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Showing posts with label Zisa machine seeks to return to power. Show all posts
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Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Update: Apathy of voters and the Zisas are the real stories in all Hackensack elections

Incumbent Hackensack Mayor John Labrosse celebrating a clean sweep in May's municipal election, when his City Council slate defeated the Zisa-backed Hackensack United for Progress and a third slate.

Only 341 registered voters needed
to OK $81.2M school tax levy


-- HACKENSACK, N.J.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

You'll find the real story about Hackensack elections -- voter apathy -- buried in the last two paragraphs of The Record's Page 1 story on how much the winning slate spent.

But you won't find any mention of the Zisa family political machine, which ran the city for decades before reformers won the City Council election in May 2013.

The Zisas, including disgraced Police Chief Ken Zisa, attempted a comeback in May, backing the so-called Hackensack United for Progress slate.

It's just plain weird for Staff Writer Rodrigo Torrejon not to mention the Zisas in today's story.

On May 5, three days before the election, Torrejon finally broke his silence on the involvement of the Zisas and "their network of political donors," associates and friends:



Mayor John Labrosse's City Council slate spent $272,672 to win the five contested seats, and Hackensack United (Zisa family) spent $196,672, according to The Record.

A third slate, incumbent Councilwoman Deborah Keeling-Geddis' Hackensack Strong, spent about $14,000, and finished third (1A and 7A).

Low turnout

"In spite of the amount of money spent and the Labrosse Team's platform of city redevelopment, voter turnout in the city was low," Torrejon says.

"The city has an estimated population of 45,000 and only 18 percent of more than 21,000 [registered] voters cast ballots," he reports (7A).

But turnout in Hackensack has always been low due to apathy sown by decades of rule by one family; elections held in April and May, not November; and weak or non-existent coverage by The Record, once the hometown paper.

More voters in '17

Today, Torrejon quotes Keeling-Geddis, the former councilwoman, as saying all the money spent "didn't really garner that much more votes."

Well, not exactly.

Both the May 2017 and May 2013 elections were hotly contested between reformers led by Labrosse and a slate allied with the Zisas, but turnout was higher this year: 

In May, there were 4,143 total voters compared to 3,513 in 2013 -- a difference of 630, according to the Hackensack City Clerk's Office.

Real apathy

For real voter apathy in Hackensack, you only have to look at the school board and school budget election every April.

After their defeat in the 2013 municipal election, the Zisas consolidated their power on the Board of Education and in the city schools.

The school budget has been rising despite falling enrollment, but few city residents go to the polls and vote "yes" or "no" on the proposed spending plan.

That is the case even though school taxes account for about 44 percent of their total property tax bill.

Maybe, most residents don't know they can vote to accept or reject the school board's proposed budget.

A "no" vote would allow the City Council to examine the budget and recommend cuts, and any disputes between school and city officials would be mediated by state officials.

You'd think senior citizens who live in all of those Prospect Avenue high-rises would vote overwhelmingly against the school budget to reduce their taxes.

341 decide budget

In the April 25 school election, only 642 ballots were cast -- for a turnout of 3 percent in a city with 21,397 registered voters. 

And it took the votes of only 341 residents, including those who sent in mail-in ballots, to approve the $81.2 million tax levy (to support a $109 million budget).

Turnout in prior school elections: 1,133 in 2015, 864 in 2014 and 1,929 in 2013.




The official campaign photo of the Labrosse Team in 2017.

Monday, May 8, 2017

Attention Hackensack: Don't forget to vote in Tuesday's crucial City Council election

Vote Column 2 on Tuesday to reelect Mayor John Labrosse and his team to another 4-year term on the Hackensack City Council.

-- HACKENSACK, N.J.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

When it comes to local elections -- held in April and May -- Hackensack is known for voter apathy.

But Tuesday's non-partisan election is as important as the one in 2013, when a City Council slate of reformers finally broke the decades-long stranglehold of the Zisa political machine on this city of 44,000 -- half of whom are registered to vote.

Mayor John Labrosse and his team of reformers are facing a challenge from two other slates, including one backed by former four-term Mayor Jack Zisa; his brother, disgraced former Police Chief Ken Zisa; and their cousin, former City Attorney Joseph C. Zisa Jr.


Polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.  

In Column 2 on the ballot, the 5-member Labrosse Team includes the mayor, Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino, incumbent Councilmen David Sims and Leonardo "Leo" Battaglia; and Planning Board member Stephanie Von Rudenborg.

They blame Zisa allies, like the ones running in Column 1, for a "city budget with a $31 million hole" and a "Main Street on life support."

Labrosse and other council members accelerated Hackensack's ambitious downtown rehabilitation plan, expanded recreation, and delivered the city's first tax-rate cut in a decade.

One of the apartment projects underway in downtown Hackensack is converting the former United Jersey Bank and Bank of America building, 210-214 Main St., into 127 luxury units and three duplex penthouses, which will be built on a new 11th floor.
The Labrosse Team campaign photo: From left, Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino, David Sims, Mayor John Labrosse, Councilman Leonardo "Leo" Battaglia and Planning Board member Stephanie Von Rudenborg.

The Record

The Record's Local news section on Saturday amounted to a Hackensack municipal election edition, with two long stories about Tuesday's City Council candidates.

One explored "a network of political donors, professional and political associates and family friends" connecting the Zisas to the so-called Hackensack United slate -- exposed on one Facebook page as "Hackensack United for Zisa."

The other reported on challengers to the Labrosse Team, including Councilwoman Deborah Keeling-Geddis, who heads the third slate, Hackensack Strong.

Both stories were by Staff Writer Rodrigo Torrejon.

Today's paper

Did anyone read Staff Writer Abbott Koloff's first and second installments of "UNSOLVED," about the death of a woman whose body was found "on an Oklahoma mountaintop in 2009" (Sunday and today)?

I just had a mid-afternoon cup of coffee, but still can't stifle a yawn.

The only local tie is that the victim, Jody Rilee-Wilson, "grew up in Roxbury," a small Morris County town on the fringe of The Record's circulation area.

Koloff is among the survivors of Gannett's layoffs -- more than 350 employees of North Jersey Media Group were let go in November and March.

Surely, his time could be better spent on real North Jersey news.