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The Year in Review

By Marilyn Baer, Mike Montemarano, Rory Pasquariello, and Al Sullivan

In 2018, communities throughout Hudson County elected new officials, watched developments rise, and enacted changes in school districts, police departments, and public services. National issues such as immigration, LGBTQ rights, legalized marijuana, and the emerging new political and social strength of women found local expression. Neighbors came together in times of crisis and mourned the passing of respected public servants. As 2019 appeared on the horizon, residents greeted the new year with renewed energy and high hopes for even better times ahead.

BAYONNE

2018 was a year of transition in Bayonne. Two elections brought many incumbents back to City Hall and the Board of Education. Mayor James Davis emerged from a contentious municipal election to win a second term that will end in 2022. Development was another big story; most undeveloped properties now have buildings under construction.

Former Police Chief Jim Sisk died in September at the age of 79. Cornelius (Neil) Carroll, a former Hudson County Freeholder, athlete, and Navy vet, died at age 91. His grandson, Neil Carroll III, was appointed in November to replace former councilman Thomas Cotter on the Bayonne City Council. On Oct. 15, former U.S. Rep. Neil Gallagher died at age 97.

Bayonne received a $650,000 federal grant in May for construction of a ferry terminal on the southern shore of the former Military Ocean Terminal Base. In October, the city announced the ferry operator would be SeaStreak, based in Atlantic Highlands. The Bayonne terminal would be SeaStreak’s first in Hudson County. The rest are operated by NY Waterway.

Traffic improvements were made to major highways and local streets, including the $310 million 14A Interchange Project, completed in May, which increased toll plaza capacity from 11 to 13 lanes, extended the ramp from Interchange 14A westbound, expanded the Hudson County Extension to two lanes, and replaced the two-lane connector bridge with a new four-lane structure to Routes 440, Route 185, and Port Jersey Blvd. A new flyover ramp was also constructed from the interchange and Port Jersey Blvd. to Route 440 south.

NJ Animal Control and Rescue’s contract was severed in favor of the Jersey City-based Liberty Humane Society after NJ Animal Control and Rescue’s director came under suspicion for alleged ethics violations.

Bayonne’s Muslim community successfully challenged the Bayonne Zoning Board’s March 2017 decision to deny the group a parking variance in its effort to convert an old warehouse on East 24th Street to a Muslim community center. The group was awarded $400,000 in February of 2018 as part of an agreement with the City of Bayonne, which was required to approve the group’s center.

In April, the school board adopted a $130.7 million budget to fund the 2018-2019 school year. The school district, which is funded by the state and from 40 percent of Bayonne’s property tax bills, levies additional taxes when the cost of running the district increases including higher costs for the state’s health insurance plan, school security, updates to math and science programs, upgrading of aging facilities, a growing student population, and a low reserve of funds from the previous year.

Five people have died in four years on Route 440, including Christian Rodriguez, 22, killed on Nov. 7 by a driver who fled the scene and was later arrested. The stretch of road between 22nd and 34th streets is particularly dangerous. The fatality comes after upgrades to the 22nd Street intersection improved crossing signals and allowed more time for pedestrians to cross.

Soon after the Feb. 14 Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, the district participated in “National School Walkout” on March 14 on Avenue A. Students, parents, and faculty walked out of school for 17 minutes, one minute for each person killed in the Feb. 14 shooting. Some Bayonne students attended the national “March for Our Lives” protest in Washington D.C. the following week. On Feb. 23, Bayonne High School went on lockdown after a message circulated through social media threatening a school shooting at “BHS,” an acronym for a New Mexico high school, Belan High School, that was confused with Bayonne.

A Bayonne hockey coach and social studies teacher, David McKenna, 38, resigned his position after allegedly pointing a State Trooper’s semiautomatic handgun at two people in the coach’s locker room at Bayonne High School on Nov. 30, 2017. The fallout from the incident was felt in 2018. The gun, which was holstered and hanging in the coach’s office, belonged to an off-duty NJ State Trooper and assistant hockey coach, Richard Korpi Jr.

Project labor agreements (PLAs) are now required for all private development projects of more than $15 million that sign payment-in-lieu-of-tax (PILOT) agreements with the City of Bayonne. The city council passed the ordinance in February after it offered PILOT agreements to most of the major developers. A PLA is a collective bargaining agreement signed by one or more labor unions and a developer that establishes the terms and conditions of employment for a construction project. Union workers support the ordinance, citing safety, fair pay, youth career building, the benefits of hiring local workers, and gender inclusion.

Landmarks of the former Military Ocean Terminal Base (MOTBY) are now gone. The iconic water tower was demolished in December to make room for 1.6 million square feet of industrial warehouse space slated for construction by 2021. Lincoln Equities Group completed its acquisition of a 153-acre site on MOTBY, called the Bayonne Logistics Center, in June. In 2007, Ports of America purchased the land and buildings. The old warehouses will be demolished, and the land raised by six feet, which will require two million tons of fill.

HOBOKEN

The city will continue to fight NY Waterway (NYW) for the former Union Dry Dock (UDD) property, which the ferry company purchased in 2017 for a refueling and maintenance facility. The city wants the waterfront site for public open space. It offered the company $11.6 million, but after NYW refused to sell, the city moved to obtain it via eminent domain in February.

This spurred NJ Transit to offer to purchase the property and lease it back to NYW, causing the city to cancel eminent domain proceedings. Despite the hundreds of residents who spoke out against NYW at a public hearing held by the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers (USACE), in December the USACE granted permits to NYW. The city awaits a study of alternative sites being conducted by the state.

Construction will begin next year on the new Hilton Hotel, which was approved by the city council after months of negotiations between the administration and the developer, KMS Development Partners. Developers will renovate the Frank Sinatra Post Office on First and River streets and provide $4.85 million in community givebacks. Mayor Ravi Bhalla said this would set a precedent for other developers hoping to build in Hoboken.

Washington Street is still under construction and will likely not be complete until May, 2019, despite the original summer 2018 deadline. The glacial pace is the result of ancient, below-ground, often undocumented infrastructure that causes unforeseen problems, though test pits, field surveys, and reviews of records and drawings were performed prior to construction. The original contract with Underground Utilities has ballooned from $17.5 million to $19.2 million. The project so far has cost a total of $21.9 million, which includes the $2.8 million for T&M Associates, which manages the project for the city.

The 2018 Hoboken Master Plan Reexamination Report and 2018 Land Use Element Report were finalized, addressing how Hoboken’s socioeconomic profile, population, vision, and needs have changed since the 2010 Master Plan. The plan’s objectives include more facilities and events for the arts and education, protecting historic structures, more affordable housing, nonresidential facilities in underserved areas, and reducing traffic.
Recommendations include an arts and cultural district, a linear park along the west side, enforcement of rent control laws and affordable housing rules, and flood prevention. A major recommendation of the Land Use Element is a new zoning map with seven residential zones, with height and size restrictions.

On Nov. 6 residents voted to reinstate runoff elections. The city could see runoffs as soon as November 2019, when six council seats will be up for grabs. The two top finishers in a ward race would go to a runoff in early December, if neither draws more than 50 percent of the vote.

Mayor Dawn Zimmer and her allies led the charge to do away with runoffs by public referendum in 2012.

The city council enacted marijuana legislation that would permit three medical dispensaries in Hoboken, no more than one per zone, but temporarily ban recreational dispensaries until the state votes on whether to legalize recreational marijuana. The council could revisit the ordinance if the state legalizes recreational marijuana in 2019.

Hoboken has a long history of alleged voter fraud; the U.S. Attorney’s Office in October indicted longtime Hoboken political player Frank “Pupie” Raia – a former councilman, mayoral candidate, and current real estate developer – for his alleged involvement in a vote-buying scheme in Hoboken in 2013. Raia, 67, was charged with “conspiracy to violate the federal Travel Act for causing the mails to be used in aid of voter bribery.” Hoboken resident and 2013 campaign worker Dio Braxton, 43, was also charged. Raia and Braxton both pleaded not guilty.

Several public meetings were held to discuss features of the Rebuild by Design project for flood-resistant structures and storm-water control systems to protect areas vulnerable to flooding along Weehawken Cove to the north, and in and around NJ Transit’s Hoboken rail yard to the south. The structures include floodwalls and soft landscaping such as berms and levees. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2020.

A final design for the city’s largest park will be chosen in 2019 with construction soon after. The six acres between Madison and Adams streets will be a key element in Hoboken’s flood resiliency strategy, and will manage at least 1 million gallons of storm water.

JERSEY CITY

After winning reelection by a decisive margin in 2017, Mayor Steven Fulop began his second four-year term in January, setting an agenda that included enlarging the police department, increasing affordable housing, and expanding development to portions of the city beyond the waterfront.

The 2017 revaluation of property was felt in 2018. Many longtime residents in upscale areas, who bought at low prices decades ago and were taxed under the 1988 valuation, complained when the assessed value of their homes and their taxes skyrocketed. People in poorer neighborhoods whose assessments went down or remained unchanged were also unhappy because the revaluation showed they’d been overpaying taxes for years while wealthy neighborhoods sometimes underpaid significantly.

The state returned local control to the Jersey City school district in September after nearly 30 years. Meanwhile, Jersey City teachers held a one-day strike in April, which concluded a four-year-struggle to get a new contract. The district faces a severe budget shortfall; only through reductions in other areas were teacher layoffs averted. An agreement among state power brokers resulted in massive cuts of state aid to the district. These were partially offset by a new payroll tax approved over objections from the business community.

Chief of Police Michael Kelly was sworn in to help solve a number of problems, most immediately a scandal in the misuse of off-duty police assignments. A number of officers were convicted for fraudulent activity in regard to the program. Former Police Chief Phil Zacche also pleaded guilty in January. Kelly, along with Mayor Fulop and Public Safety Director James Shea phased out the program. The police department also mourned the death of Lt. Christopher Robateau who was struck by a vehicle on the New Jersey Turnpike while assisting a stranded motorist. Changes to the city prosecutor’s office and the appointment of Jake Hudnut as the new prosecutor shifted the focus to helping those charged with crimes rather than jailing them. Although gun violence was down in 2018, there were several temporary spikes, including one in late October and early November when the city reported 13 shootings in a two-week period.

In May, a new building began to rise in the Bergen-Lafayette section, signaling a giant stride in redevelopment in that area. To advance this redevelopment deeper into Ward F, the city unveiled its City Hall Annex, renaming the HUB areas as Jackson Square, a tribute to a family of farmers who once lived there. While projects continue to rise along the waterfront, other projects slated for areas near the Hoboken border took off this year, as well as a new residential building in the Hamilton Park area and a new public park. Journal Squared – the most visible building in the city – broke ground in the fall on the second tower of the three-tower project. In purchasing a building in Journal Square from the county college in January, the city took the first steps toward building a world-class performance center and creating a new home for the city museum.

The city sidestepped some of the issues encountered with redeveloping the Historic Loew’s Theater.

In June, Mayor Fulop and the city council opted to purchase a 95-acre tract along the Hackensack River, making the city its own master developer of the largest development since the Newport area in the 1980s; it has the potential to increase affordable housing stock in the city.

Pedestrian fatalities in 2017 pushed the city to begin work on a traffic plan. This would include safety developments, parking planning and enforcement as well as a bicycle master plan. In March, the city took the next steps in a proposed traffic bridge at the end of Jersey Avenue designed to steer traffic away from high volume areas near the edge of downtown. A plastic bag ban introduced in June had to be scrapped later in the year when Gov. Phil Murphy refused to endorse state legislation that would allow municipalities to charge people for using some types of bags. City officials are expected to reintroduce a version early in 2019.

In anticipation of the state’s legalization of recreational marijuana, the city created a new zoning overlay that would allow local officials to determine where marijuana could be sold. By the end of the year, no legislation was approved by the state legislature.

In April, Hudson Pride – which provides services to the LBTGQ community – relocated from Journal Square to temporary offices at Christ Hospital. The center had plans to relocate to more permanent facilities on Newark Avenue, but by year’s end, the move had not yet taken place. LBTGQ rights were highlighted at numerous events, including Pride Week and the Pride Festival in August.

In late May, Mayor Fulop supported moving the Kaytn Memorial statue from the end of Montgomery Street at Exchange Place to accommodate a new park many protestors claimed would benefit wealthy patrons of local hotels. The proposal led to a war of words between Fulop and high officials in Poland, and a chilly visit from the president of Poland. But before a referendum could be voted on, a Hudson County Superior Court judge nullified the council’s ordinance that authorized moving the statue.

NORTH BERGEN

A plan for the North Bergen Liberty Generating power plant was first announced in April 2018. The plant will channel electricity across the Hudson River to a Con Edison plant in Manhattan. Liberty Generating claims the plant will burn natural gas in a way that’s “34 percent more efficient than the average NYC fossil fuel power plant today.” It estimates the plant will create 620 long-term jobs. North Bergen officials have proposed a Payment in Lieu of Tax (PILOT) plan, with North Bergen Mayor Nicholas Sacco claiming there will be “no impact on residential neighborhoods and little to no strain on municipal services.” According to protestors, the facility “will emit hundreds of tons of ozone and particulate matter annually.” In 2017, Hudson was one of 11 New Jersey counties to receive an F grade in an evaluation by the American Lung Association.

The Board of Education received voter approval to fund a major expansion project on Dec. 11. The school will move forward with a $60 million bond issue to purchase the former High Tech High School campus on Tonnelle Avenue and divide the township high school into a west and east campus. Schools Superintendent George Solter announced plans to start a partnership with Hudson County Community College, so that students would be able to receive college credits prior to graduation.

The former Manhattan Trailer Court Park has been cleared to make way for a project by developer James Dematrakis. The site at 48th Street and Tonnelle Avenue will see 240 housing units adjacent to the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail station. On Paterson Plank Road, the Hudson Mews development will accept rental applications on Jan. 15. Six wood-framed residential buildings hold 288 units. The developer is also constructing a 1.5-acre park adjacent to the site.

NORTH HUDSON

The prospect of federal aid for the Hudson Tunnel Project remains up in the air. The $13 billion project aims to construct a new railroad tunnel below the Hudson River for Northeast Corridor use, and rehabilitate the current North River Tunnel after Superstorm Sandy caused extensive damage. The entrance will be the same for that of the North River tunnel on Tonnelle Avenue.

President Trump scrapped an agreement made during the Obama administration for the Federal Transportation Administration to fund 50 percent of the project. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo met with Trump on Nov. 28, but no further consensus was reached.

Yearly overdose deaths in Hudson County have more than doubled since 2013. Union City High School held a substance abuse awareness seminar on Jan. 25 organized by the NJ Reentry Corporation to discuss the epidemic. The panel highlighted the increased street presence of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 times more potent than heroin. Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal reports that statewide prescriptions for opioids have decreased, but the rate of overdoses has been increasing since 2015. According to the report, fentanyl was involved in 69 of 147 overdose deaths in Hudson County in 2017.

Weehawken Mayor Richard Turner and Union City Mayor Brian Stack were re-elected in May 2018 after running unopposed. Stack’s commissioners ran unopposed. Commissioner Tilo Rivas was replaced by Wendy Grullon following his decision not to run. Stack has held office since 2000; he also represents the 33rd district in the New Jersey Senate. In Weehawken, Councilwomen Carmela Silvestri-Ehret and Rosemary Lavagnino were re-elected, while Councilmen Raul Gonzalez and David Curtis took the helm of third ward and at-large seats, respectively.

In 2018, thousands of residential units were under construction in North Hudson, signaling a change in downtown areas, housing markets, and rental costs. Proximity to New York City makes the waterfront a hot location. At the beginning of 2018, Weehawken approved expanding its waterfront recreational area. By summer 2019, three new pools, a splash park, and an 11,200-square-foot pavilion that can convert into an ice rink are expected to be completed. The extended-stay Residence Inn by Marriott Hotel held an open house at the 154-room Port Imperial complex on Dec. 14. The hotel is within walking distance of the Port Imperial light rail station and ferry terminal. A 210-room Renaissance Hotel is slated to open in the same building this summer. Developer Hovnanian unveiled a complex with 278 luxury condo units on a 2.8-acre lot near the Port Imperial ferry terminal. The development, named Nine on the Hudson, is one of the largest residential structures in the Port Imperial complex.

SECAUCUS

Secaucus is a small town at heart dealing with many of the problems that urban communities face, including school district controversies, flooding, traffic woes, and crime.

The attempt by the Board of Education to fire high school Principal Robert Berkes was probably the biggest story in Secaucus in 2018. Berkes responded by filing a $5 million lawsuit against the district. In positive news, the new High Tech High School campus opened in September. The $160 million development has 70 classrooms in 350,000 square feet on a 22-acre site near Laurel Hill Park and specializes in culinary arts, design and fabrication, biomedical sciences, environmental science, media, visual arts, and performing arts, in addition to core high school courses. The school board election in November saw the reelection of Trustee Joan Cali, the return of former Trustee Barbara Strobert and the election of newcomer Mary Eccles. Patricia Smeyers, a fifth-grade teacher at Clarendon Elementary School in Secaucus, was named Hudson County’s Teacher of The Year.

Secaucus faced serious flooding at the end of the year, partly because safeguards installed during the 1970s were neglected. As many as 70 homes experienced flooding during late-year storms, an issue the city claims it will resolve early in 2019.

In January, Secaucus launched a shuttle service to the center of town for Xchange residents. While Xchange is within walking distance of the Secaucus Transfer rail station, it is still remote from the other residential and business sections.

The town also tried a shuttle service between Laurel Hill Park and the rail station for commuter parking but shut it down in November when few people used it.

In June, Uber opened a driver hub in Secaucus, competing with a number of cab companies.

In March, the town council changed municipal law to allow non-U.S. citizens to serve on its volunteer fire department. Early in the year, the town also began to enforce zoning laws in order to shut down illegal apartments, which are often fire hazards.

In June, the Secaucus medical marijuana dispensary opened, a state-approved facility that dispenses marijuana to patients with prescriptions. A month later, the town council voted to ban recreational marijuana sales, anticipating state approval that was still pending by the end of the year.

Secaucus in 2018 continued to try to persuade a supermarket to locate in town, possibly in Mill Creek Mall. In August, Secaucus officials announced a repaving program for portions of Meadowlands Parkway, paid for largely by grants.

The American Dream complex is slated to open next April, according to an August release from developers Triple Five. Formerly known as Xanadu, the site was like a mirage in the Meadowlands since construction began over a decade ago. Skepticism about its opening grew as the project cycled through developers, and opening-date promises fell by the wayside.

The complex will occupy 3.2 million square feet in East Rutherford, and will hold the largest indoor ski slope in the Western Hemisphere, a full-sized ice rink, a CMX luxury theater, a 235-foot diameter observation wheel, a DreamWorks waterpark, a Nickelodeon Universe theme park, a Legoland discovery center, and an aquarium.

Secaucus, which holds an annual fishing derby in May, saw a number of curious animal-related events during the year. A dog chasing a rabbit in Laurel Hill Park got trapped in a pipe and took more than 24 hours to rescue. In the summer, someone abandoned a goat at the Walmart on the opposite side of town. In July, several seals were spotted in the Hackensack River near Trolley Park.

A staunch community activist and strong advocate for the animal shelter and rescued animals, former Councilwoman Sue Piro, died this year.

2021 in Bayonne: The Year in Review

If 2020 was the year of the COVID-19 virus in Bayonne, then 2021 was the year of the vaccine.

The city honed in on vaccinations from the start of the year. Meanwhile, the city’s redevelopment boom continued unabated by the pandemic. And most prominently, the virus did not prevent local politics from dominating the talk of the town.

COVID-19

At the start of 2021, the city was distributing its first vaccines at Bayonne Medical Center. The focus of the initial vaccination efforts focused on health care workers and hospital staff, emergency personnel and first responders, and high-risk populations such as seniors in housing authority buildings.

February marked the one year anniversary of COVID-19’s entrance into Bayonne, when a Royal Carribbean cruise ship docked in the city carrying passengers thought to be sick with the virus. While no one tested positive, the scare pushed Bayonne to begin preparing for when the virus actually showed up at its doorstep.

As the months went on, eligibility slowly expanded. In May, the city began vaccinating those age 12 and up. And by November, those 5 and up could get the jab. Coinciding with the expansion in eligibility in the fall, the city began administering booster shots to eligible residents.

Hospital executives, doctors, nurses, and hospital staff across the county repeatedly confirmed the validity of the vaccine, the lack of serious side effects, and its effectiveness across variants.

Medical personnel at Bayonne Medical Center got the vaccine first.

The main municipal point of distribution for vaccines was at the Bayonne Community Museum, but quickly shifted to the ice rink by April in preparation to vaccinate the general public. Meanwhile the museum continued to serve intermittently as a testing site.

Cases were decreasing at the start of the year from the holiday surge experience at the end of 2020, at around less than 400 active cases as of Feb. 11. A “twin-demic” was avoided, as that flu season had not been that bad. By the end of the month, cases had dropped to below 200. By March, cases were down to 130.

Throughout the spring and summer, cases continued to fall and remained low. That is until the virus began to spike in late July and early August. However, cases didn’t climb back over 100 until December, and continued to rise through the end of the year.

By the time 2021 had ended, a total 133 residents have died from COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic. There were still over 222 active cases and hospitalizations were rising to 19.

Politics

The year was dominated by politics practically from the start.

In March, Mayor James Davis made waves with his ousting of Assemblyman Nicholas Chiaravalloti from the county ballot line. Davis announced he no longer supported Chiaravalloti without giving a reason, opting to instead support crane operator William Sampson for the role. At first, Chiaravalloti was not going out without a fight. However, he eventually ended his reelection bid after the Hudson County Democratic Organization backed Davis’s decision.

Then, campaign season started early in May, with the rumor that Davis was allegedly looking to replace City Council President Sharon Ashe-Nadrowski and Second Ward City Councilman Sal Gullace on his ticket in the May 2022 municipal election. Meanwhile, rumors that Ashe-Nadrowski would challenge Davis in that election also began to solidify.

Mayor James Davis and City Council President Sharon Ashe-Nadrowski speak at the renaming of Edith Ferrell Way. Photo by Daniel Israel

In the interim, $500,000 secured by Chiaravalloti to complete a portion of the waterfront walkway on Newark Bay was removed from the state budget, allegedly as retaliation from the state against Davis. Less than a week later, the county announced it would provide the city with the necessary funds to complete the project.

Davis was challenged by a former city councilwoman Mary Jane Desmond for the chair position of the local Democratic committee, but he ultimately secured reelection. Davis continued under fire, with an attack ad campaign launched against him in September, dubbing him “Dirty Davis,” to which his spokesperson said it was an “out-of-towner led plot.”

Sampson sailed to victory in November, making the 31st Legislative District represented by a trio of African-American lawmakers for the first time. In December, Ashe-Nadrowski officially announced she was running for mayor, to which Davis also confirmed he would be seeking a third term. The race was now on.

City council busy amid the pandemic

The Bayonne City Council had a busy year amid COVID-19. The council returned to in-person meetings in May after operating remotely for the year, keeping the virtual option with TetherView available until the end of the year. The council adopted a $150 million budget in 2021.

The city received $39.2 million in American Rescue Plan funds from the federal government. So far, the city has spent a few million of the funds on small business grants, payroll for public health workers, public health expenses, stormwater management, and the hiring of police officers and firefighters.

Later the council decided to form a committee to oversee the funds after discussion of how CARES Act funding was spent. However, that committee was met with resistance from City Hall.

The council approved a number of payments-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOT) agreements. And although discussion about the length continued repeatedly throughout the year, the council did not act to further limit the length of the agreements to 15 years.

The City Council met in person starting in May. Photo by Daniel Israel

The council also now has all PILOTs reviewed by outside financial advisors to ensure they benefit the city. Some PILOTS adopted included amending the PILOT for the Plattykill Manor Apartments, and a PILOT for the first high-rise at MOTBY.

The council approved an ordinance permitting recreational cannabis establishments, particularly two cannabis retailers and one grower and one processor. The council also awarded the animal control contract to the NJ Humane Society, opting not to remain with the Liberty Humane Society.

The city continued to deal with a garbage issue that predated COVID-19 but became inflamed by medical waste being improperly discarded during the pandemic and the new garbage collection contractor. This was in part helped by the annual Earth Day clean up across the city and a “clean sweeps” initiative by First Ward City Councilman Neil Carroll.

The city’s current water contract with Suez was also a common topic of discussion at council meetings, with many residents citing high water bills. The council approved a contract with A + L Disposal, an alleged political donor, however the city claimed the gift was returned.

The hospital saga at a standstill

The fight over Bayonne Medical Center was also front and center before the city council in 2021.

At the end of 2019, CarePoint announced the sale of its three Hudson County hospitals, including Bayonne Medical Center. Throughout the year, it became a never-ending saga.

As CarePoint Health dissolves and liquidates its assets, including Bayonne Medical Center, Hudson Regional Hospital has purchased the real estate of the hospital. Meanwhile, CarePoint has reached an agreement with BMC Hospital LLC to operate the hospital.

However, Hudson Regional Hospital wants to operate the hospital, not BMC Hospital LLC, sparking a war between the entities.

CarePoint and Hudson Regional Hospital continue to butt heads, with Hudson Regional Hospital starting off 2021 by terminating its lease agreement with CarePoint. The entities were further entangled in a number of lawsuits, and by April the fight had made its way to the Bayonne City Council.

The battle over Bayonne Medical Center continued throughout the year. Photo by Daniel Israel

The council introduced held a public hearing on two ordinances that would condemn the property of Bayonne Medical Center through eminent domain and allow BMC Hospital, LLC, CarePoint’s chosen successor which currently operates the hospital, to also own the land. However, the council has continuously postponed a vote pending approval of the state Local Finance Board, which has said it is waiting on the city and county. Regardless, the ordinances appear doomed to fail due to the opposition by Ashe-Nadrowski and the abstention of Gullace due to a conflict of interest since he sits on the hospital board.

In the midst of the battle, CarePoint announced it would be transitioning to a nonprofit, with its three hospitals will continue to operate in their current form and will be controlled by the new nonprofit organization, a spokesperson told the Bayonne Community News when asked if the hospitals were still up for sale. The move effectively brought the eminent domain process to a standstill, but the council still opts to postpone it monthly.

A public hearing before a state entity finally manifested in the form of a New Jersey Department of Health meeting in December. However, nothing has moved forward since and everything still remains per status quo.

With CarePoint and BMC Hospital, LLC on one side, and Hudson Regional Hospital on the other, sparring between the entities is bound to continue into 2022.

School district copes with COVID-19

The school district started the year off under virtual instruction, opting not to shift to hybrid or fully in-person instruction for the rest of the 2020-2021 school year after the winter break. In the meantime, the district was prepping for an eventual return to the classrooms. Meanwhile, some parents called for a return to in-person learning. By March, the district announced it would shift to hybrid instruction in May.

In May, students returned to classrooms under that hybrid model. While there were plans to return to a full in-person instruction model, COVID-19 did not allow for it. Graduation was again held twice, both in person and remotely. Students returned fully in-person in September and maintained that through the end of the year.

The Board of Education adopted a $154 million budget in 2021 and approved a new contract with educators. The district also received almost $10 million to construct a new technical education facility at the high school.

Students returned to school in person in May of 2021, for the first time since the onset of the pandemic.

The board approved the renewal of Superintendent of Schools John Niesz’s contract for an additional five years. The board also approved a new position, the Assistant Superintendent of Special Education, and named Jennifer Vecchiarelli to role. Additionally, the board created its own Office of Emergency Management, appointing former Deputy Police Chief Walter Rogers as the emergency response and crisis coordinator.

Dwayne Williams was named head football coach at Bayonne High School. After a 4-5 season, his contract was not renewed for unclear reasons according to his attorney, although it likely has to do with a brawl between Bayonne High School and Barringer High School after the last game of the season.

The first Black elected trustee to the Board of Education, David Watson was sworn in at the start of the year. However, by November, he resigned because he had to move for family reasons.

Trustee Ava Finnerty passed away. Her seat was filled by parent Melissa Godesky-Rodriguez. Godesky-Rodriguez was reelected on a “Together We Can” slate alongside Trustees Jodi Casais and Pamela Sclafene.

Three seats on the board were up for election in November, with a crowded race which resulted in the incumbents on the “Together We Can” slate sweeping. For the election, the city held early voting for the first time in history.

Redevelopment booms unabated

The Bayonne Planning Board and Bayonne City Council have been busy in 2021, approving a multitude of new projects. This includes: an eight-story mixed-use residential building with 126 units at the corner of East 12th Street and Broadway; a UPS distribution center at the former Military Ocean Terminal at Bayonne (MOTBY); various commercial uses were permitted as part of an adaptive reuse of the former Frank Theatres; an adaptive reuse of the former Mt. Carmel School which will be transformed into a residential building with 31 units; a seven-story multi-family residential building at 1207-1211 Kennedy Boulevard with 42 units; the Bayview project consisting of two eight-story buildings and one twelve story building with 797 units and plans for an additional 12 story tower; a rail-serviced construction supply hub; and a six-story residential building with 40 units at 196-200 Avenue E.

Redevelopment plans were approved for the site of the DaNoi restaurant, Resnick’s Phase Two, the Rite Aid on Broadway, PDQ Plastics and Atlantic Cement at 7 and 9 Hook Road respectively, and the shuttered Delta gas station at 218-222 Broadway, among others.

A rendering of what the center of the Bayview project will look like when completed.

A redevelopment plan for the Caschem site was approved, despite redeveloper objections to height limitations on part of the site. The plan was withdrawn before the city council as the redeveloper sought to submit an alternate redevelopment plan. When the original redevelopment plan was approved, the Gamal Group had claimed that its neighbor, Togus Urban Renewal, owner of the Texaco site seeking to construct a film studio, had not communicated its site plans for the site with them and that the height limitation was put in at Togus’s request. Meanwhile, resident Robert Archibald has filed a lawsuit to have a public hearing for the original Caschem redevelopment plan prior to the council taking any action on the new Gamal Group East redevelopment plan.

The renovations to the former Holy Family Academy to open a new Head Start location at the school continued, eventually coming to a standstill after the bids kept coming in too high from contractors to complete the upgrades. Finally, the council received a worthy bid, awarding the contract to Billy Contracting and Restoration for over $2 million. The BEOF also unveiled the new name and logo of the school at Holy Family, while it seeks further federal funds to complete the rest of the renovations. The planning board also approved plans for the district to reuse the closed St. Andrew’s School as a school.

However, one former Catholic school was not as lucky. The former Marist High School is being eyed by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority as part of a project to construct a new Newark Bay Bridge. It is unclear how this will affect the current redevelopment plan for the property, which was approved by the Bayonne Planning Board in December and offers residential and industrial options. The re-developer assigned to the property, Peninsula Court, LLC, a subsidiary of the Alessi Organization, has not yet submitted final site plans for the board. Prior to the reassignment of the re-developer, the city in conjunction with the school district was looking to purchase the property for educational uses.

Other redevelopment continues across Bayonne, including the implosion of military buildings at MOTBY, the planned construction of a ferry terminal, ongoing library renovations, and other construction slated. Additionally, the Building Department moved out of City Hall, and into one of the parcels of the former Frank Theatres to better serve the public.

Co-founder of Black in Bayonne Camille High led the “Power in the City” parade down Avenue C. Photo by Daniel Israel

Activism prominent in the peninsula

Black in Bayonne, founded in 2020 following the police killing of George Floyd, kicked off the year celebrating Black History Month, emphasizing its importance all year long. Meanwhile, the Bayonne Branch of the NAACP regained local prominence with new President Donald Byrd at the helm. The local organization’s various committees working with the city on various issues.

Co-founder of Black in Bayonne Camille High held an annual vigil for survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence in April. Following the guilty verdict of former police officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd, Black in Bayonne’s Clarice High said there was still work to be done.

The group helped get out the vote to people of color ahead of the June primaries, as the city hired its first Black women police officers. For Juneteenth, Black in Bayonne held a march for the second year in a row, this year expanding from a flag raising to a parade down Avenue C to City Hall known as “Power in the City.”

The Bayonne Interfaith Clergy Association in conjunction with the NAACP Health Committee held a series of mental health events in 16th Street Park and online. In July, Black in Bayonne called for a better police response to mental health and substance abuse crises following a recent fatal officer-involved shooting in Bayonne.

The group closed out the year with holiday festivities meant to support the culture including giving away meals for Thanksgiving, hosting a Black Business Crawl for Black Friday, a toy giveaway throughout December, and an opportunity for children to take pictures with a Black Santa.

Lawsuits, legal letters, and food distribution

Business Administrator Melissa Mathews filed a gender discrimination lawsuit against the city and a number of Bayonne officials in April, alleging a toxic culture at City Hall. However, in August, a Hudson County Superior Court judge dismissed three main defendants from the lawsuit, including former Assistant Business Administrator Mark Bonamo, former Municipal Services Director Tim Boyle, and Office of Emergency Management Coordinator Eduardo Ferrante. Mathews has filed an amended suit seeking to reinstate them.

From left to right: City Council President Sharon Ashe-Nadrowski, Business Administrator Melissa Mathews, and Law Director Jay Coffey. Photo by Daniel Israel

Boyle later resigned following an incident in which he allegedly illegally recorded a conversation he was not part of, which involved Mathews. The council appointed Gary Chmielewski to fill the position left empty by Boyle.

An appellate court panel also reinstated the “sexting” lawsuit filed by former deputy register Stacie Percella in 2018. And in December, a judge ruled that Davis alongside other Bayonne officials can be deposed in the case.

A Bayonne police officer has filed a lawsuit alleging retaliation after being accused of reporting a superior’s drinking and driving. While the officer has denied filing the report, he allegedly still faced pushback as if he did.

Bayonne Food Bank funding is in limbo, pending a letter of no conflict of interest for co-founder Melissa Mathews from the city of Bayonne Law Department. However, a rift became evident between Law Director Jay Coffey and Business Administrator Melissa Mathews.

By July, it was announced the matter had been handed off to outside counsel. While no movement had occurred for some months, the matter is being handled “administratively,” officials said in December.

Meanwhile, in August, Hunger Free Unity in the Community asked the city for help in finding a permanent location to distribute food from in Bayonne. By November, the council was exploring a few options, however, there had been no solid leads.

Hurricane Ida, stormwater management, park upgrades, and street renaming

The remnants of Hurricane Ida dumped more than nine inches of rain on Bayonne on the night of Sept. 1, causing numerous floods across the city. By Sept. 7, FEMA teams had surveyed Bayonne with canvass teams arriving on Sept. 15 to help residents eligible for federal assistance.

Cars were strewn about, left abandoned following flooding by Hurricane Ida. Photo by Victor M. Rodriguez

In August, the city council passed a resolution asking for federal help in financing its Long Term Control Plan to address combined sewer overflows (CSOs). City officials say the city is working on a number of stormwater projects, including one at Cottage Street and Hobart Avenue, to continue to address the flooding problem in Bayonne.

The over $3 million renovations to Fitzpatrick Park including playground and stormwater management upgrades continued, finishing and reopening in early December. The final touches were installed to the park and the park was completely open by Christmas Eve. The city saved the bells of the now-demolished St. Joseph’s Syriac Catholic Cathedral back in 2020, with the intention of incorporating them into the new East 25th Street pedestrian bridge. Instead, the city will now construct a bell and clock tower in Fitzpatrick Park using the recovered bells. Meanwhile Collins Park is under construction, as well as Morris Park and 28th Street Park among others.

Streets were renamed after prominent locals Rev. H. Gene Sykes, Edith Ferrell, and Jack Graham. A street near 16th Street Park was renamed after the late Det. Joseph Seals, as well as a memorial bench dedicated in his honor.

Miscellaneous facts from 2021

The year started off with two incidents of racism. The first was when a Black woman filmed herself being the subject of racial slurs. In March, another video went viral showing a woman hurling racial slurs at a person of color. Both women from the viral videos were later charged with bias intimidation.

The wind turbine is still broken. The city is still negotiating with the manufacturer to fix it.

The CMA CGM Marco Polo sails under the Bayonne Bridge.

Cruises by Royal Carribbean, which had ceased since the onset of the pandemic in 2020, began work to resume operations over the summer, and cruises set sail again in September. And in November, it amended its agreement with Royal Carribbean to mandate all passenegers age 12 and up need to be vaccinated to board a cruise. And speaking of ships, the biggest cargo vessel to ever dock on the East Coast, the CMA CGM Marco Polo, passed under the Bayonne Bridge in May.

While it was announced in late April that the annual Memorial Day Parade in the city would not be held due to the state of the committee and its veterans. Then the city stepped in to take over, with a new committee appointed by the mayor set to organize the parade again in 2022. Veterans were honored throughout the year, including the unveiling of a statue of war hero Stephen Gregg in the Bayonne county park that bears his name.

Mayor James Davis helped police catch a robber who allegedly dragged a woman from their vehicle. And TEDx Talks are coming to Bayonne.

Remembering the past and moving forward

While Bayonne has paid a toll due to COVID-19, the city continues to charge forward. However, it will not forgot those it lost in 2021, such as Zoning Board Chairman Mark Urban passed away after a battle with cancer, or Maria Ambrocio, the Bayonne nurse who died after she was assaulted in Times Square.

As the city continues to strive towards normalcy in 2022, the challenges of 2021 will not be forgotten, as many are still present and growing worse.

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

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