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Monday Morning High Tide

Downtown Highlands: photos by LoriAnn Nolan


Dock at Salt Creek Grill, Rumson, photo by Brian Nelson

Posted: October 29th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Highlands, Hurricane Sandy | Tags: , , | Comments Off on Monday Morning High Tide

Poltical Animals and other musings

I didn’t make the Highlands council meeting last night as I was dining in Princeton with Poltical Animals star Sigourney Weaver.

Not really.  Weaver was leaving the Blue Point Grill as my party was entering.  And we had the same waitress.  Still it was cool.  Other than politicians and pundits this was my closest celebrity encounter since Bette Midler walked in on me in a Fort Lauderdale Airport mens room.

 

Political Animals is a fun watch.

Weaver plays a former first lady, Elaine Barrish, who ran for president, lost the Democratic primary, divorced her philandering husband and became Secretary of State for the president who beat her in the primary.  In the most recent episode, Barrish tells the president that she is going to run against him again, but not before she councils him to do something more heroic than killing Bin Laden and her ex-husband ex-president punches out the vice president in the oval office.

While all of that high drama is going on, Barrish’s “bad son,” a gay piano player who was outed while growing up in the White House, is in the hospital recovering from a drug overdose and her “good son” is joining the mile high club with a reporter who buried the overdose story while the good son’s fiancee is smoking pot with Barrish’s mother.

Must see TV.

I heard the Highlands council did not vote to put the flood mitigation plan on the November ballot as a non-binding referendum and that Councilman Chris Francy did not deny that he kept the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers off his property when they wanted to study an alternate plan of flood mitigation.  When asked about that during the public portion of the meeting, I’m told that Francy said, “that article on the Internet was not really an article, but a blogger’s opinion.”

Whatever.  They’ve done the right thing so far.  I hope the governing body doesn’t drop the issue now.

The political animals in the NJ GOP were crazier today than the TV show.

The Bergen Record ran a piece by their Washington Correspondent Herb Jackson, GOP Senate candidate Joe Kyrillos open to tax hikes.

By early afternoon, Kyrillos issued a press release stating that he doesn’t favor raising taxes.  He wants to lower tax rates and close loopholes.

12th District GOP congressional candidate Eric Beck, the guy running against Rush Holt, issued two press releases.  The first one was announcing that he disagrees with Kyrillos on taxes.  The second one was announcing that Huffington Post  and Politickernj picked up the first one.  Beck’s campaign manager, Chris Pordon, who got his start in politics working for Kryillos, has been breaking his back trying to get free media for Beck.  He got some today, including this mention on MMM for which he’s been dogging me.

Anna Little has not issued a press release throwing Kyrillos under the bus.   Michele Bachman endorsed Little and the Bayshore Tea Party is having a bake sale fundraiser for her. Really.  What’s next, a car wash? No bikinis. Please.

In Bergen County, Republican County Executive Kathleen Donovan is suing the Republican controlled Freeholder Board to prevent them from dissolving the Bergen County Police.

Kyrillos announced that he will release three years of tax returns at a press conference tomorrow.  Senator Bob Menendez responded that he will release five years of tax returns at a press conference next week.

Not a bad day for the Democrats given all the Republican self inflicted wounds.

Posted: August 16th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Congressional Races, 2012 U.S. Senate Race, Anna Little, Bayshore Tea Party Group, Bob Menendez | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Flooding in Highlands

Flooding is a serious problem in Highlands.

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.

There’s two problems with this scenario.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted: August 15th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Army Corp of Engineers, Chris Francy, FEMA, Flooding, Frank Pallone, Highlands | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments »

Unity or Strange Bedfellows in the Monmouth GOP?

Anna Little, with good reason, has been taking credit for John Bennett’s election as Monmouth GOP Chairman.  If not for Little endorsing her benefactor and encouraging the County Committee members who are also Tea Party activists to vote for Bennett, Christine Hanlon would be Chairwoman.

Little’s reward, whatever it is, will come sometime after she loses to Frank Pallone in November.

The biggest change that Bennett has made since taking over the helm of the Monmouth GOP six weeks ago is to start to make good on his campaign promise to raise the money necessary for county campaigns.   He has informed the Monmouth GOP ticket of Freeholders John Curley and Serena DiMaso, as well as County Clerk Claire French, not to worry about rasing money for the fall campaign.  He has instructed office holders not on the ballot this fall, including the legislative delegation and the sheriff, all of whom have campaigns next year, to suspend their fund raising activities effective August 1 so as not to compete with his efforts for the current campaign.

But how will he raise the money?

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted: July 31st, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Anna Little, Brookdale Community College, Campaign Contributions, Campaign Finance, Christine Hanlon, CME Associates, ELEC, Frank Pallone, Freeholder, John Bennett, John Curley, Middlesex County Democrats, Middletown Democrats, Monmouth County, Monmouth County Board of Freeholders, Monmouth County Republican Committee, Monmouth GOP | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | 35 Comments »

Bridge collapse, water main break, reduces water for 55,000 Monmouth residents

Photo credit: Holmdel-Hazlet Patch

A “major infrastructure failure” at the Swimming River Water Treatment Plant in the Lincroft section of Middletown has shut the water off for 3,000 Holmdel residences and closed Brookdale Community College until further notice.

Holmdel-Hazlet Patch was the first to report the story, scooping the Asbury Park Press pay site by an hour.

A statement from New Jersey American Water Company that was emailed by the Borough of Tinton Falls to its residents and forwarded to MMM by a reader states that the failure includes the loss of two transmission mains leaving the plant and well as the raw water main coming into the plant.  New Jersey American Water customers in Monmouth County may be experiencing low water pressure or no pressure at this time.

Photo credit: lostcreekquarnberg blog

Residents of Middletown, Holmdel, Aberdeen, Highlands, Seabright, Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, Oceanport, Shrewsbury Township and Borough, Tinton Falls and Long Branch are requested to limit all non-essential water use while NJAW works to restore service.

Save water, shower with friends.

UPDATE  4:32

Middletown Township sent out an automated phone call at 4:30 to residents and businesses announcing that all outdoor water usage is restricted.

 

 

Posted: June 29th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Brookdale Community College, Middletown, Monmouth County | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Little: Highlands Voters Unsophisticated

Fresh off her 2010 defeat at the hands of Congressman Frank Pallone, former Highlands Mayor Anna Little blamed the fact that she lost in her hometown by 55* votes on the lack of sophistication of her constituents and colleagues on the borough’s governing body.

Little told Politickernj her Highlands loss “was likely to involve some borough employees” who would could be effected by a layoff plan she had agreed to support.  One month after the election, lame duck Little killed the layoff plan by voting with the Democrats on the governing body over the objections of her fellow Republicans.

“The council is not politically savvy,” Little said, “They were running too.”

“I think there’s some feeling that I left them behind, too,” she said. “I’m their mayor, and I’m off doing something else. (But they don’t understand), everything I do outside of Highlands will relate back to Highlands.”

Little was the only Republican on the ballot in Highlands who lost in 2010.  Republican Frank Nolan was elected Mayor to replace Little.  Shaun Golden was elected Sheriff.  Rob Clifton and Tom Arnone were elected Freeholder.  We’d give you their numbers in Highlands, but the County Clerk’s Office hasn’t gotten around to posting the official election results of 2010 and 2011 on their website.

 

* News reports at the time indicated that Little lost Highlands by 76 votes.  When mail in and provisional ballots were counted the loss was by 55 votes.

 

Posted: May 24th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Congressional Races, Anna Little, Frank Pallone | Tags: , , , , , , | 8 Comments »

Horny Tortoises Rescued In Highlands

Happy Ending For Giant Testudines?

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.

 

 

Posted: September 14th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Highlands | Tags: , , , , , | Comments Off on Horny Tortoises Rescued In Highlands

9-11 World Trade Center Steel Coming To Highlands

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.

Posted: September 6th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: 9-11, Highlands | Tags: , , , | 8 Comments »

2139 Customers Without Power In Monmouth County

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 FoxLee 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

 

City

1

ABERDEEN

1

ALLENHURST

1

ALLENTOWN

5

ASBURY PARK

42

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

2

BELFORD

33

BELMAR

13

BRADLEY BEACH

40

BRIELLE

33

CLARKSBURG

6

CLIFFWOOD

19

CLIFFWOOD BEACH

11

COLTS NECK

4

CREAM RIDGE

7

DEAL

2

EATONTOWN

1

ELBERON

41

ENGLISHTOWN

6

FAIR HAVEN

3

FARMINGDALE

84

FREEHOLD

 

 

City

32

HAZLET

54

HIGHLANDS

199

HOLMDEL

3

HOWELL

2

KEANSBURG

6

KEYPORT

26

LEONARDO

81

LINCROFT

22

LITTLE SILVER

8

LOCUST

13

LONG BRANCH

2

MANALAPAN

3

MANASQUAN

10

MARLBORO

6

MATAWAN

390

MIDDLETOWN

19

MILLSTONE TOWNSHIP

27

MONMOUTH BEACH

55

MORGANVILLE

16

NEPTUNE

88

NEW MONMOUTH

 

 

City

10

OAKHURST

5

OCEAN

1

OCEAN GROVE

12

OCEANPORT

3

PERRINEVILLE

31

PORT MONMOUTH

72

RED BANK

1

ROBBINSVILLE

92

ROOSEVELT

344

RUMSON

6

SEA BRIGHT

16

SEA GIRT

10

SHREWSBURY

3

SPRING LAKE

1

SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS

10

TINTON FALLS

77

WALL

14

WEST END

9

WEST KEANSBURG

1

WEST LONG BRANCH

4

WICKATUNK

 

Total Out = 2139

By the way, PSEG had only 300 customers without power in their entire service area as of 9PM last night.

Posted: September 3rd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Highlands, Hurricane Irene, JCP&L | Tags: , , | 5 Comments »

Wyndmoor Condos Get Power At 7:20 AM

Highlands Mayor Frank Nolan a Wyndmoor Condos 12:30 AM September 3

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 waiting for JCP&L's crew to arrive at Wyndmoor Condos to restore power for 125 families

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

Highlands Mayor Frank Nolan and a JCP&L lineman, 1:30 AM, September 3, 2011

Posted: September 3rd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Frank Nolan, Highlands, JCP&L | Tags: , , | 2 Comments »