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Sparking debate

Wood burns in a fire pit, by Shutterstock.

Weehawken has moved to ban wood-burning fires in outdoor fire pits, following numerous complaints.

The Weehawken Township Council introduced an ordinance banning the practice at the virtual council meeting on Oct. 29. According to Mayor Richard Turner, residents can still have outdoor fires using gas or propane.

Embers and smoke

Turner said some residents had complained about the smoke, many of them with lung conditions such as asthma. Embers have also raised concerns about spreading fire.

“Given the density we have, we feel very strongly in favor of this ordinance,” said Turner who noted that complaints have been on the rise.

Resident Roger Desmond asked if the ordinance banned indoor wood burning fires, too, considering they create smoke just like those in outdoor fire pits.

Turner responded that only fires burning in outdoor pits are prohibited under the proposed ordinance.

Fireplaces and cigarettes?

According to Desmond, indoor burning in indoor fireplaces and cigarettes create embers, and the ordinance should ban those as well.

Turner said that they’ve never had complaints about embers from chimneys and that many fireplaces have protective devices to prevent the spread of embers. Turner noted that the council does not have the authority to ban cigarette smoking.

Desmond noted that currently, if a neighbor complains about a wood- burning fire in a pit, the fire department arrives and asks that the fire be put out. He questioned how that differs from the ordinance.

Turner said the township is passing the ordinance, so the fire department doesn’t have to deal with the issue on a case-by-case basis.

When Desmond said that charcoal grills created embers and smoke and should be banned, too, Turner told him to save it for the public hearing for the ordinance in November.

Years of complaints

Another resident said his neighbor had frequently burned anything and everything in a fire pit, which caused frequent issues with embers.

Whenever the man complained, the fire department told him that it was the neighbor’s right to have a fire in his backyard.

Turner said that prior to the proposed ordinance, residents were allowed to burn wood in a fire pit in their backyards, but that they needed to be responsible. Since many residents were not being responsible, the township took action.

According to Turner, Weehawken has been trying to control the problem for years.

Turner said the township is looking to initiate eminent domain on that man’s neighbor, due to the neighbor’s reckless behavior; his house had apparently burned down numerous times.

A public hearing on the ordinance may be held at the next council meeting on Nov. 5. For more information, visit weehawken-nj.us.

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].

West New York bonds for improvements

West New York Town Hall via Google Maps

At the West New York Board of Commissioners meeting on Oct. 15, two bond ordinances were adopted that finance various improvements, including to the parking utility. The ordinances authorize the issuance of bonds to finance the costs not covered by grant funding.

Commissioners Victor Barrera, Cosmo Cirillo, Margarita Guzman, Yoleisy Yanez, and Mayor Gabriel Rodriguez voted unanimously to approve the renovations.

Bankrolling the upgrades

The capital improvements total $6,825,000.

The ordinance bonded $4,527,880 to cover part of the estimated cost. The rest will be financed by various grants totaling $2,297,120.

A total of $514,500 in Green Acres grant funding is expected to be received from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the Garden State Preservation Trust.

Funds are expected to include $757,980 from fiscal year 2019, and $828,390 from fiscal year 2020 Municipal Aid Grants expected to be received from the Department of Transportation.

The town will put several down payments from the Capital Improvement Fund to finance the improvements for a total of $196,250. For bond ordinances, a down payment of no less than five percent must be appropriated to help finance the total cost.

A better Bergenline

The ordinance primarily finances streetscape improvements to Bergenline Avenue from 57th Street to the Guttenberg border for an estimated $1,7000,000. The town bonded $1,615,000 for the improvements with an $85,000 down payment from the Capital Improvement Fund.

In August, West New York announced its Bergenline Avenue Revitalization Project, including street and sidewalk resurfacing from Bergenline Avenue and 49th Street to Bergenline Avenue and 56th Street. This ordinance finances improvements for the rest of Bergenline Avenue in West New York, from 57th Street to 67th Street.

A major expense is $2,000,000 for reconstruction and resurfacing of various streets and roads. A total of $1,586,370 in federal grants will go toward the cost of the resurfacing. The town bonded $413,630 to finance the remainder of the cost.

Town-wide improvements

The ordinance finances improvements to the Port Imperial walkway for an estimated $900,000. The Green Acres grant will fund $514,500 of the cost. The town bonded $385,500 to finance the rest.

Also financed is the acquisition of motor vehicles, other than passenger cars and station wagons, including SUVs for Department of Public Works and other municipal services for an estimated $550,000. The town bonded $522,500 to finance the acquisition, with a down payment of $27,500 from the Capital Improvement Fund.

The ordinance bonds $470,000 for improvements to various streets including road markings, sidewalk repair, and tree removal. The town bonded $446,500 and put a down payment of $23,500 from the Capital Improvement Fund to cover the cost.

Improvements to municipal buildings, including EMS roof replacement, Police Department facility enhancement, and court repairs will cost an estimated $450,000. The town bonded $427,500 to finance the improvements, putting a down payment of $22,500 from the Capital Improvement Fund.

Ongoing parks renovations

The bond ordinance allots $420,000 for improvements to parks. The town bonded $399,000 and put a down payment of $21,000 from the Capital Improvement Fund to cover the estimated cost.

The new improvements will accompany park renovations already underway at Miller Stadium and Patricia McEldowney Field. Centennial Field recently reopened after being refurbished under Mayor Rodriguez’s plan.

The ordinance finances the acquisition of information technology and telecommunications equipment, including items with a unit cost less than $5,000. This includes enhancements to municipal operations, servers, and associated computer equipment for an estimated cost of $160,000. The town bonded $152,000 to cover the cost in addition to an $8,000 down payment from the Capital Improvement Fund.

Site remediation at the Department of Public Works Building will cost $100,000. The town bonded $95,000 and put a down payment of $5,000 from the Capital Improvement Fund to finance the cost.

The ordinance covers a fuel system upgrade at a cost of $75,000. The town bonded $71,250 to cover the estimated cost, as well as a $3,750 down payment from the Capital Improvement Fund.

Parking utility rehabilitation

The second ordinance adopted bonded $750,000 to cover the estimated cost of parking utility improvements. No down payments are required because the improvements are considered self-liquidating, or will earn back the cost over time.

The rehabilitation the 62nd Street Garage includes repairs to the stairwell, power inverter, camera infrastructure, sealing, including all work and materials. The rehabilitation will cost an estimated $475,000.

The ordinance financed the acquisition of license plate readers for an estimated $165,000, and online permitting software for an estimated $30,000.

The ordinance financed the acquisition of motor vehicles, other than passenger cars and station wagons, for the parking utility without limitation. This includes SUVs and other vehicles for an estimated cost of $80,000.

The next Mayor and Board of Commissioners meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 18 via Zoom. For more information, visit westnewyorknj.org and click on the event on the calendar.

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].

The Park Theatre was originally named after the Passion Play

Original floor mat, which is still at the main entrance of the Park Theatre.

The Park Theatre, a 1300+ seat house was built in 1931 by the Archdiocese of Newark​, and originally named for the famous Passion Play that was performed there annually. For many years it had been an active performing arts venue but then had fallen into disuse and disrepair.

Signage and murals on the original floor and main entrance of the newly restored Park still identify it as the Passion Play Auditorium.

Starting almost exactly a year ago, a group of passionate volunteers/donors and art professionals have worked tirelessly, turning the Park back again into a viable arts venue. Cleaning, repairing, repainting, replacing carpeting, upgrading lighting, restored the theatre, while its operators lined up many performances and events to make the Park a financially self-sustaining venue, looking towards the future, and honoring its past.

On March 7, a ribbon cutting was held with Union City commissioners and blessed by Rev. John Docherty of the Holy Family Parish, with a grand opening of the refurbished art gallery (Gallery at the Park), and tours of the theatre and performances in a restored mezzanine lounge area.

The main theatre was scheduled to have opened a month later and exciting performances were slated through the Spring. Part of the historic marquee that long-time residents remember from outside the theatre was restored and displayed in the refurbished lobby.

But everyone knows what happened a few days later…. The pandemic put a hold on everything.

However, once it was feasible, the volunteers returned, and working now with masks and distancing, continue preparing and improving the theatre, for eventual re-opening, while lining up many productions, performances and events.

The Passion Play’s costumes and props have been preserved and organized with the possibility to resume its annual performance. Many other performances, acts and events are lined up to make it a self-sustaining arts venue, once it is safe to do so for the performers and audience.

While at this time, performances in the theatre will have to wait, the Gallery at the Park finally re-opened in October, with COVID guidelines being followed. The gallery features the exhibition which opened in March, of paintings by New Jersey artist Cara London.

Future exhibitions are planned, including work from artists from the local community. Check the website for hours. www.ParkTheatreNJ.org​

North Bergen hires more police officers

New police officers were hired on Oct. 23.

North Bergen has hired seven new police officers, making the current force the largest in the township’s history.

Mayor Nicholas Sacco, Police Chief Peter Fasilis, and Public Safety Commissioner Allen Pascual presided over an oath-of-office ceremony in the Recreation Center on Oct. 23, officially hiring the seven new full-time officers to the NBPD.

The new officers are Paul Alvaredo, Anthony C. DeOrio, Michael A. Derin, Nicholas Garcia, John P. Nunez, and Al-Abed Taha. Three were already serving as part-time special officers. The other four will attend a rigorous police training academy in the coming weeks.

This brings the total number of police officers to about 140, the highest number in NBPD history. Both Mayor Sacco and Chief Fasilis stressed that the safety of the community is paramount in maintaining a high quality of life.

Reflecting the township

The township’s policy of hiring only local residents has led to a force that reflects the ethnicity of the town. According to the NBPD, four of the new officers are Latino, two are Caucasian, and one is Arabic-Caucasian.

“Our police department is part of the community, and the community is part of our department,” Fasilis said, pointing out that police officers who grew up in the township are more invested in it, understand it better, and are more motivated and engaged. “It just doesn’t work any other way.”

According to federal data, since 2007, many departments are becoming more white compared to their communities. North Bergen topped the list of local police departments that bucked the trend and became more diverse.

Sacco has touted the data, analyzed by the NYTimes, showing that the North Bergen Police Department became more diverse and less white in comparison to the community from 2007 to 2016.

“One of the ways we have acted to improve police-community relations is by making the North Bergen Police Department more diverse by exclusively hiring North Bergen residents for new positions,” Sacco said. “Hiring local residents means that our officers have a deeper connection to our community and stronger relationships with residents, and we will continue to invest in our NBPD by providing opportunities for local residents to become a part of it.”

The township promoted seven officers in September, announcing intentions to hire more officers in the future.

Also attending the ceremony were Commissioner Julio Marenco, County Commisioner Anthony Vainieri, Township Administrator Christopher Pianese, EMS Chief David Prina, NHRFR Executive Director Michael DeOrio, Township Attorney Thomas Kobin, and many other township officials, along with police and family members. Everyone in attendance wore masks and observed social distancing.

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].

WNY park renovations continue with reopening of Centennial Field

Mayor Rodriguez kicks a soccer ball with local children.

Park renovations continue in West New York with the reopening of Centennial Field.

WNY Mayor Gabriel Rodriguez and the Board of Commissioners cut the ribbon on the newly renovated field on Oct. 2.

On the waterfront, the field features new turf and drainage improvements. The renovations are part of continuing plans to renovate three major parks.

Recreation soccer has grown substantially over the years. The field was upgraded to support the program’s growth. It’s hoped that by investing in needed repairs, youth enrollment will increase further.

A three-park plan

Other parks undergoing renovations include Miller Stadium and Patricia McEldowney Field.

On Feb. 8, ground broke for renovations at Miller Stadium, a field more than 100 years old where Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig once played. Renovations include a new drainage system and turf surface at Miller Stadium, which will now be used as a multipurpose field for football, baseball, and soccer.

Patricia McEldowney Field will be completely refurbished and equipped with security cameras to enhance public safety.

Revitalizing parks

In June of 2019, Rodriguez and the commissioners took the first steps toward revitaliziing three of West New York’s parks, voting unanimously to introduce three bond ordinances for renovations at Miller Stadium, Patricia McEldowney Field, and Centennial Field.

According to Rodriguez, there will be no cost to taxpayers because the renovations will be funded by county and state grants.

“Our parks have been severely neglected in recent years, denying our children and all residents the open space and recreational opportunities they deserve,” Rodriguez said in February. “We had an opportunity to right that wrong earlier this year, but unfortunately politics got in the way, and the former mayor blocked these much-needed improvements. I’m proud that one of our new administration’s first acts is investing in our community and our youth while fixing that profound mistake.”

Righting past wrongs

Similar bond ordinances were considered by the Board of Commissioners in January of 2019, when Rodriguez was a commissioner. However, the pleas of local parents and children who packed the meeting calling for park improvements fell on deaf ears at the time. The ordinance failed to achieve the required four votes.

Then-Mayor Dr. Felix Roque was the abstaining vote, who went on to lose to Rodriguez. The newly sworn-in Board of Commissioners passed the introduced ordinance unanimously on June 5.

“Our children are our community’s future, and I can’t wait to see these parks be rebuilt to suit their needs and give all of them places to play, learn, and grow,” said Parks and Public Property Commissioner Victor Barrera. “West New York residents deserve these kinds of community amenities, and our entire team is committed to delivering on our promise to move our town forward with actions like this.”

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

North Bergen calls for the closure of Ridgefield power plant

The PSE&G Bergen Generating Station

Mayor Nicholas Sacco and the Board of Commissioners passed a resolution at the Sept. 23 meeting, calling for the closing of the Bergen Generating Station and calling on Ridgefield Mayor Anthony Suarez and the Borough Council to join them.

After calls for the board to oppose the power plant in Kearny at the Oct. 7 meeting, the board may pass a resolution to do so.

 The Bergen Generating Station

The neighboring 1,229-megawatt, gas-fired power plant has been named by environmental advocates as the top producer of greenhouse gas in the state.

“The Bergen Generating Station has consistently been cited as the dirtiest power plant in the state and the biggest contributor to climate change in our area,” said Mayor Sacco. “Closing this plant and transitioning it to a renewable energy use would not only benefit North Bergen residents by making our air cleaner and reducing carbon emissions, it would also help hundreds of thousands of people who live within a few miles of the facility.”

The action by North Bergen comes after PSE&G announced that it planned to divest from its fossil fuel burning plants in the state.

Sacco continued: “With PSE&G announcing its divestment plan, this is the perfect opportunity for local communities to bring pressure on the utility to close this dirty plant, and we hope that Mayor Suarez and his fellow Ridgefield leaders will join us in this fight and make their commitment to environmental justice clear.”

Ridgefield Mayor responds

Mayor Suarez opposed the proposed power plant in North Bergen that was later cancelled after public outcry from environmentalists and residents.

Suarez opposed the project because “our air here already isn’t a great quality. It’s gonna be putting more and more CO2 emissions into the air.”

In an interview with the Hudson Reporter, Suarez said that the proposed Meadowlands Power Plant would have powered New York City and polluted New Jersey, while bringing in tax revenue only to North Bergen. He said the lungs of residents in surrounding towns would have been hurt by the pollution.

“The power plant in Ridgefield has been there since the 1950s and supplies energy to New Jersey residents, including North Bergen,” Suarez said contrasting the Ridgefield power plant to the proposed power plant in North Bergen.

Suarez said he supports clean energy, but there aren’t clean energy alternatives to the current Ridgefield power plant. 

“There’s nothing right now other than the PSE&G plant that supplies energy to Ridgefield and other towns serviced by the plant,” Suarez said, noting that if there was an alternative supply of clean energy for Ridgefield, he would support it.

Suarez said Ridgefield has passed a resolution opposing the Kearny power plant. 

Opposing the Kearny plant

At the Oct. 7 meeting, environmentalists lobbied the North Bergen Board of Commissioners to pass a resolution opposing the Kearny plant.

Members of Food and Water Action Group and Don’t Gas the Meadowlands Committee spoke against the power plants.

“As the climate crisis intensifies, we must rapidly transition off fossil fuels and onto clean energy to protect our health and future,” said Food and Water Action organizer Samantha DiFalco. “So we must work to close down polluting facilites that harm the health of New Jersey residents, we must also prevent the construction and operations of new ones like the 140 megawatts fracked-gas burning power plant that New Jersey Transit has proposed in the nearby Kearny Meadowlands.” 

DiFalco urged North Bergen to join 15 other municipalities, including Hoboken, Jersey City, Union City, Weehawken, and West New York in opposiing the power plant proposed by NJ Transit. 

Sacco asked for a sample resolution to be sent over, a sign that the commissioners may pass a resolution against the Kearny plant at their next meeting. 

Clarifying inconsistencies

Matt Smith, Director of Food and Water Action, pressed Sacco as to why he supported the proposed power plant in North Bergen, which would put the health of esidents in jeopardy. 

Sacco said the difference between the Ridgefield plant and the power plant  that “might have been” in North Bergen “but was simply being studied,” was that the Ridgefield plant “is the dirtiest in the state” and actively pollutes the area. 

Smith countered that if the North Bergen power plant had been built, it would have been the “largest source of carbon pollution in the entire state.” 

Sacco said the plant in North Bergen would have been the “cleanest plant,” given the technology.  

Smith claimed Sacco’s comments were “a complete 180” from the past but embraced Sacco’s calling for the closure of the Ridgefield and Kearny plants. 

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].

StandUp Comedy OUTSIDE! @ Brightside Tavern Socially Distanced COMEDY THURSDAY OCT 15 @ 7pm ET

Stand Up Comedy OUTSIDE @ Brightside Tavern w/The Laugh Tour

StandUp OUTSIDE! Comedy @ Brightside Tavern
Socially Distanced STAND UP COMEDY
THURSDAY OCT 15 @ 7pm EST
BUDDY FITZPATRICK HBO The Sopranos
KENDRA CUNNINGHAM Dry Bar Comedy
ERIN MAGUIRE Live @ Gotham
hosted by RICH KIAMCO The Howard Stern Show @richkiamco
Please buy your tickets early  *** VERY LIMITED OUTDOOR SEATING**
TICKETS: $10
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/1015-standup-outside-comedy-brightside-jersey-city-tickets-124483354063

** lineup subject to change**

A limited number of “Pay What You Can -Laugh All You Want” tickets are available per show too!

VENUE: Brightside Tavern, 141 Bright St, Jersey City.

Free street parking and along the trees/fence BEHIND Old Colony Square across street from the venue. PLEASE DO NOT ATTEND if you have fever or any symptoms related to COVID. Please wear a mask when moving around the venue space and when you are not eating or drinking.

www.TheLaughTour.com

North Bergen libraries launch contactless self-checkout

The self-checkout stations will be available at all three libraries.

All branches of the North Bergen Free Public Library now have contactless self-checkout through a computer system.

Meescan self-checkout is a contactless way to get books from the libraries using the tablet computer. Contactless operations work to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 by eliminating unnecessary human interaction.

Meescan is available at all three libraries: the main library at 8411 Bergenline Ave., the Kennedy Branch at 2123 Kennedy Blvd., and the Guttenberg Resource Center at Galaxy Towers Mall lower level at 7002 Blvd. East.

COVID-19 precautions

The library has been operating on a Grab’n’Go model since allowing residents inside again, meaning grab a book and go. To accommodate the limited maximum occupancy at each facility, lingering in the library is discouraged. Library use is limited to one hour per day.

Computer use is limited to one hour, and masks are required. Browsing is allowed, but gloves must be worn, available at any staff station.

The library’s children’s room reopened on Oct. 1. Patrons over the age of two are required to wear masks and keep them on, covering both the nose and the mouth, at all times.

The three computers available in the children’s department are reserved only for children and teens, and use is limited to one hour a day.

Virtual and in-person programming

The library has been home to a slew of virtual content since the onset of the pandemic.

From weekly take-home crafts featuring instruction on Zoom, to the virtual Book Club, there are a variety of online activities hosted by the libraries on a weekly basis.

The virtual library is open all the time. Residents can access e-books and audiobooks, and stream music and movies via Libby and Hoopla. For more information, visit nbpl.org.

In-person programming is also making a comeback.

As part of the township’s celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month, residents and guests gathered in the parking lot of the library’s main building to enjoy a performance by the five-piece mariachi band, Mariachi Sol Mixteco.

The Kennedy Branch and the Guttenberg Resource Center are open Monday through Thursday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.; Friday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and is closed Sunday.

The Main Branch on Bergenline has the same hours as the Kennedy Branch but is open Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m.

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 public schools remain virtual

Superintendent of Schools Dr. George Solter gave a video update on Sept. 28.

North Bergen public schools will remain virtual, Superintendent of Schools Dr. George Solter announced on Sept. 28.

After three weeks of virtual instruction, Solter updated the community. While the district planned a possible return to the classrooms on Oct. 1, Solter said the district decided to work in the virtual environment until the end of the first marking period.

Shifting plans 

The district’s original plan was to open under a hybrid instruction plan with students learning in-person on Mondays and Tuesdays, while a second group learns in-person on Thursdays and Fridays. All students would learn virtually on Wednesdays. 

In August, Gov. Phil Murphy signed an executive order allowing schools to start with virtual instruction, but school districts must have processes in place to slowly move toward in-person education.

The district is currently in the process of reevaluating the plan for students to return to in-person instruction, according to Solter.

The Restart Committee is assessing all possible issues. When the plan is finalized, Solter will announce the plan in a video message. When returning to in-person education, parents can still keep their children in the virtual learning program.

“I hope everyone is staying safe and healthy by practicing social distancing and using PPE when needed,” Solter said.

Emulating in-person instruction

In September, the school district began virtual learning with Google Meet for instruction, and Google Classroom for assignments and presentations. Teachers used other forms of communication to get messages to the students, according to Solter.

His vision was to cleave as much as possible to in-person instruction. Solter said it’s important for students to form relationships with teachers and classmates.

The school district’s goal is to have a classroom teaching period look just as if it were in-person. According to Solter, teachers will introduce material, work through examples, assign independent work, and return for discussion.

“It is not about our teachers speaking and lecturing for the entire period, Solter said. “We want a balanced approach that makes the best sense for learning.”

There will be days when there is no direct instruction by teachers; they will post information for exploration, and related assignment for all schools on Mondays and Thursdays from noon to 2 p.m.

Virtual open house

The school district will hold a virtual open house, according to Solter.

Each staff member will create a video describing tudent expectations, classroom procedures, requirements for the completion of assignments, creation of projects, evaluation of student progress, and how the parent can communicate with teachers.

Details about the virtual open house can be found at northbergen.k12.nj.us.

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].

Passionate arts professionals bring the gallery at the historic Park Theatre back to life

Gallery at the Park - One of 5 rooms of the gallery.

The grand opening of the Gallery at the Park at the Park Theatre in Union City, with an exhibition of paintings by New Jersey artist Cara London, occurred in early March, just a few days before everything shut down due to the pandemic.

While it will still be some time before the theatre can safety be filled with audiences or can have social opening receptions, the gallery has finally re-opened! Over 88 of London’s paintings are on display in the gallery’s five rooms, including the theatre’s lobby. In addition, to the work present at the opening, some of recent paintings have been added.

The Park Theatre, a 1300+ seat house owned by the Archdiocese of Newark, was built in 1931 and had been an active performing arts venue, made famous by The Passion Play. In recent years it had fallen into disuse and in need of restoration.

Over the past year, a group of passionate volunteers/donors and art professionals have worked tirelessly, turning the Park back again into a viable arts venue. Cleaning, repairing, repainting, replacing carpeting, upgrading lighting . . . and restoring the Park, while lining up many performances and events to make the Park a financially self-sustaining venue, looking towards the future, and honoring its past.

At the beginning of March, a ribbon cutting was attended by Union City commissioners and Father John of the Holy Family Parish, with a grand opening of the art gallery (Gallery at the Park) and the mezzanine lobby which has been turned into a lounge and second performance space. There was an open house, tours of the theatre and musical performances in the new lounge. The main theatre was scheduled to have opened a month later and exciting performances were slated through the Spring.

Just a few days after the opening, COVID-19 shut the country down.

Once it was feasible, the volunteers returned, and working now with masks and distancing, continue preparing and improving the theatre, for eventual re-opening, while lining up many productions, performances and events.

The Passion Play’s costumes and props were preserved and organized with plans to resume its annual performance. “Go, My Child,” a new large cast biblical musical, will be a new addition to the Park. The Park Theatre will be the home of the new annual New Jersey Independent Film Festival. “Frankenstein,” a long running Off-Broadway musical, is scheduled to play regular school matinees at the Park. Many other performances, acts and events are lined up to make it a self-sustaining arts venue, once it is safe to do so for the performers and audience.

While at this time, performances in the theatre will have to wait, the Gallery at the Park, finally re-opened in October, with COVID guidelines being followed. The gallery features the exhibition which opened in March, of paintings by Cara London. Future exhibitions are planned, including work from artists from the local community.

For everyone’s protection, visitors must call ahead (201) 565-3630, or email [email protected]. Masks must be worn, and social distancing guidelines will be followed. The hours for the next two weeks are listed below (or by special appointment).

Further dates will be kept updated on the website.

The Gallery at the Park is located at the Park Theatre, 560 32nd Street, Union City, NJ 07087.

Cara London earned a BA in Art History from Brandeis University and an MFA from Parsons School of Design. She studied sculpture at the New York Studio School and painting with John Adams Griefen, which profoundly shaped her direction as an artist. London has attended numerous international professional workshops, including Triangle Artists’ Workshop, Vermont Studio School, Emma Lake the Leighton Foundation and most recently Chateau Orquevaux, where she received the Diderot Artist-in-Residence grant.

She was a founding member of SOMI Fine Art Gallery in Flemington. She has exhibited her work regularly and is in numerous collections. She also teaches drawing and painting to students of all ages and levels of experience. Ms. London is known for her painterly representational work. Cara London was among the team who helped restore the Park Theatre and turned the space into a viable gallery. (website: CaraLondon.com)

The hours for next 2 weeks are as follows:
Wed, Oct. 7, 3-8 pm
Thur, Oct. 8, 3-8 pm
Fri, Oct. 9, 12-5 pm
Thur, Oct. 15, 3-8 pm
Fri, Oct. 16, 3-8 pm
Sat, Oct. 17, 12-5 pm
Sun, Oct. 18, 12-5 pm
(or by special appointment)
(future dates will be posted on the website ParkTheatreNJ.org/gallery
For everyone’s protection, visitors must call ahead (201) 565-3630, or email [email protected].

For more information about the gallery, please contact [email protected]
For the theatre, please contact info@ParkTheatreNJ.,org

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