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Friday, May 28, 2021

Crosswalk without a warning sign proved deadly to woman, 76, out for a daily stroll

JINXED CROSSWALK: None of the 4 crosswalks on Passaic Street and Summit Avenue in Hackensack -- including this one on Passaic Street, used by Carol A. Ventura before her untimely death on May 13, 2021 -- have "Walk/Don't Walk" signs or any other warning to alert pedestrians about turning vehicles from Summit Avenue, like the Tesla I photographed yesterday, above. 
 

She was hit by one vehicle, 

then run over by a trailer


By VICTOR E. SASSON

EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- When a 76-year-old woman set out for her daily late afternoon walk in her neighborhood two weeks ago, she didn't stand a chance as she stepped off the curb at dusk and into a crosswalk on Passaic Street at Summit Avenue.

Not only are the crosswalk stripes non-reflective, faded or missing, but there is no lighted sign warning pedestrians like Carol A. Ventura it is unsafe to walk as vehicles on Summit get a green arrow and turn onto Passaic Street and into the crosswalk she was using.

That late afternoon walk on May 13 proved to be Ventura's last as first a pickup truck turning onto Passaic from the Summit Avenue turn lane hit her and knocked her down shortly after 8:30 p.m., police said.

Then, a second driver, like the first, said he didn't see the woman, and she was run over by a landscaping trailer his vehicle was pulling.

Ventura, who had retired recently after 25 years as a sales administration manager at E.T. Browne Drug Co. in Englewood Cliffs, died a short time later at the hospital.

She lived not far away in The Pierre Apartments on Prospect Avenue in Hackensack.

No 'Walk/Don't Walk' signs

None of the 4 crosswalks at the busy intersection of Summit Avenue and Passaic Street -- in Hackensack's Fairmount section -- have "Walk/Don't Walk" signs.

The intersection has long been cursed by drivers on narrow, 2-lane Passaic Street -- a major artery leading to Maywood, Rochelle Park and Paramus -- because there are no turn lanes for vehicles on Passaic at Summit Avenue.

The street dates to the Revolutionary War, and the intersection, maintained by Bergen County, would look more at home in an underdeveloped country.


NO WARNING OF TURNING VEHICLES: The second crosswalk on Passaic Street at Summit Avenue, above, has no sign to alert pedestrians they should look out for cars or trucks turning into the street from Summit Avenue.

No help for pedestrians 

Pedestrians also are sitting ducks on Polifly Road in Hackensack, where a 3-block stretch with a busy CVS Pharmacy on one side of the 4-lane street and an apartment building on the other side lacks crosswalks or traffic lights.

On March 4, 2021, Lillian J. Holmes, 81, of Hackensack died after she was knocked down by a hit-run driver in a black SUV, and struck by a second driver as she was crossing the darkened street to pick up a prescription at the pharmacy.

Polifly Road is another street "maintained" by Bergen County.

June 4 services

Services for Carol A. Ventura. who turned 76 on April 13, one month before she was killed, will be held on June 4 at G. Thomas Gentile Funeral Home at 397 Union St. in Hackensack.

A celebration of her life will take place at Nanni Ristorante in Rochelle Park.

"Carol had been embracing her retirement and looking forward to spending more time with her cherished companion" -- identified as William J. Gaynor -- according to her obituary.

Ventura grew up in North Bergen, earned a bachelor's degree at Montclair State University and became a school teacher.

Read her full obituary on the funeral home website: 

Obituary of Carol A. Ventura

READ: Yet another careless driver 

is getting away with running down a pedestrian


Sunday, May 23, 2021

Yet another careless driver is getting away with running down a Hackensack woman

ANOTHER VICTIM: Carol Ventura, 76, was in a crosswalk when she was struck by one vehicle, then run over by a landscaping truck's trailer last week not far from her home in The Pierre Apartments on Prospect Avenue in Hackensack, below. She died at the hospital.

 
A second pedestrian is killed

crossing the street at night

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- No criminal charges will be brought against the driver of a pickup truck who ran down a 76-year-old woman in a crosswalk on Passaic Street at Summit Avenue, police said.

On May 13 shortly after 8:30 p.m. -- described as "dusk" --  a second driver didn't see Carol Ventura lying on the pavement, and she was run over by a landscaping trailer his vehicle was pulling.

She was pronounced dead a short time later at Hackensack University Medical Center, according to news reports.

Ventura was at least the second pedestrian killed crossing the street in Hackensack since March.

Poor street maintenance and the absence of pedestrian safety measures are issues in both deaths. 

Hit-run death

On March 4, Lillian J. Holmes, 81, of Hackensack died after she was knocked down by a hit-run driver and struck by a second driver as she was crossing a darkened Polifly Road, between Sutton and Marvin avenues.

She was going to pick up a prescription at a CVS Pharmacy, family members said.

There is no painted crosswalk, traffic light or adequate street lighting where the hit-run crash occurred, even though there is an apartment building on one side of the 4-lane street leading to Route 80 and a busy pharmacy on the other.

The Fatal Accident Investigation Squad of the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office still hasn't found the driver of the black BMW X-5 SUV that hit Holmes first before fleeing. The second driver stayed on the scene.

The deaths of the women are two more examples of drivers who kill pedestrians, but never face serious charges, and of streets -- many of them maintained by Bergen County -- that lack crosswalks, proper lighting, reflective crosswalk stripes or walk/no-walk signs.

In effect, many pedestrians are sitting ducks.



Confused news reports

News stories from the Hackensack Daily Voice and Patch said Ventura, the victim, "had the right of way," quoting Hackensack Police Capt. Nicole Foley.

But in a story that also appeared on the front page of the weekly Hackensack Chronicle, the clueless Joshua Jongsma of NorthJersey.com, The Record's website, quoted police as saying "they do not believe Ventura had a walk signal or the right of way when she crossed."

As the photo below clearly shows there is no walk/don't walk signal for the crosswalk the victim used.

Capt. Foley quoted an unidentified Rochelle Park man, 42, who was driving the pickup that first hit the woman, as saying he didn't see her.

That driver might face a traffic summons for failing to yield or stop for a pedestrian, and 2 points on his license. 

The second driver, a 51-year-old Paramus man, also said he didn't see the victim. He also wasn't identified.

"From 2010 to 2020, 14 pedestrians were killed in Hackensack, records show, including three last year," NorthJersey.com reported, but there was no mention of whether any of the drivers faced serious charges.


FADED PAINT, MISSING WALK/DON'T WALK SIGNAL: According to news reports, Carol Ventura of Hackensack was in this crosswalk on Passaic Street "shortly after 8:30 p.m." on May 13, 2021, when she was struck by a 2021 Dodge Ram pickup truck turning from southbound Summit Avenue, like the white sedan in this photo taken a few days later. The crosswalk paint is faded, and likely hard to see at night, and there is no don't walk sign to warn pedestrians about turning vehicles, which get a green arrow before the traffic light on Summit turns green. 

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Hackensack's reformers win another term despite pathetically low turnout by voters

A CLEAN SWEEP: In a photo from his campaign's Facebook page, Hackensack Mayor John Labrosse, center, declared a clean sweep over 2 other tickets in Tuesday's non-partisan City Council election. From left, Councilman Leo Battaglia, Councilman-elect Gerard Carroll, Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino and Councilwoman Stephanie Von Rudenborg.
 

Labrosse, running mates beat

10 others in nasty City Council race

 

Editor's note: This post has been updated with the official results as certified by the Hackensack City Clerk's Office.

By VICTOR E. SASSON  

EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- Mayor John Labrosse -- first elected in 2013 as a reformer after the city became a laughing stock known as "Zisaville" -- won another 4-year term on Tuesday to lead the City Council.    

Labrosse, Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino, Councilman Leo Battaglia, Councilwoman Stephanie Von Rudenborg and newcomer Gerard Carroll scored a clean sweep in the nonpartisan election.

Here is part of their statement as posted on the campaign's Facebook page late Tuesday night, as well as the official results as certified by the City Clerk's Office:

"It's a Clean Sweep.

"Today, Hackensack voters spoke loud and clear that they want to keep moving forward and let the Labrosse Team finish the job of revitalizing our city and building a brighter future for all residents."

Low turnout

Labrosse was the top vote getter with 1,879 votes in a city with 27,365 registered voters as of May 6, 2021, according to the Hackensack City Clerk's Office, which certified the election.

Hackensack residents would rather bitch, bitch, bitch than vote, vote, vote.

The official results for all candidates appear below. 

Officials said 3,133 voters went to the polls on Tuesday, but the number of returned mail-in ballots wasn't available.

READ: Campaign by 15 candidates turned nasty


OFFICIAL RESULTS:
LABROSSE 1,879
CANESTRINO 1,812
BATTAGLIA 1,754
CARROLL 1,832
VON RUDENBORG 1,823
AMIRHAMZEH 1,056
GLOVER 1,059
POST 1,062
GAINES 1,141
LOPEZ 1,005
SIMS 1,119
ROMERO 1,138
MILLER 1,015
NELSON 995
MERINO 965

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Despite 2020 quarantine, more readers drop The Record and NorthJersey.com

LOCAL JOURNALIM OR LITTER? The Hackensack Chronicle, owned by the Gannett Co., long ago lost its own staff and now reprints news stories and other material from The Record of Woodland Park. I find the free weekly in the driveway of my home every Friday.

 Circulation, advertising revenue
fall for the 4th year in a row


By VICTOR E. SASSON

EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- Despite having a captive audience in 2020, The Record and NorthJersey.com continued to lose readers and advertising revenue for the 4th year in row.

Gannett's annual report for 2020 shows once again the widely reviled print edition and website failed to hold onto readers, despite the Covid-19 pandemic that forced many North Jersey residents to stay home or work remotely.

In July 2016, Gannett bought Hackensack-based North Jersey Media Group  -- including The Record, Herald News, NorthJersey.com and numerous weekly newspapers -- from the Borg family for nearly $40 million in cash.

More than 110 years

The Record had been based for more than 110 years in Hackensack before the Borgs executed the biggest downsizing in company history in 2008, closed the headquarters building at 150 River St. in 2009, and moved to Woodland Park. 

In 2020, circulation of The Record and its affiliated website, NorthJersey.com, declined to 47,004 daily and 62,057 on Sunday, according to Gannett Co.'s annual report.

That compares to 52,623 daily and 70,682 on Sunday at the end of 2019.

Compared to total readership in 2016, that's pathetic.

At the end of 2016, total circulation for the print edition and website was given as 235,681 daily and 147,609 on Sunday.

In 10th place

In 2020, The Record and NorthJersey.com held onto 10th place among Gannett's major publications across the United States, including USA Today, the Detroit Free Press and The Arizona Republic.

According to a the Letter LY blog, U.S. newspaper print circulation is the lowest in the last 80 years:

  • In 2020, The Wall Street Journal’s circulation fell below the 1-million mark.
  • Due to declining readership, 1 in 5 US newspapers has folded in the last 15 years.
  • American newspapers will see their ad revenue cut in half by 2024.
  • Newsroom employment dropped by 23% since 2008.
  • Americans prefer digital newspapers over social media as a news source.


#gannettruinedmypaper

NorthJersey.com carries photos of all staff members at the website, The Record and (201) magazine, a total of 86 employees.

Last week, Gannett employees who want to form a union announced on Twitter they had prevailed in an election conducted by the National Labor Relations Board -- by a vote of 59-4 -- and called on the company to bargain with them.

In the first 8 months or so after Gannett acquired North Jersey Media Group in July 2016, about 350 employees were laid off.

Previous reports

Here is my previous reporting on readership of The Record and NorthJersey.com since Gannett took over; laid off hundreds of employees, including reporters, editors and copy editors; and gutted local news coverage of Hackensack and other communities:


In 2019, The Record and NorthJersey,com lost 16,000 readers daily, 19,600 on Sunday

Ganett admits readership of The Record, NorthJersey,com dropped dramatically after takeover

Staffers at The Record, two other Gannett dailies are trying to join a union


Sunday, May 2, 2021

In repeat of 2017 election, the Zisa family is trying to return to power in Hackensack

CAMPAIGNING THROUGH THE MAIL: Candidates in the non-partisan municipal election on May 11 are appealing to voters through the mail, above, and on social media.


Taxes, redevelopment 
debated by 15 candidates   
as campaign turns nasty
 

By VICTOR E. SASSON

EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- It's deja vu all over again in the non-partisan City Council election on May 11.

Just as in the May 2017 election, Mayor John Labrosse is leading one of three slates of 5 candidates, and the infamous Zisa family is backing one of the other slates in yet another bid to return to power.

Historically, the May municipal election has been greeted with a collective yawn from Hackensack's largely lazy, stupid and apathetic registered voters.

Same goes for the April election to choose members of the Board of Education, but that election has been moved to November, meaning voters will no longer be able to say "yes" or "no" on the school budget. 

And some of the candidates in the May 11 election  have themselves failed to vote in council elections, according to a NorthJersey.com reporter, Terence T. McDonald.

I'm voting for no tax hike

As a homeowner in Hackensack since 2007, I'm voting for the slate headed by Mayor Labrosse, who pledged to hold the line on raising municipal taxes for 5 years.

We're now in the third year of that pledge, and the city isn't raising the municipal portion of the property tax bill despite the fiscal strain of the Covid-19 pandemic, Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino said.

And in the last few years, an extensive program of repaving local streets -- including Prospect Avenue and my block, which hadn't been touched in nearly 3 decades -- addressed a major quality of life issue. 

A third major accomplishment is the nearly completed conversion of Main Street to two-way traffic, as it was in the city's heyday, when Hackensack was a shopping and entertainment mecca.

That involved the replacement of 2,450 feet of water main, as well as lead service lines carrying water to homes and businesses, by SUEZ, the water company, which had hoped to complete the work by mid-February, not Christmas 2020, as I wrote originally.

The work is now complete, but not all of the repaved and restriped streets were open to traffic yet.

Main campaign issues

The campaign is being conducted largely through fliers sent to voters' homes and on social media.

Property taxes, redevelopment and affordable housing are among the major issues, and the campaign has turned nasty.

Canestrino said Hackensack already has 500 affordable housing units, and will provide 60 more in a building that will go up on a city owned parking lot near headquarters of the Fire Department on State Street.

The building will have about 200 market-rate units in addition to the 60 apartments for people with low to moderate incomes.

The city also has reached a settlement with the non-profit Fair Share Housing Center that will see the addition of hundreds of new affordable housing units.

Developers in a 108-acre zone will be required to set aside 10% of residential units as affordable housing.

More tax revenue

Meanwhile, developers of more than a dozen new apartment projects under construction in and near downtown will be paying more in taxes annually than the properties yielded before they changed hands, Canestrino said.

The projects are being built under New Jersey's tax-abatement program, providing payments in lieu of taxes, also known as PILOTs, in communities like Hackensack that are most in need of rehabilitation.

Tax abatements are necessary, city officials say, because Hackensack "does not have a track record of successful significant residential developments in the downtown or riverfront corridor."

"Hackensack will gain $10 million in new annual tax revenue" once the development plan is complete, the Labrosse Team said.

In a campaign flier, Mayor Labrosse labeled as "a Big Lie" his opponents' claim that "developers will pay no taxes for 30 years." 

As an example, 150 Main St., a 14-story apartment building that anchors downtown redevelopment, will be paying $844,847 in annual tax revenue, compared to $237,499 before.

Other examples appear in the Comments section at the end of this post.

Candidates' voting records

"Eleven of the 15 council hopefuls have not voted in at least one city election in the last three cycles [2017, 2013 and 2009], and four of them, have missed two of the last three rounds of municipal balloting,"  according to voting records reviewed by North Jersey.com and The Record.

"[Deputy Mayor] David Sims declined to say why candidates on his ticket did not vote and called NorthJersey.com's inquiry 'offensive and ridiculous.'"

"'Not a single resident with whom we have spoken has asked us about our voting histories,'" Sims wrote in an email cited by the reporter.


UNMASKING THE ZISAS: The slate headed by Mayor John Labrosse sent out this flier reminding residents what Hackensack was like when the Zisas and their allies were in power. Former Mayor Jack Zisa, left, and his brother, disgraced former Police Chief Ken Zisa, are shown.


Three slates

In the May 11 municipal election, Mayor Labrosse is leading three other City Council incumbents and a newcomer as he seeks a third 4-year term.

Sims, the deputy mayor who was dumped from the Labrosse team for violating the Covid-19 lockdown at City Hall on Dec. 22, 2020, formed a second slate and  enlisted the support of the Zisa family.

The family's allies are running with him or serving as his spokesman.

Sims brought his married daughter, who had tested positive for Covid-19, into City Hall, and they interacted with a city employee, who was sent home to quarantine for 14 days.

Sims has served on the City Council since 2013, when he, Labrosse and three others won election on a reform platform after decades of rule by the Zisa family or its allies.

A third slate of candidates is led by Leila T. Amirhamzeh, development director of New Jersey Citizen Action and a former member of the Hackensack Board of Education.

Welcome to 'Zisaville'

The Zisa family's decades-long grip on Hackensack turned the city into a laughing stock called "Zisaville."

Jack Zisa, the former 4-term mayor (1989-2005), tried to return to power in the 2017 City Council election by backing a 5-member slate, just as he is doing now.

In 2010, more than a decade after he stepped down as mayor, Jack Zisa acquired a Main Street building in a sweetheart deal that generated nearly $400,000 in leasing fees annually from the Bergen County Special Services School District.

In a campaign flier, Mayor Labrosse says "there are millions of reasons why the Zisa family wants to control Hackensack again."

Labrosse says:

  • Ex-Police Chief Ken Zisa is suing taxpayers for $30 million, and hopes to be appointed public safety director.
  • Jack Zisa made a fortune selling insurance contracts "when the Zisa machine ran the city."
  • "When they were thrown out in 2013, Main Street was a ghost town and the city was wracked with scandals and corruption."

The Zisa family

Jack Zisa's father, the late Frank Zisa, served 16 years on the City Council and as mayor for one term (1977-81); his brother, Ken, the disgraced former police chief, also was elected to the state Assembly; and another brother, Frank Jr., was deputy police chief under Ken.

Their cousin, Joseph C. Zisa Jr., was the city attorney for many years, and didn't see any conflict in approving the payment of hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees to lawyers who represented police officers and others who sued Ken Zisa in his public roles.

Allies of the Zisa family also controlled the city's Board of Education for many years, when school budgets ballooned.

Today, school taxes represent more than 45% of the property tax bill paid by every home and commercial building owner in Hackensack.

(By the way, Hackensack residents must pay their second-quarter taxes by Monday, May 10, the day before the election.)


MASKED CANDIDATES: In campaign material sent to homes, members of the slate led by Deputy Mayor David Sims are shown wearing masks, a bit odd considering Sims was censured for violating the Covid-19 lockdown at City Hall when he brought his grown daughter, who had tested positive for the coronavirus, into the building and interacted with a city employee. 

VOTING BY MAIL-IN BALLOT: "For Hackensack's Future," the slate of candidates led by former Board of Education member Leila T. Amirhamzeh, is in Column 1 on the May 11 ballot, left; Deputy Mayor David Sims and "The Coalition for Clean Government" is in Column 2, center; and "Labrosse Team '21" is in Column 3.


'Labrosse Team '21'

Mayor John Labrosse and his running mates -- who call themselves Labrosse Team '21 on Facebook -- are campaigning under a banner of "lower taxes and honest government."
  • Labrosse, who has served as mayor since 2013, takes credit for being "the driving force leading the city forward to its current renaissance."
  • Deputy Mayor Kathleen Canestrino "is directly responsible for nearly $1 billion in new real estate development coming to Hackensack, creating millions of dollars in new tax revenue."
  • Councilman Leo Battaglia, a native of Ecuador,  founded the Hackensack Junior Soccer Program; helped oversee expansion of the M&M Recreation Center and Johnson Park Sports Dome projects; and worked to repave many local streets.
  • Newcomer Gerard Carroll, who replaces Deputy Mayor David Sims, is a retired educator who has been "deeply involved in local sports programs and community organizations ... and the NAACP."
  • Councilwoman Stephanie Von Rudenborg, who has a law degree and master's in special education, is a mother of 3 children in city schools and has overseen the Community Garden; improvements at Foschini and Staib parks; and other  projects.
On Labrosse's ticket, the mayor and Canestrino voted in the last three city elections, according to The Record, but incumbents Stephanie Von Rudenborg and Leo Battaglia missed one each, and newcomer Gerard Carroll didn't vote in 2009 or in 2013.

'Coalition for Clean Government'

Deputy Mayor David Sims, who has the backing of the Zisa family in their bid to regain control of the City Council, is calling his slate "The Coalition for Clean Government."

The slate's campaign material says, "It's time to clean up Hackensack City Hall." They are:  
  • Sims, a member of the City Council since 2013, has served as liaison to the Recreation Board, Sanitation Department and Department of Public Works. He founded the Hackensack Junior Basketball League.
  • Modesto Romero is "a local business owner" and ally of the Zisa family who has served on the city's Board of Education.
  • Frederic C. Miller, who with his wife Diana recently became a Hackensack homeowner, is employed by the Ford Motor Co.
  • Venus Nelson, a lifelong city resident, is chairwoman of the city's Rent Stabilization Board and a member of Mount Olive Baptist Church.
  •  Carlos I. Merino, a long-time resident of Hackensack, is a former member of the news media who "worked to defend individuals and companies from computer hackers and breaches of electronic security."

In campaign fliers, an embittered Sims launches several personal and professional attacks on Mayor Labrosse.

As head of a slate challenging the incumbents, Sims portrays himself as "clean," but what about the years he served besides Labrosse? 

Wasn't he and the rest of the council "clean" then, too, or or was he the only "clean" one?

The Record says Sims' slate has the worst track record on voting, with Modesto Romero and Fred Miller missing one of the last three city races, and Carlos Merino and Venus Nelson missing two each.


MORE ZISA INFLUENCE: Campaign material sent to homes by For Hackensack's Future, headed by Leila T. Amirhamzeh, who was elected to the city Board of Education in 2017 with the support of the Zisa family's Team Hackensack. Caseen Gaines, another candidate on the slate, was campaign manager for Hackensack United for Progress, "a group with ties to the Zisa family," The Record reported in February.

'For Hackensack's Future'

Leila T. Amirhamzeh, a former member of the city's Board of Education (2017-20), is leading the third slate in the May 11 election under the banner of "For Hackensack's Future."  

On the slate's Facebook page, Amirhamzeh says:

"Downtown redevelopment should benefit the entire city. The Labrosse Team and Deputy Mayor Sims are proud of their record of rubber-stamping tax giveaways to developers -- while ... rents keep going up.

"Just like all of us, developers should pay their fair share -- and make meaningful contributions to our community. We all deserve to get our money's worth, so Hackensack can be the vibrant city it has the potential to be."

Other member of her slate are: 
  • Clarence "Randy" Glover, chairman and executive director of Tri-Arc Community Development Corp., which sponsors food pantries in Hackensack, Englewood and Teaneck, and is a member of the NAACP.
  • Andee Post, a Realtor, has been active in the Parents Teachers Association and Girl Scouts, and is a member of the Hackensack Chamber of Commerce.
  • Caseen Gaines, a teacher and theater director at Hackensack High School, is co-founder of the Hackensack Theater Company.
  • Mary Lopez, a former stage and television actress, has worked in the pharmaceutical industry for 17 years, and is co-ower of a skin-care company. 

As for their voting record, Amirhamzeh missed the 2009 and 2013 city elections, Glover didn't vote in 2013; Post and Gaines voted in all three of the past municipal elections; and Lopez, who moved to Hackensack in 2018, didn't vote in any, according to The Record.

If you don't vote by mail -- the most convenient way to exercise your right -- polls will be open on May 11 from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.