Archive for November, 2006

Kean Headquarters Turned Into a Prison

Sean Piotrowski| November 8, 2006 10:16 am

LOCKED DOORS!
In a move that shows how classless the Menedez campaign really is, the Star-Ledger reported this tidbit this morning in an article about our wonderful Gov. Jon Corzine’s statements on election night:

“Yesterday, the funny business started before 5 a.m., when a lone worker inside the Kean for Senate headquarters in Mountainside discovered he was locked in. Someone had padlocked the office’s front entrance and jammed all the other doors.

The worker, whom police identi fied as John Rodgers, “was inside when it happened but didn’t hear anything,” Mountainside Police Capt. Richard Osieja said.

There was a collateral victim: Dorf Feature Service, a local news agency used by The Star-Ledger that is the only other tenant in the one-story building. A Dorf employee who tried to get into her office sometime later also found the door jammed, Osieja said.

Mountainside police dispatched the town’s public works department to cut the padlock, and locksmiths fixed the other doors. But the incident didn’t end without a flurry of heated accusations.”

Source: NJ.com

New Jersey Loves Corruption

Sean Piotrowski| 10:02 am

Kean Jr.

“Three weeks ago, Democrats conducted a secret poll that cut to the core of this campaign, and told them in advance that they were very likely to win.

The poll asked voters which generic candidate they would prefer: A Democrat with some baggage on ethics — or a Republican who usually supports President Bush.

The verdict was overwhelming. By a margin of 54 to 31, the voters of New Jersey preferred the slippery Democrat.”

Source: NJ.com

Republicans Lose Control of the House

Sean Piotrowski| 9:49 am

Complete NJ State Election Results

Sean Piotrowski| November 7, 2006 11:12 pm

New Jersey

For results for the entire state visit CNN.com

Residents want to live in Toms River

Sean Piotrowski| 11:05 pm

Parkway Sign for TR
Dover Township will fade into past. Voters reject name, favor Toms River
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
BY MARYANN SPOTO
Star-Ledger Staff

Dover Township, get ready to become history.

Residents in this sprawling Ocean County community suffer ing from an identity crisis of late voted last night to change the name of the town to Toms River.

“Now it’s official. We’re Toms River,” said Mayor Paul Brush, who co-chaired the committee pushing for the change. “We all feel we live in Toms River, we say we’re from Toms River and now the voters have spoken.”

The unofficial vote, 16,059 to 10,176, culminates a hard-fought and emotional battle over whether the town should keep the name it has borne for 239 years or take the moniker that many people have called it anyway.

The town officially takes its new name next Tuesday when the clerk certifies the election results. Toms River is a section of Dover that en compasses the township’s downtown district and the county seat. Though Dover Township has more than a dozen sections all with different names, Toms River is the one that became synonymous with the entire town.

The confusion was magnified when the U.S. Postal Service built a new post office in the Toms River section and gave nearly all residents in Dover Township a Toms River mailing address.

Proponents of the name change, spearheaded by Brush and a group of downtown business owners calling themselves the Dover Township Name Change Committee, ar gued that the change was needed to end confusion. The town also is frequently confused with Dover in Morris County.

Until recently, the U.S. Census considered Dover Township and Toms River two different communities.

Supporters of the change also argued that businesses would often pass over Toms River, because they considered it too small and didn’t realize it was a smaller part of New Jersey’s seventh most-populous municipality.

Opponents argued, however, that the confusion is exaggerated by business people looking for a new marketing strategy. They contended the town didn’t have to go as far as changing its name — and essentially wiping out its history — to clear up ambiguity.

The mayor has said the name change on all township-owned property, estimated to cost between $16,000 and $20,000, would be phased in over several years. Opponents insisted the cost will be much higher and will warrant a tax increase for a town already facing a $1.4 million budget shortfall.

Source: NJ.com