TD Bank.
The Parsippany PAL is located at 33 Baldwin Road.
For more information on the Dinner Celebration and to order tickets, click here.
NEW BRUNSWICK — The identity of the hacker or hackers who crippled Rutgers University computer networks at least four times during the last school year is still a mystery. But Rutgers is spending big money to make sure cyber attackers don’t knock the school offline again. The state university has hired three cyber security firms to…
PARSIPPANY — Tension has been high at Morris County, Parsippany, and Board of Education offices, and in many homes this week after hackers released lists of millions of email addresses that were used to access the Ashley Madison online dating site for married people.
The website, whose tag line is, “Life is short. Have an affair,” was hacked by a group called the Impact Team in June. Earlier this week, it exposed the names, email addresses, credit card numbers and sexual preferences of upwards of 37 million users of the site.
With the help of a forensic expert, Parsippany Focus did an analysis of the massive leak and found that hundreds of the site’s members worked or lived in Parsippany. While virtually all members used a personal email address to sign up, Parsippany Focus uncovered a few members who joined the site using their government issued email. One person used his County of Morris email address, another used a Parsippany Board of Education email, and another was a high ranking officer in the Parsippany Police Department with the email address Sxxxxxxx@parpolice.com (Parsippany Focus has made an editorial decision not to publish member names or full email addresses. Websites have popped up in recent days that allow a person to search whether a specific email is included in the leak). The Parsippany Police email account in question also links back to the officer’s home address when a simple Google search is done.
Parsippany Focus spoke with a member of law enforcement on background and was told that if a police investigation was ever being conducted on the Ashley Madison website, an official police email account would never be used to access the dating site.
Parsippany Focus was able to confirm that the Parsippany BOE employee was a former district principal, but has since taken a job in another district.
Aside from the one police officer who used his police issued email account, Parsippany Focus uncovered two other former Parsippany Police officers who were regular users of the site. Of the two, one was already retired from the force when he signed up for the dating site, but the other was an active member of the Parsippany Police department at the time, and evidence reveals that the officer accessed Ashley Madison from police department headquarters and paid nearly $200 to Ashley Madison in the days immediately after Hurricane Irene. Although the officer used a fictitious name on the website, credit card records show that the officer used 3339 Route 46 (Parsippany Police Department HQ) as his mailing address, and he was required to use his real name when he provided his credit card information.
In addition to government email addresses, 191 accounts were associated with a rutgers.edu account, 25 with a County College of Morris student account, and three with an email account provided by the Parsippany-Troy Hills School District.
Government employees were not the only users of the cheating website. Records show that literally hundreds of Parsippany residents paid upwards of thousands of dollars to connect with other cheaters. Not surprisingly, all Parsippany members who paid were male, except for one woman from Lake Hiawatha who was looking for a “discreet partner who isn’t a couch potato.”
PARSIPPANY — Celebrate fall harvest and Craftsman Farms’ agricultural past at The Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms’ 9th Annual Fall Family Day.
This traditional fall festival set for Saturday, September 19 from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. is the museum’s biggest family program of the year.
A day of old-fashioned family fun for the young and young-at-heart! Join for Hayrides Pumpkin Painting, Games & Races, Handcraft Demonstrations like Woodworking, Embroidery, Pottery, Scavenger Hunts, Craft Activities and More. Inside the Log House, tours will be suspended for the day and families will be invited to stroll through the museum Open House.
This is fun-filled and memory-making afternoon at Craftsman Farms! $5.00 Member Children; $7.00 Non Member Children; Free to Adults accompanying children; $7.00 Adults without children. Admission fees are paid at the event.
Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms is located at 2352 Route 10 West, Morris Plains.
For more information, click here.
PARSIPPANY — The band Street Hassle performed during the final concert at Parsippany’s Summer Concert Series on Thursday, August 20.
The weather forecast was for rain, but Parsippany Parks and Recreation Superintendent Joseph Plescia decided to move forward and have the concert. The luck was with him. It didn’t start raining until the concert ended for the evening.
“There was a nice crowd of people came out to Veteran’s Memorial Park to see Street Hassle,” said Karen DeChristopher, a member of Parsippany’s Office of Emergency Management (OEM).
Street Hassle is no stranger to Parsippany, performing the last Friday of each month at Mount Holleran Town Tavern, with the next performance scheduled for Friday, August 28.
Street Hassle is a “Powerful Horn Band” with skilled area musicians that enjoy performing interpretations of Classic Rock, Blues, Motown and Pop. They are energetic and an entertainingly enjoyable band. They also cut from 60’s classic rock to 70’s disco and can ease their way through a 200+ song catalog to excite the most diverse crowd. I heard exhilarating renditions of classic from Chicago, The Rolling Stones, Dusty Springfield and Tina Turner. They also choose the right song for the moment, and don’t not fall into repetitious medleys of just number one hits.
The band has turned a lot of heads. When you see a blazing horn section in action, or see and hear the sound of a real Hammond
Organ spinning a whirl of sounds through the air, you can rest assured that this band is not aiming for the slickness of a cruise ship lounge act. They are a real band playing real songs and sometimes that just takes 12 people to accomplish. “We cant cut corners like our competitors,” jokes the bands leader and founder Steve Hantis.
Street Hassle has open for John K & Steppenwolf, Blood Sweat & Tears and many other national acts. They enjoy a loyal following centered in the NY/NJ Metro Area. In addition to Parsippany’s Summer Concert Series the group performs at large outdoor events including Millburn and Fredon’s annual concert Series in addition to Florham Park, Rockaway Boro and Berkeley Heights Feast Of Our Lady Of Mount Carmel Fireworks.
They are the house band at The Legendary Stanhope House and continuously play the club scene all throughout the year. The band is also proud of their affiliation with The Blue Knights MC and have been the headline act for 5 consecutive Gooch’c Garlic Runs.
PARSIPPANY — The Parsippany-Troy Hills Board of Education approved an adjustment in the total hours of a school day in grades kindergarten through 12, adding nine additional minutes to the school day.
The additional time will be added at the end of each school day. Parsippany Hills High School and Parsippany High School, will begin the day at 7:40 a.m. and end at 2:25 p.m., as opposed to an end time of 2:16 p.m. in the past.
Brooklawn Middle School and Central Middle School will see a change with the opening bell starting one minute later, at 8:00 a.m. rather than the previous 7:59 a.m. Classes will be dismissed at 2:46 p.m. rather than 2:36 p.m.
All ten elementary schools, Eastlake, Intervale, Knollwood, Lake Hiawatha, Lake Parsippany, Littleton, Mount Tabor, Northvail, Rockaway Meadow, and Troy Hills, will begin school at 8:55 a.m. and end at 3:25 p.m.
There are no changes in pre-school hours.
Click here to download a flyer provided by the Parsippany Board of Education.
Parsippany Schools first day for Students is Thursday, September 3 and will be closed on Monday, September 7 for Labor Day. Click here to download the 201-52016 calendar.
PARSIPPANY — Lehigh University is thrilled to officially welcome the Class of 2019. The incoming class of 1,200+ represents an accomplished, diverse group of students who hail from 43 U.S. states and 27 international countries and territories. These first year students join a distinguished group of 75,000+ Lehigh alumni. Welcome to Lehigh!
Elizabeth Ocker of Parsippany will be starting her freshman year at Lehigh.
For 150 years, Lehigh University (lehigh.edu) has combined outstanding academic and learning opportunities with leadership in fostering innovative research. The institution is among the nation’s most selective, highly ranked private research universities. Lehigh’s four colleges – College of Arts and Sciences, College of Business and Economics, College of Education and the P.C. Rossin College of Engineering and Applied Science – provide opportunities to 7,000 students to discover and grow in a learning community that promotes interdisciplinary programs with real-world experience.
PARSIPPANY — Parsippany’s Boy Scout Troop 72 provided four staff members/instructors and four participants for the latest Wood Badge course. Pictured clockwise from back left, Kevin Wall(P), Chris Kennett(P), Keith Hawkins(S), Adam Sonzogni(S), Trish Sonzogni(S), Tristan Vidreiro(S), Ron Knowle(P), Rich Kaiser(P).
Wood Badge is the pinnacle of adult leader training for all scouting programs. Starting in England in 1919 by Robert Baden-Powell, Wood Badge has grown to be a worldwide training program.
The BSA started official Wood Badge courses in 1948, and the training has grown and adapted with the times. Current training takes cues from corporate team building and management courses, while still utilizing the scouting Patrol and Troop structure. The first three-day weekend consists of the “classroom” portion, with most of the instruction taking place indoors. The second 3-day weekend is the “mountaintop experience” with most of the weekend spent outdoors. This portion of Wood Badge is called the “practical phase”. Scouters then develop a “ticket” of five goals that will improve scouting in their local unit, district, or council. This is the “application phase”.
They then set off to accomplish these goals, and have 18 months to complete them.
To take Wood Badge, a scouter must first complete the basic training for the leadership position they hold. The level of commitment given by these scouters shows their deep dedication to the scouting program, and the youth we serve.
Once a scouter completes both phases, they are awarded with the Wood Badge training award consisting of a special neckerchief, woggle (neckerchief slide), certificate, and 2 wooden beads on a leather strap. It is these beads that the course derives its name.
Wood Badge staff members are hand-picked by the course director, and must have completed both phases of Wood Badge before being eligible.
Troop 72 now has eight leaders that have completed Wood Badge, with four that have staffed multiple courses. With these 4 new participants, more than half our adult leaders will be Wood Badge trained.
Troop 72 has been serving the youth of the Parsippany area since 1954. We invite all boys between the ages of 11 and 17 to come out and learn more about scouting and all that way do. Which includes, but is not limited to, camping, hiking, canoeing, rock climbing, and lots of service to our community.
For more information or to join Troop 72 email info@boyscoutsofparsippany.org or click here.
Troop 72 is doing its annual popcorn fundraiser. If you live in the Parsippany area and would like to support scouting, email us at popcorn@boyscoutsofparsippany.org
TRENTON — Three citizens groups on Friday sued Gov. Chris Christie and his presidential campaign in an attempt to spare New Jersey taxpayers from picking up the the tab for the governor’s security expenses while he is on the 2016 campaign trail. The lawsuit, filed in state Superior Court in Mercer County, alleges that the Christie…
The National Weather Service issued a flash flood watch on Thursday afternoon for parts of western and northern New Jersey. The watch is in place for northwestern Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Morris, Salem and Somerset counties through Friday morning. Sussex and Warren counties are also under a flash flood watch through late tonight. A…
MORRIS COUNTY — The Morris County Historical Society at Acorn Hall is pleased to announce that Sarah McClintock has joined the Society’s Board of Trustees for a four-year term. Ms. McClintock brings extensive financial expertise to the Board. Ms. McClintock is Senior Vice President of Corporate Banking at HSBC Bank USA, with experience in trusts and estates. She earned her MBA in Finance from New York University, and is a registered securities professional.
Ms. McClintock is the daughter of Sally McClintock, a former President of the Summit Historical Society. Ms. McClintock is a long time Summit resident. She lives in Summit with her husband Andrew Cairns, enjoys gardening, and recently completed the renovation of their third house in the area.
The Morris County Historical Society was founded in 1945. The Society’s mission is dedicated to the discovery, preservation, promotion, and interpretation of Morris County history through events, programs, exhibits, and preservation advocacy. The Morris County Historical Society is a member-supported, 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization.
PARSIPPANY — The results are in and with many comments both for and against, the overwhelming majority of people feel that it is not ok to park a vehicle on the lawn of a home.
The Township, like virtually every other municipality in the State, strictly forbids the parking of any vehicle on any lawn. Parsippany’s parking ordinance is enforced by the Township’s Housing Department. Parsippany Focus recently spoke to a former housing inspector and was told via email that “inspectors are out every day citing people for illegally parking and we received complaints all the time. People may feel that it is ok to do whatever they want on their own property, but that is not the way society and zoning laws work.”
[polldaddy poll=9030467]
PARSIPPANY — Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Council made a presentation to the participants in the Clean Communities program with a certificate of appreciation at its meeting of Tuesday, August 18.
Each year, Parsippany-Troy Hills Township receives grant money through the New Jersey Clean Communities program. Parsippany received a grant of $111,553.58 of the total distribution for fiscal year 2015 of $18,494,161.22. (Click here to review full report)
The young people were an enthusiastic group who seemed truly appreciative of being able to perform duties for the Township; they were paid through the Clean Communities grant, and they were very happy to have summer jobs.
The program is designed to support municipalities in their effort to educate citizens and abate littered areas.
They did a great job assisting the Road Department with repair of catch basins, picking up garbage along the roadside, helping out the water department and performing tasks to show how proud Parsippany can be.
The Clean Communities Program was created in 1986 with funding from taxes levied on the sale of litter generating products. In 2002, the Clean Communities Fund was reauthorized. Twenty-one counties and five hundred fifty-nine municipalities are eligible to receive funding.
Dear Editor:
I’ve been reading the events of few months regarding the Parsippany SuperPAC saga with a mix of amusement and sadness. Not quite sure how much of which. I’ve felt so often that I have quite a unique perspective on all of this. Why? Well – the reason that’s most important to me pertains to the issue of money in politics. From the time I first ran for office for what was dubbed by our Founding Fathers as “the People’s House” – US Congress – it was quite apparent to me what an ironic nickname that is for that legislative branch. Given the cost of what it takes to make a viable bid for membership in that the body as well as the typical sources you utilize to run for, and maintain your seat – it’s really far from anything that could rightly be called “the People’s House”.
Councilman Valori noted as quoted by Parsippany Focus “These Parsippany Super PACS are becoming a political cancer which must be stopped from spreading. [they’re] corrupting the foundation of honest government and it must stop now.” I could not wholeheartedly agree with him more – however I’ll do him one better – it’s a cancer on our entire democracy from sea to shining sea. A noted scholar once said that democracy will collapse when folks learn that they can vote themselves money. This gentleman overlooked the possibility that businesses might find a way to buy out our government first.
That’s why I stood in front of the town council six years ago and asked them to toughen up our Pay-to-Play laws (even though – as Cindy Forrest noted to me – the ordinance I presented didn’t go nearly far enough). I had just spent three years of my life trying to make a difference running for Congress and I saw how high the barrier was. Many people listened to my message and politely shook their heads – saying “you keep tilting at windmills Tom – we need idealists”. Of course when I was ignored by our Town Council, I took to the streets with a few other idealists, stood in front of convenience stores and supermarkets, talking to so many people who agreed and practically took the petition clip boards out of our hands to sign-up and support the idea. Presenting the petition back to the Council a few members “voted for it – before they were against it.” And of course just a few months later it was dismantled behind a pile of cynical excuses.
And my other unique take on all this? …. I know some of the SuperPAC players in question. In 2006 – when I first met the municipal chairs of Western Essex County – part of Congressional District 11 – I was sitting in the back room of Fairview Insurance not even knowing the owners. I met them later – along with a whole list of Democratic who’s-who of the “donor class”. I know what’s it’s like to ask for money to run for office. I know what it’s like to have someone write you a big check – then question yourself –“ what if this person wants something from me someday”? So naïve I was – right?
But that’s the democracy that we put up with, and so it’s the democracy we deserve. But I know – and so do a lot of other people …. it doesn’t have to be this way. That’s why I’m now focused on teaming up with any organization to help stop this threat.
It might take forever – and maybe I’ll never see the day when all this is cleaned up, when we can “form a more perfect union” by taking our Democracy off the auction block. But I do know one thing – something that I learned 9 years ago when I kicked off my congressional campaign – that I still knew 6 years ago as I politely lobbied our town council – and as I stood outside the Shop Rite with a petition, and subsequently having endured the humiliation of having the same council dismantle our efforts months later in front of us….. This is a cause worth fighting for – as hard as you would any cancer that threatens you …. or your family …. or your whole society.
Tom Wyka
Parsippany
PARSIPPANY — The driver, Ms. Alexus Deangelis, 23, West Orange ran the red light at Smith and Littleton Road striking a vehicle driven by Kevin R. Nowicki, 22, Parsippany. The accident occurred on Sunday, August 9.
Mr. Nowicki was driving a 2012 Mazda and Ms. Deangelis was driving a 2000 Toyota. Both vehicles were removed from the scene by Eagle Towing.
Ms. Deangelis and a passenger in her vehicle were transported to Morristown Memorial Hospital by Parsippany Volunteer Ambulance.
Parsippany-Troy Hills Patrolman Arthur Olhsen investigated the accident. At the time of this article there were no summons issued.
PARSIPPANY — Jacqueline Smith, 16, a Parsippany resident recently completed summer service projects for Eleventh Hour Rescue and the United Nations Foundation’s Nothing But Nets program.
Smith a rising junior at Mount Saint Dominic Academy in Caldwell, conducted two events during the Parsippany Adult and Communication Education’s (PACE) “Wide World of Summer” camp program held at Central Middle School. “Wide World of Summer” is an eight-week camp program filled with outdoor sports and indoor activities, educational enrichment programs and field trips. Smith is a third-year member of the camp’s Counselor in Training leadership program.
Eleventh Hour Rescue is a local non-profit focused on saving pets from kill shelters, and educating the community about the animal overpopulation problem and the importance of spaying and neutering. Smith’s camper education program included a service dog presentation from the FBI Bomb Detection K9 unit, and included a pet food and shelter supply donation drive for the group’s headquarter facility in Randolph.
Smith’s second program raised money for the UN Foundation’s Nothing But Nets campaign. The campaign aims to prevent malaria, a leading cause of death among children in Africa by purchasing and distributing long-lasting, insecticide-treated anti-mosquito nets, and educating families on their use. Smith’s fundraising activities included a soccer goal shootout, basketball shooting contests and a collection jug for spare change. She raised $510 in donations, equal to 51 lifesaving nets. This was her third event for Nothing But Nets, and she has now raised a total of $1,740 for the organization, enough for 174 nets for families in affected countries. Smith was named to the Nothing But Nets “Champions Council” for her efforts, and will travel in February to Washington DC for the group’s global conference as a student representative to share her work and gain ideas for future fundraising efforts.