Highlands resident Derek Gordon street kayaking after this afternoon's storm. Photo credit: Brian Cobb
The center of town, which is both residential and business, is at a lower elevation than the shore line. During a storm, water comes from the Sandy Hook Bay/Shrewsbury River and storm water comes rushing down to the below sea level downtown from “the hill,” the highest elevation on the east coast of the United States which includes parts of Highlands and the Monmouth Hills section of Middletown. During a big storm at high tide and a full moon, downtown Highlands looks like Venice without the charm and romance.
Councilman Chris Francy convinced the rest of the governing body to have T&M Associates, the borough’s engineers, design a flood mitigation system that includes new pumps and pipes to get the water out of town and back into the bay/river. The project is said to be “shovel ready” and will cost roughly $4 million dollars. The governing body is applying to FEMA to cover $2.2 million of the cost. Congressman Frank Pallone is on board to advocate for the project with FEMA. At a town hall meeting on Monday night, Francy, Pallone and Mayor Frank Nolan said that Highlands is currently number three on FEMA’s list of such projects in New Jersey but that only two will be approved. Pallone is working to get Highlands bumped up on the list and secure the funding. That might be good for Highlands and bad for a community along the Passaic River.
The governing body is set to vote on a resolution tonight that will put the project on the ballot in November as a non-binding referendum. The referendum would ask the voters consent to fund the entire project without FEMA money.
Loud moans being heard throughout the Grand Tour neighborhood in Highlands lead to the rescue of four giant pet tortoises that would not have survived the coming winter in New Jersey’s climate, according to a report in The Asbury Park Press.
Richard Hines, 41, moved from North Carolina to Highlands in June, bringing his pets with him. Big Blackjack, a 575 pound native of the African archipelago had been Hines pet for 15 years. Three other tortoises ranging in size from 25 to 120 lbs were also rescued.
The Division of Fish and Wildlife filed charges of possession of an exotic species without a permit against Hines.
Welcome to New Jersey Mr. Hines. Hines’ wife Christina told NJ.com that the couple would not have moved here if they had known they couldn’t keep the tortoises which are valued between $2000 and $10,000 on the exotic pet market.
Monmouth SPCA Chief Buddy Amato told NJ.com that the aninmals were malnournished and had holes in their shells filled with fiber glass. He said they are desert animals that the Hines improperly kept in water.
Members of the Highlands Fire Department will be transporting a piece of the World Trade Center from JFK Airport to the World Trade Center site and then on to Highlands tomorrow, according to Councilwoman and former Fire Chief Rebecca Kane.
Kane said that the Port Authority approved the HFD’s application for a piece of the WTC to be permanently memorialized at their firehouse with a mural and lighting on June 27th.
The steel will arrive at Veteran’s Park in Highlands tomorrow, September 7, at approximately 6PM. Highlands will have a formal memorial service at the park on Sunday September 11 at 4:30PM.
How would you like to be that one family in West Long Branch who has been without power for a week?
West Long Branch appears to have fared pretty well from the storm. When I first started tracking JCP&L’s estimates for customers without power on Tuesday there was only 35 customers without power in West Long Branch. By Thursday evening West Long Branch was off the list, implying that power had been restored to the entire town.
On Friday one customer from West Long Branch was back on the list. Maybe that customer’s power had been restored and went out again. I’m guessing that it never went back on. That JCP&L missed them. There is still one West Long Branch customer on the list this morning.
That situation occurred to me. Not this time, during some other summer outage. I don’t remember which one, we’ve had at least one every summer, and one every other winter, since I moved to Highlands 10 years ago. The entire town was without power for, I don’t remember…too long. The town came back online and my house was still without power for a couple of days or three.
I was fortunate, which is probably why I don’t remember the details that well. My commercial building in Belford had power. We have a shower and a kitchen in the building. We didn’t have to impose on neighbors to shower or store food. I don’t know what the family in West Long Branch is going through, but I know it sucks to be the only one without power in your community for an extended period of time.
They or the one customer in Ocean Grove, Aberdeen, or Spring Lake Heights will probably be the last ones in Monmouth with the power turned on, as JCP&L finishes working on their “priorities” and then tracks back to the homes they missed the first time around. There are 8 zip codes with only one customer without power in Monmouth County. 22 zip codes with between 2 and 16 customers without power.
JCP&L sucks. Their infrastructure is aged and inadequate. They didn’t respond to Irene like it was an emergency. They responded like it was one of their “normal” annual power outages that was just bigger than usual. They lie to their customers. They lie to the mayors. They lie to county OEMs. They like to state OEM. They lie to BPU and they lie to the Govenor’s office. They lie to their own government affairs representives.
There was a joke floating around facebook that JCP&L got religion….they said they could not control acts of God. They didn’t get religion. Their preparation showed no fear of this act of God. In their response they did not act like their customers are His children.
I hope that JCP&L suffers the wrath Chris Christie.
While the situation we have suffered this week is a failure for JCP&L, it is also a failure of government.
For too many decades the Board of Public Utilities has been a bureau of cozy cronyism where senior political hacks or their spouses were sent as a reward for their “service.” It has been a piggy bank funded by ratepayers to fund experimental and inefficient wind and solar technologies and $80,000,000 off the books slush funds.
For decades BPU has looked the other way while JCP&L, a company owned by out of state utility conglomerates, “created efficiencies” by deferring maintenance and infrastructure upgrades. By reducing the number of New Jersey residents employed by the company.
Democratic hacks whined when Chris Christie appointed the prosecutor who ran his Trenton U.S. Attorney’s Office as BPU President over McGreevey- Corzine hack Jeanne Fox. Lee Solomon’s job in Christie’s cabinet got a whole lot more important this week.
Estimated Customers Out For
MONMOUTH County
As of Sep 3, 2011 9:47 AM
Highlands Mayor Frank Nolan at Wyndmoor Condos 12:30 AM September 3
Yesterday afternoon JCP&L Government Affairs Rep Roberta Sheridan told Highlands Mayor Frank Nolan that tonight’s first crew would be dispatched to Highlands at 10PM to restore power to the Wyndmoor Condominiums.
Nolan held a public information meeting for Highlands residents Friday evening. There were about 100 residents there, 40 from Wyndmoor. Meals had been provided earlier in the day at the community center. Too bad showers couldn’t be provided. Nolan relayed JCP&L’s commitment to a respectful, yet frustrated and skeptical crowd .
At 11:30 a JCP&L rep, Jackie, told Nolan that the crew was in Union Beach heading to Highlands. Nolan headed to Wyndmoor where he found residents Dick McCormick and Ray Goddard waiting. McCormick had been waiting since 9:30.
Ray Goddard, Mayor Frank Nolan and Dick McCormick, a 12:15 AM September 3, waiting for JCP&L's crew to arrive at Wyndmoor Condos to restore power for 125 families
Wyndmoor has 125 electrical customers. At 11:12 PM on Friday, JCP&L posted that only 79 Highlands customers were without power.
Goddard sent me at text at 11:27, “no trucks at Wyndmoor.”
The trucks showed up at 1:17 AM. The power finally went on at 7:20 AM.
Highlands Mayor Frank Nolan and a JCP&L lineman, 1:30 AM, September 3, 2011
Those JCP&L “customers” could easily be 300,000 to 400,000. More if your count employees of businesses that can’t operate without power.
Yesterday I wrote about the seasonal businesses in Highlands that are losing a major week of business due to JCP&L ineptitude. To those 300 people not working this week, add the 100 clamers who process their product through the James T. White clam depuration in plant in Highlands. The plant purifies 673,000 clams harvested from restricted waters per week, on average, before sending them to market. Watch for an increase in clam prices.
Here’s an update from JCP&L on the number of Monmouth County electric customers without power as of 10:05 this morning.
Estimated Customers Out For
MONMOUTH County
As of Aug 30, 2011 10:05 AM
City
250
ABERDEEN
15
ADELPHIA
278
ALLENHURST
377
ALLENTOWN
4
ALLENWOOD
2528
ASBURY PARK
3539
ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS
13
AVON BY THE SEA
3061
BELFORD
1441
BELMAR
96
BRADLEY BEACH
2
BRICK
732
BRIELLE
445
CLARKSBURG
5
CLIFFWOOD
371
CLIFFWOOD BEACH
3852
COLTS NECK
801
CREAM RIDGE
424
DEAL
1188
EATONTOWN
39
ELBERON
4392
ENGLISHTOWN
786
FAIR HAVEN
302
FARMINGDALE
9087
FREEHOLD
1608
HAZLET
City
3076
HIGHLANDS
22
HIGHTSTOWN
3574
HOLMDEL
4672
HOWELL
7
IMLAYSTOWN
7
INTERLAKEN
100
JACKSON
204
KEANSBURG
164
KEYPORT
1337
LEONARDO
1285
LINCROFT
1061
LITTLE SILVER
379
LOCUST
1721
LONG BRANCH
156
MANALAPAN
3166
MANASQUAN
2122
MARLBORO
3866
MATAWAN
5677
MIDDLETOWN
161
MILLSTONE TOWNSHIP
44
MONMOUTH BEACH
11
MONROE TOWNSHIP
2328
MORGANVILLE
131
NAVESINK
1541
NEPTUNE
274
NEW MONMOUTH
City
61
NORTH MIDDLETOWN
90
OAKHURST
918
OCEAN
31
OCEAN GROVE
33
OCEANPORT
217
PERRINEVILLE
2849
PORT MONMOUTH
3732
RED BANK
19
ROBBINSVILLE
370
ROOSEVELT
1827
RUMSON
46
SEA BRIGHT
1187
SEA GIRT
705
SHREWSBURY
751
SPRING LAKE
2190
SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS
5
TENNENT
1831
TINTON FALLS
18
UNION BEACH
1884
WALL
6
WALL TOWNSHIP
1
WARETOWN
630
WEST END
254
WEST KEANSBURG
35
WEST LONG BRANCH
39
WICKATUNK
Total Out = 92451
The free water and ice that JCP& L is offering, per APP, is small comfort.
3-5 Days Without Power Is Devastating to Seasonal Businesses
Hey Governor Christie! Even though it makes you seem like a Democrat, I appreciate where you’re coming from with your Hurricane Irene Business Assistance.
Those $500K lines of credit while waiting for insurance proceeds will come in handy for many, but let’s be real, this is a subsidy to the insurance companies. Issue an executive order that the insurance companies must pay the interests on those loans and the claims will be paid faster.
If those banks we bailed out were lending, we wouldn’t need this program. I don’t expect you to fix that problem until you are President. Thanks for stepping in now.
By the way, Governor, your did a great job this weekend. You still are. The business assistance plan is needed, and it is wonderful that the Lt. Governor is out at the shore campaigning for people to come back for the rest of the season (rest of the week.)
BUT THEY WON’T COME BACK IF THERE IS NO POWER!
I know you have a lot on your plate. Did I mention that you’re doing a great job? I also know you’re talking to CEO’s of the public utilities companies, because you said so during one of your briefings before I lost power. When you’re talking to the CEO of First Energy, that guy in Ohio, tell him there are thousands of seasonal businesses and seasonal employees serviced by his JCP&L subsidiary that are counting on this week and this coming weekend for a large portion of there annual income.
In Highlands, the small town on the Shrewsbury River where I live, we have 23 restaurants and all of their employees who would rather be earning this week than applying for loans or unemployment benefits.
The lack of information coming from JCP&L to the public is unacceptable:
Jersey Central Power & Light
JCP&L is continuing to experience power outages due to the effects of Hurricane Irene. We are assessing damage and anticipate that many of our Customers will be restored in the next several days. In areas with more extensive damage, restoration is expected to continue throughout the week. Please treat all downed wires and damaged electrical equipment as live and dangerous. If you have not already reported your electric service as being out, call 1-888-544-4877.Time Posted: Aug 29, 2011 9:27 AM
That a lowly blogger can find out that JCP&L is telling OEM that we’ll be without power for 3-5 days before the main stream press knows is an indictment of both the press and the utility.
It seems to me that JCP&L’s response to outages has been wanting the last few years. I appreciate the magnitude of Irene, but I wonder if they’d be doing a better job if they weren’t owned by an Ohio company. Two business owners mentioned to me today how much better the service was before JCPL’s Belford location closed. We’d wonder about that less, and make less noise about it, if the lights go in the bayshore today.
3-5 days without power at this time of year is devastating to seasonal businesses and their employees. It’s like pulling the plug on the week before Christmas for Macy’s.
Governor, you got the Jets-Giants game switched to tonight, but no one will be watching the game at bars in Highlands.
I know you can influence that guy in Ohio’s priorities. Please do so. Monmouth County businesses need the lights on.
The Highlands Business Partnership was joined by the Mayor and Council, Senators Joe Kyrillos and Jennifer Beck, Assemblywomen Mary Pat Angelini and Amy Handlin, Freeholders John Curly and Amy Mallet and about 200 members of the community to celebrate the completion of the new bridge that spans the Shrewsbury River between Highlands and Sea Bright with a ceremonial ribbon cutting.
During the ceremony, the Bayshore Marine Task Force, a cooperative of Bayshore area first responders who provide marine emergency services, provided a water display with their equipment.
The ceremony was followed by a two hour cruise on the river and Sandy Hook Bay hosted by SeaStreak and catered by Highlands restaurants.
Mayor Frank Nolan declared, “Highlands is open for business!” Nolan noted that business in Highlands, home to 22 restaurants within one square mile, was off 40% during the three summer seasons that were impacted by the demolition of the 75 year old drawbridge and the construction of the new 65 foot high fixed-span structure.
Old Highlands-Sea Bright Bridge. Photo Courtesy NJDOT.
Senator Joe Kyrillos read a letter from Governor Chris Christie which said in part, “today’s event effectively kicks off the first summer season at the Jersey Shore that vacationers and day trippers will be able to use it (the new bridge). I join with the legislators and community leaders present today in applauding the New Jersey Department of Transportation for completing this project on-time and under-budget. The bridge has made it easier for people to experience what Sandy Hook has to offer, including all of its small businesses that make vital contributions to our State’s rich economy.”
Jay Cosgrove, Vice President of the Business Partnership and an owner of Bahrs Landing expressed the gratitude of the business owners to their loyal customers who battled difficult traffic conditions to quick the establishments afloat during the bridge construction.
New Highlands Bridge. Photo Credit Jay Cosgrove, Bahrs Landing
Kyrillos said, “This bridge is of incredible importance to the residents of Monmouth County, as well as the many tourists and visitors from which our regional economy benefits,” Senator Kyrillos said. “The old, moveable bridge spanning the Shrewsbury River was in the poorest condition of all moveable bridges in New Jersey. We are fortunate to replace this critical infrastructure. It is a beautiful bridge and more important it is safe and secure and will be of service for generations to come.”
Senator Jennifer Beck said, “We’ve been watching the progress of the construction of the new Highlands Bridge over more than two years,” said Beck, “and it is exciting to see it concluded just in time for the summer beach season, when thousands of people, from New Jersey and beyond, come to visit the shore. Also, as a sponsor of legislation that would name this span in honor of my friend and mentor Captain Joseph Azzolina, which has already passed the State Senate, I have a personal connection to this bridge, and I look forward to seeing the legislation pass the Assembly.”
Beck asked those present to call Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver and ask her to post the bill naming the bridge for Azzolina for a vote.
Monmouth County GOP events are particularly enjoyable for me because I get to see many MMM readers in person and get face to face feedback, pro and con. Positive feedback usually includes a warm conversation, laughter and a friendly dig. Negative feedback is usually in the form of a cold shoulder, an evil eye or a faux smile. More and more there is agenda driven feedback and requests from people who want an issue covered or exposure for a candidate or cause. All of that happened last night. I appreciate all of it.
There were two related issues that dominated the feedback I received last night.
One was my explusion from the Highlands Republican Club for the treacherous act of accurately reporting Anna Little’s decree that the New Jersey Supreme Court is unconstitutional. I appreciate all the invitations to join or visit other Monmouth County Republican Clubs with no restrictions on what I write about. I also appreciate that none of the “threats” I received to be removed from the dinner via “appropriate measures” were followed through. My friend and fellow blogger Jim Hogan shared some hilarious emails he received from members of the HRC, including one from Mr. Neighbor, in response to Jim’s comments on my banishment.
The other issue that dominated feedback I received last night was my front page exposure and accompanying article in the triCityNews last month.
Senator Sean Kean greeted me with a smile and said, “Hi Art, I see Dan Jacobson likes you better than he likes me.” Dan has been particularly critical of Kean. I told Sean that I heard Jacobson was not the only one who felt that way.
Another party leader said he saw Dan’s article. “Is that for real, you don’t support Anna Little any longer?” he asked. When I told him it was, he was positively giddy. Another leader did not seem so happy about that.
Mickey Gooch gave me a good natured razzing for not including his testimonial about MMM in my journal ad. It is nice to know that someone actually reads the ad journal. Here’s Mickey’s quote:
“MMM is a great source of insider gossip and news in the conservative wing of the Republican Party and the Tea Party. I don’t agree with everything I read, but I keep taking a look- it is definitely entertaining. However, MMM would be better and could have far greater credibility if Art Gallagher didn’t display his biases quite so obviously and ran an unbiased forum for discussion. ” ~ Mickey Gooch, Mickey Gooch
I told Mickey he’s welcome to write another quote now that my biases have shifted.
Thank you for reading MMM, and thanks for your feedback.
While researching county committees and the question of by-laws this week I stumbled upon an interesting provision in the unconstitutional amendment to NJSA 19:5-3.2 that creates a significant incentive for county parties to create by-laws.
In Monmouth County we elect county committee members and the Chairman every two years. In trying to find the law that set those terms, I couldn’t find it. The terms of committee members and chairmen does not appear to be spelled out clearly anywhere in the law. I consulted an expert election law attorney figuring he would have the answer on his finger tips. After an hour searching the Intenet together over the phone, we still couldn’t find it.
Title 19 refers to annual elections but it isn’t clear. My election law expert found a case going back to the 1960’s that could be interepted to require annual elections.
I confess that my first thought upon this discovery was somewhat selfish.
Last year, due to the same snafu in the primary ballot printing that placed Dan Peters for Sheriff under Anna Little for Congress, making the Sheriff primary an unexpected race, county committee challengers in Highlands were also bracketed with Little.
I knew my county committee slate was in trouble as soon as I saw the ballot. Early on in the process Chairman Oxley assured me that the challengers would be in the Siberian section of the ballot. That I was supporting Little over Gooch for Congress was no secret. I had raised the question of bracketing the incumbent committee with Little in the primary because I expected her to win Highlands, which she did. Oxley assured me that the challengers would not be bracketed with Little and the committee that I led submitted our petitions under Gooch and the rest of the county line.
I know this wasn’t a dirty trick on Oxley’s part because he was more surprised and upset by the ballot as I was. Not so much because of the Higlands bracketing, but because of the Dan Peters for Sheriff bracketing under Little. Suddenly Shaun Golden for Sheriff lawn signs had to be rush ordered and placed throughout the 6th congressional district.
We weren’t going to buy four different sets of lawn signs for a county committee primary in Highlands that less than 200 people were going to vote in. But we did spent the weekend before the primary on the phone asking historical primary voters to cast a vote for Little for Congress and then move to the left and vote the county line for the rest of the ballot. Those hundreds of voice mails that said, “Please vote Anna Little for Congress in column B and then move to the left to column A and vote for Shaun Golden for Sheriff, Clifton and Arnone for Freeholder, Frank Nolan for Mayor and our local county committee team” must have sounded pretty weird to the people who listened to them. The messages didn’t work and the challengers won the primary on Little’s coat tails.
Discovering that the terms of committee members weren’t defined by law and what little law there was pointed to annual elections, it occurred to me to have my committee team in Highlands file petitions this year two minutes before the filing deadline.
If the clerk accepted our petitions and put us on the ballot, and if everyone kept their mouths shut, the current Highlands committee wouldn’t even know that they were about to be voted out until they got their sample ballots in the mail. This was fun fantasy.
But if the clerk said, “there’s no county committee election this year,” and I said, “there should be, let’s go to see Judge Lawson,” word would get out we’d waste a bunch of time and money.
If I prevailed, either in court or by the clerk accepting the petitions and putting us on the ballot, the victory would be short lived and all hell could break lose through out the county and as unhappy Republicans and Tea Party activists tried to take over the party every year. We could have a different county chairman every year. It could lead to chaos and ultimately Democratic control of the county government.
All of that went through my head in less time than it took for you to read it while I was on the phone and the Internet with my election law expert friend when I remembered reading in the Ocean County Republican By-Laws that the the term of county committee members in Ocean is four years.
“Hey election law attorney friend,” I said, ” the Ocean County By-Laws say that the terms of county committee members are four years, what’s up with that?”
Back to the unconstitutional statute we went and there is was….the new law passed by Corzine and the legislature provides that county committee terms are determined by committee by-laws.
That seems to be a pretty good reason to have by-laws.
Maybe we’ll have by-laws by the primary filing deadline. If not, we might have some fun in Highlands after all.