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North Bergen flea market returns

Residents shop the various wares at the flea market. Photo by Art Schwartz.

The North Bergen monthly flea market and collectible fair is back, a local staple since its launch and subsequent popularity in 2018.

This year the market will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the third Saturday of every month, except for September, when the market will be held on the third Sunday.

Dates include July 17, August 21, Sept. 19, Oct. 16, Nov. 20, and Dec. 18.

The market is on the sidewalk of Bergenline Ave. outside Braddock Park between 90th and 79th Streets. Find new items, secondhand treasures, collectibles, vintage items, craftwork, and more.

The flea market is hosted by North Bergen Community Policing. Proceeds are donated to the Special Olympics.

Farmers Markets opening too?

North Bergen is also preparing to open its farmers markets soon.

The Braddock Park Farmers Market is looking for new vendors. Email [email protected] for more information.

The market will be held Thursdays, 5 to 7 p.m. beginning the end of June. The official start date and more information will be announced.

It’s not clear yet if the Friends & Family Farmers Market in front of Stan Newman Field, across 64th Street from the Recreation Center will return this year. The market launched in 2019 on the last Saturday of every month during summer and fall.

For more information, visit northbergen.org or check official social media pages.

For updates on this and other stories, check www.hudsonreporter.com and follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Daniel Israel can be reached at [email protected].

Pompidou or ‘Pompidon’t?’

The Pathside Building in Journal Square is set to become the Centre Pompidou × Jersey City museum by 2024. Photo provided by the City of Jersey City.

The Jersey City Council adopted a resolution approving a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the city and French museum Centre Pompidou that would open a location in Journal Square.

But councilmembers and members of the public were apprehensive about the price tag associated with getting the new museum up and running.

“I’m absolutely appalled by this Pompidou thing. I think it should be called Pompidon’t,” said resident Jeanne Daly. “We can’t even afford our school budget. Why are we spending money on this vanity project?”

According to the agreement, Jersey City would pay about $5.6 million for the first three phases of the project.

The first phase will cost approximately $285,000. In this four-month phase, staff based in Paris will be recruited to operationally support the Pathside Project, as the city, JCRA, and Pompidou create a plan for the museum.

In the 10-month second phase, which will cost approximately $1,9 million, Centre Pompidou will create the organizational structure and  governance as well as a broad business plan for the new museum. In this phase the Centre Pompidou will help create a high-level capability  building plan, educational programs, an audience development  roadmap, and communication strategy.

During the approximately, $3.3 million third phase the  Centre  Pompidou  will  help  JCRA  prepare  for  the grand  opening.

During the 15-month phase, Centre Pompidou will “further detail deliverables  handled  during  Phase  2” and  assist  with recruitment and staff from the Centre Pompidou to run training and coaching sessions  for future local teams.

Phase four will  start with  the  opening  of  the artistic and  cultural  hub. Over the next five years the city will pay Centre Pompidou approximately $5.9 million per year.

$$$***!!!

This $5.9 million includes a yearly branding fee of $2.3 million for the right of use of the name “Centre Pompidou,”  a  yearly  fee  of  about $653,000 for  the Centre Pompidou’s expertise and consulting, a yearly fee of about $2 million for  works and contribution to the organization of exhibitions, and a yearly fee of approximately $831,000 for HR contributions.

Those annual fees could decrease over the five-year deal with the Pompidou, according to the MOU, but if the city were to pay the $5.9 million per year, that would amount to a total of about $30 million over the five-year time period not including money for the first three phases to get the project off the ground.

The above costs do not include the “material dimensions” of the exhibits, according to the MOU, including  transportation, insurance, copyrights and related promotion  rights, maintenance, or programming for performing arts; all of which the city or JCRA will pay for separately.

Nor do the costs cover renovations to the Pathside Building where the new museum will be located, which, according to council documents, could cost an estimated $15 million.

According to the city, the deal with Centre Pompidou could be offset with developer contributions and ticket sales, but as Councilman James Solomon pointed out, so far, the council has no idea what that looks like.

Solomon said “I’ve been very sort of torn on this issue,” before voting to adopt the MOU, noting that the city would now have six months to finalize an agreement with Centre Pompidou which should include more financial data and analysis.

Councilman Rolando Lavarro also said that so far there has been no financial analysis for the project showing how the new museum would benefit the city.

He said that when the city purchased the property in 2018 for $10 million, he was told the city could sell it for $25 million and receive a profit, but “With this $15 million, we are now essentially exceeding that $25 million cost,” Lavarro said

He said the city needs to get its priorities in order, noting that the money could be used for necessities such as school funding.

“This is again a vanity project we can’t afford,” Lavarro. said. “It is not to say we shouldn’t have it. We should have beautiful things. We should have beautiful art … but we have to get our priorities straight here.”

Lavarro was the lone dissenting vote. The resolution supporting the MOU was adopted 8-1.

For updates on this and other stories follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Marilyn Baer can be reached at [email protected].

Art House Productions Announces New Board Leadership

Robinson Holloway, Incoming Board President of Art House Productions

Art House Productions, Jersey City’s home for the performing and visual arts for the past 20 years, has announced a transition of the leadership of its board of trustees. David Gibson, current board president, stepped down on June 13 after ten years on the board and seven years as president. The board has unanimously appointed Robinson Holloway to succeed Gibson as president.

“I’m thrilled to pass the torch to Robinson Holloway. She will be a stellar Art House leader through an exciting period in its history, as it takes up residence in a grand new home right in the heart of Jersey City,” says Gibson.

“David has led Art House through four different locations, successfully helped the organization manage the transition from founder to successor, and oversaw tremendous financial growth during his time as President of the Art House Board of Trustees. He’s leaving the organization at a time of great promise and in the very capable hands of Robinson Holloway. We’re all excited about what’s next for Art House under Robinson’s leadership, and are incredibly grateful for David’s service,” says Meredith Burns, Art House’s Executive Director.

“David Gibson has set a remarkable leadership example, and I am honored to be a part of the Art House Productions team as we move forward into our third decade,” says Holloway. “We’re in a period of exciting growth for the arts right now, as well as recognition of the importance of the arts as both a societal and economic engine. Art House is a unique arts organization, with strength in all disciplines, and its ability to engage both artists and audiences will only increase as we emerge from the pandemic and open our new theater and gallery space.”

Holloway began her career in sports journalism. Thanks to a tidy sum of money won on “Jeopardy!” when she was 22, she successfully pivoted from graduate studies in Medieval History to a career covering the PGA Tour. She started in print journalism for The Independent and other British newspapers, as well as at Sports Illustrated, and then moved to television, working for ABC Sports, ESPN and Golf Channel.

She transitioned to a career in the arts after founding and directing two non-profit art galleries, including Village West Gallery in Jersey City. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the London-based Association of Women Art Dealers, and is a member of ArtTable and the International Women’s Forum.

She was the founding Chair of the Board of Directors for the Jersey City Arts Council, and created Art Fair 14C while at the JCAC, stepping down from her role at the Arts Council in 2018 to run Art Fair 14C as its pro bono Executive Director. She currently serves as the Vice President for Communications for the Village Neighborhood Association in Jersey City.

Gibson is the co-founder of the New York City design consultancy known as Two Twelve. Mr. Gibson is internationally recognized as an advocate of “public information design” and for his work on behalf of cities, institutions, and corporations over the past forty-one years, since Two Twelve’s founding. He was named Fellow of SEGD in 2009.

He has served on the Art House Board of Trustees since 2011, succeeding Alicia Wright as Board President in 2014. Looking forward, he will be dividing his time between Jersey City and Rome, Italy where he and his husband are relocating.

The Art House Board of Trustees includes Joseph Bonifaz, Jeanne Brasile, Brad Fay, Michael Griffiths, Cynthia A. Hadjiyannis, Rachel Handler, Robinson Holloway, Annie Kessler, Michelle Lewis-Bellamy, Kristin Mountford, Sophie Penkrat, Jim Peskin, Erin Leigh Pierson, Shriti Rath, Mary Snyder, and Alysis Vasquez. The Art House Access Committee includes Krystle Allen, Millie Gonzalez, Rachel Handler, Stephanie Lubalin, John McGinty, and Colleen Roche. The Art House/NJCU Junior Board includes Tammy Brobeck, Tyvera Bryant, Alexis M. Castaneda, Zhnai Davis, Nicholas Geosits, Danette E. Sheppard-Vaughn, and Nelson Solis.

Art House Productions is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization committed to the development and presentation of the performing and visual arts in Jersey City, NJ. Art House Productions presents theater, performing and visual arts festivals, art exhibitions, and provides adult and youth art classes.

Art House Productions is generously supported by The New Jersey State Council on the Arts, SILVERMAN, The Princeton Foundation, The New Jersey Theatre Alliance, The Hudson County Office of Cultural Affairs, and the Alliance of Resident Theatres / New York.

Art House Productions is committed to accessibility and inclusivity in all public programming. Art House Productions produces work with a shrewd sense of social responsibility. For more information about Art House Productions, please visit our website at www.arthouseproductions.org. Follow us on social media @arthouseproductions @arthouseprods. To sign up for Art House’s mailing list, please click here: http://eepurl.com/hd1FCj.

Guttenberg Arts Gallery presents Long Story Short

Guttenberg Arts Gallery presents Long Story Short, an exhibition of work by Dahlia Elsayed, on view from July 8 to August 8th at the Guttenberg Arts Gallery with an opening reception on Thursday July 8, 7 – 9 p.m.

Guttenberg Arts Gallery is open by appointment only Tuesday – Saturday, 10a.m. – 4 p.m. and virtually on their website. Patrons can schedule their visit or view the virtual gallery by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions.

The exhibition consists of a recent series of ceramic sculpture dioramas by Dahlia Elsayed. She explains, “The small-scale sculptures conjure figures or architectural shapes and are arranged together within colorful graphic backgrounds, suggesting dreamy and strange landscapes.”

Dahlia Elsayed is an artist and writer who makes text and image based work that synthesizes an internal and external experience of place, connecting the ephemeral to the concrete. She writes short fictions for created landscapes that take the form of narrative paintings, print and installation.

Her work has been exhibited at galleries and institutions throughout the United States and internationally, including the 12th Cairo Biennale, Robert Miller Gallery, BravinLee Programs, The New Jersey State Museum and Aljira Center for Contemporary Art. Her work is in the public collections of the Newark Museum, the Zimmerli Museum, Johnson & Johnson Corporation, the US Department of State, amongst others. Dahlia has received awards from the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the Edward Albee Foundation, Visual Studies Workshop, the MacDowell Colony, Women’s Studio Workshop, Headlands Center for the Arts, and the NJ State Council on the Arts.

She received her MFA from Columbia University, and lives and works in New Jersey. Ms. Elsayed is Professor of Humanities at CUNY LaGuardia Community College in Long Island City, NY.

Schedule your visit by going to www.guttenbergarts.org/exhibitions. For more information please contact [email protected] or 201-868-8585. To view more work by Dahlia Elsayed, please visit https://dahliaelsayed.com/.

Guttenberg Art Gallery is free and open to the public by appointment only. Guttenberg Arts programming is made possible by a grant from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a division of the Department of State, and administered by the Hudson County Office of Cultural & Heritage Affairs, Thomas a. Degise, Hudson County Executive & the Hudson County Board of Chosen Freeholders.

North Bergen municipal pool opening soon

Make a splash this summer!

The North Bergen municipal pool will be open to North Bergen residents only beginning Saturday, June 26, Mayor Nicholas Sacco and Parks Commissioner Hugo Cabrera have announced.

Like last year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there will be no annual memberships. Instead, the township will issue daily passes for individual three-hour sessions.

The first session will run from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. This will be for seniors only ages 62 and older. Admission is free; no younger guests. Only the lap pool will be open.

The second session will run from 12:45 to 3:45 p.m. The third session will run from 4 to 7 p.m. During these times, the pool will be open to all ages.

Register in advance

Residents must register in advance using the online pool portal at https://etrak-ne1.com/etrak/portal?org=26. After entering the required information, registrants will receive an approval confirmation. This may take a day or two to process.

Registered users must sign up through the portal for a specific time period. Signup will be allowed for sessions within the next 24 hours only, one session per day. Residents must sign up online. No walkups will be allowed.

The cost is $5 per adult, ages 16 and up; $4 per child; and $3 per senior for the afternoon and evening sessions. Kids under one year are free.

For updates on this and other stories, check www.hudsonreporter.com and follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Daniel Israel can be reached at [email protected].

North Bergen judge faces judicial complaint for an alleged groping incident

Falcone was arrested and charged with criminal sexual contact, but the case was dismissed after his cooperation with the Pretrial Intervention Program.

Nino Falcone, a part-time municipal court judge in North Bergen, now faces additional charges stemming from an allegation that he groped a woman at his private office two years ago.

Falcone faces a four-count criminal complaint from the Supreme Court of New Jersey’s Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct.

According to the complaint brought by ACJC, Falcone violated four canons of the state’s Code of Judicial Conduct “which requires judges to observe high standards of conduct so that the integrity and independence of the Judiciary may be preserved;” “which requires judges to respect and comply with the law;” “which requires judges to avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety and to act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the Judiciary;” and “which requires judges to conduct their extrajudicial activities in a manner that would not demean the judicial office.”

The complaint continues: “By his treatment of A.C. as detailed above, resulting in a charge of criminal sexual contact… [Falcone] demonstrated a failure to conform his conduct to the high standards of conduct expected of judges and impugned the integrity of the Judiciary.”

He knew her

Faclone was first charged by the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office in 2019 with criminal sexual contact in relation to an incident that occurred in his law office. Falcone, 78 at the time, was arrested after allegations that he grabbed a woman’s breast without her consent.

To preserve her identity, she is referred to in the court documents only by her initials: A.C. Falcone knew A.C. and had represented her in personal matters in the past, the complaint said.

The alleged incident occurred at his private law office at 7807 Bergenline Ave, the complaint said. A.C. went to Falcone’s office around August 19, 2019, on behalf of her employer, a physician with whom Falcone had a professional relationship for years.

Groping alleged

According to the complaint, after discussing business with Falcone, A.C. attempted to leave his office. But Falcone allegedly pulled her into him and began rubbing her back.

A.C. tried to push Falcone away, but he held her arm, squeezed her breast, and told her to “let me touch you, let me play with you,” the complaint said.

As she continued to push him away, Falcone allegedly grabbed A.C.’s wrist. He then released her wrist, and offered her what he allegedly called “birthday money.” A.C. refused, left, and returned to her employer’s office, according to the complaint.

A.C. told her employer, coworkers, and husband following the incident. According to the complaint, A.C. and her husband went to the Teaneck Police Department, which referred the case to the HCPO.

Caught on recording

Using a recorded undercover telephone line in a station house interview room, A.C. placed a call to Falcone, according to the complaint. During their conversation, he allegedly admitted to A.C. that he touched her “inappropriately” and apologized to her.

Falcone was arrested and charged on September 12, 2019, by complaint summons with one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact. After being processed, he was released.

Falcone was suspended without pay in 2019. He retired in August of 2020, according to the Township.

In March of 2020, Falcone was admitted into the Pretrial Intervention Program (PTI). After complying with the conditions of PTI, the matter was dismissed.

The complaint from the ACJC breathes new life into the case.

For updates on this and other stories, check www.hudsonreporter.com and follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Daniel Israel can be reached at [email protected].

Kennedy Dancers Inner City Youth Pre-Professional Program featured at the Hispanic Youth Showcase

The troupe will perform choreography from Kathryn Reese and feature dancers Ebone Verde and Joyce Najm Navarro. Both dancers are 17 years of age and have been students of The Kennedy Dancers Inner City Youth Pre-Professional Training Program for the past three years.

The show will air worldwide on NJPAC Online, Thursday June 17, 2021 at 6:00PM

 See the stars of tomorrow shine in this unique, multi-disciplinary showcase featuring many of New Jersey’s finest young Hispanic dancers, musicians, and singers.  The program is held at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC) in Newark and has propelled its winners to successful careers as recording artists, Broadway actors, and movie stars.

William Sánchez serves as the executive producer/director of Images/Imágenes, a cultural and public affairs show. His work on Images / Imágenes and the Hispanic Youth Showcase, a talent competition for New Jersey’s Latino youth, has garnered Mr. Sánchez multiple Emmy awards. He also received an Emmy for his work on Sembrando El Futuro, a television special focused on parenting skills for the Latino community.

Diane Dragone is the founding director/choreographer/teacher for the Kennedy Dancers Repertory Company and the Kennedy Dancers School since 1977. The Kennedy Dancers is a non-profit corp.  Diane Dragone created the Dance curriculum for the Hudson County Schools of Technology. She taught the gifted and talented and special education dance programs at Hudson County High Tech and Hudson County prep schools as well as classes at the Hudson County Juvenile Detention center. She was also a returning guest teacher of dance at Hudson County Community College. Ms. Dragone is a certified teacher of dance in the state of New Jersey. During her career she has performed and created countless choreographies for many regional dance, theater, and opera companies.

The Kennedy Dancers have performed in over 400 grammar schools, high schools, and universities and performed in theaters up and down the eastern seaboard including the White House as well as U.S.O. tours.  The Kennedy Dancers are 6-time award winners of Citations of excellence from New Jersey State Council on the Arts. Artistic Director Diane Dragone is the executive producer of the 8-time award winning cable television program “Dance Vista” seen on assorted cable television systems throughout and beyond 22 states.

Sacco reiterates support for Palisades Cliffs Protection Act

Buildings abut the Palisades in North Bergen. Photo by Robert Walden.

North Bergen Mayor and State Senator Nicholas Sacco has reiterated his support for the Palisades Cliffs Protection Act. It came at a Board of Commissioners meeting in late May, following the board’s approval of a settlement agreement regarding a development application in Edgewater.

Sacco said that he and State Senator and Union City Mayor Brian Stack are working on legislation to protect the views in all municipalities along the Palisades Cliffs, including Jersey City, Guttenberg, Union City, Weehawken, West New York, North Bergen, Edgewater, Cliffside Park, and Fort Lee. The duo introduced the bill in December, but it is still in committee.

“The threat is not over, regarding the destruction of the Palisades by neighboring communities, mainly Edgewater,” Sacco said. 

Protecting historic views

Prior to the settlement, the development would have exceeded the height of the Palisades, blocking views of the New York City skyline from North Bergen residents. The settlement saw the developer lower the height of the proposed development to below the Palisades cliff line, protecting views of the New York City skyline in North Bergen.

The lowest point of the Palisades in the nearby area of the development in Edgewater is 178 feet high. The development has shrunk to 152 feet, according to Sacco, which is now below the cliff line.

“We can look over, and everyone in this area can see the skyline,” Sacco said.

Sacco said they persuaded the developer Tom Heagney, who was “very reasonable,” to settle without a drawn-out court battle. 

He reiterated his support for the joint legislation he introduced with Senator Stack, arguing that the threat to the Palisades is growing. 

Stack decries ‘outrageous structures’

In March, Stack reiterated his support for curbing the heights of buildings below the Palisades Cliffs.

“If you visit Firefighters Memorial Park on 9th Street and Palisade Avenue, Washington Park, or live in Union City, you know the views of New York City and the Hudson River are amazing,” Stack said. … “Over the years the Commissioners and I have strongly opposed the construction of outrageous structures that have attempted to be built below Union City which would come directly in front of the Palisade Cliffs destroying our views, but more importantly, our quality of life.”

According to Stack, some communities on the waterfront, such as Weehawken, have been cooperative in keeping structures below the cliff line, while others have not.

“Hoboken has allowed the construction of a building on 9th Street to be visible on Congress Street in Jersey City without any regard for the direct impact it would have on the residents of Jersey City,” Stack said.

Stack said that he and the Union City Board of Commissioners will continue to work with officials in the municipalities below the Palisades Cliff to ensure that views or the quality of life is not disrupted. If that does not prove effective, Stack said he will bring the matter to the courts.

Union City has attempted to address the issue by limiting new construction to four stories, with the exception of a few redevelopment areas “where the development would bring other benefits to the residents of Union City.”

Hoboken council disapproves

The proposed legislation has sparked backlash in Hoboken. The city council adopted a last-minute addition to the agenda on Jan. 6 opposing the proposed Palisade Cliffs Protection Act.

According to the council, the act would limit Hoboken’s control over its land use, which could negatively impact all economic, housing, and public safety decisions.

Some city council members pointed out the “irony” of the act’s intent to “preserve the views and topography features of the Palisades” given “the recent practices in the towns of each of the sponsoring Senators/Mayors where portions of the Palisades have literally been gutted entirely to accommodate projects built directly into the same cliffs these bills state they are trying to protect.” One project cited is the Hoboken Heights development in Union City.

Despite the push in recent months by the two Hudson County mayors and state senators, the bill is still in committee awaiting further legislative approvals.

For updates on this and other stories, check www.hudsonreporter.com and follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Daniel Israel can be reached at [email protected].

Little Free Library coming to WNY

Little Free Library's book exchanges are heading to WNY parks this June.

Little Free Library book exchanges are coming to all West New York parks beginning the first week of June, Mayor Gabriel Rodriguez and the Board of Commissioners announced.

Little Free Library (LFL) is a nonprofit organization that aims to improve book access by fostering neighborhood book exchange boxes around the world in hopes of inspiring a love of reading and building community. 

The LFL received the 2020 World Literacy Award and has been recognized by the Library of Congress, the National Book Foundation, and others for its dedication to expanding book access. For more information, go to LittleFreeLibrary.org

The LFL’s is the world’s largest book exchange program with over 100,000 units in over 100 countries. West New York will now join the movement to share books, bring people together, and create a community of readers.

‘Take a book and share a book’

“Little Free Library is a great community program that we are proud to be a part of,” said Rodriguez. “Encouraging our residents to read, come together as a community, and spend time at our beautiful parks is a win any way you look at it. We want our residents to take a book and share a book with their neighbors.”

West New York will provide residents with the first round of books, from early childhood books to novels for adults. Providing various genres will allow readers to find a books that they enjoy while allowing them to share another book that another resident can fall in love with.

“Book sharing is a great way to bring people together and create a sense of community,” said Commissioner Victor M. Barrera. “We are confident that this program will bring our residents closer together and allow them to enjoy a new experience by reading and sharing books with their neighbors.”

“After being approached by Commissioner Barrera, I could not have been happier to hear that our great community will be able to become even more connected through the Little Free Libraries,” added Commissioner Cosmo Cirillo. “Reading is an amazing way to learn and indulge in a new story that they may have never heard about if it was not for the Little Free Library program.”

For more information about West New York’s LFL book exchanges and other community programs, visit www.westnewyorknj.org.

For updates on this and other stories, check www.hudsonreporter.com and follow us on Twitter @hudson_reporter. Daniel Israel can be reached at [email protected].

Kennedy Dancers’ Annual Dance School Recital will be broadcast on TV

The Kennedy Dancers, Inc., and Artistic Director Diane Dragone have announced the dates for their upcoming 2021 Annual Dance School Recital.

Due to COVID-19 and the lack of available indoor performance spaces, the recital will be broadcast on television across 22 states and locally on Verizon 43, Comcast 97, and Time Warner Cable 3.

Showing dates and times in early July to be announced.

The recital will be filmed on June 18th and 19th at our studio at 79 Central Avenue, Jersey City.

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