Showing posts with label Stephen Berger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen Berger. Show all posts

Monday, January 18, 2016

On many news stories, an A for effort, but C for execution

Homeowners on Forest Avenue in Teaneck , above and below, and on a surprisingly large number of other township streets have been cursing officials who keep on raising property taxes, but refuse to pave their streets.




By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

NJ Transit's broken promises to commuters who moved into Wood-Ridge's Wesmont section certainly deserves front-page coverage in The Record today.

But the state mass transit agency has screwed so many others who ride its buses and trains you have to wonder why Staff Writer Christopher Maag is making such a big deal over a train station that is years behind schedule (A-1).

The paper's transportation writers, including Road Warrior Columnist John Cichowski, have ignored all of the commuters who can't find rush-hour seats on NJ Transit buses and trains.

How's that?

Maag focuses on Alex Kernitsky, a commuter who lives in the Westmont transit village, but who has to drive to a park-ride lot, take a bus into Manhattan, then board a subway and, finally, walk four blocks to his office -- a total of 90 minutes (A-1).

If Kernitsky could take a train to the city, that would save him "an hour of commuting time every day," Maag reports.

But after arriving in Manhattan on an NJ Transit train, the commuter still would have to take a subway and walk four blocks to his office, so readers wonder how he could do all that in 3o minutes.

Too many Bergers

Below the fold today, a story on the delayed hiring of a new chief executive at the Port Authority never explains why filling the job is so important, and why the agency can't simply get along without one (A-1).

In the story, Staff Writer Paul Berger quotes Stephen Berger, executive director of the bi-state agency from 1985 to 1990, but readers don't know whether they are related.

Devorah Stubin 

The front of the local-news section today is dominated by the death of Devorah Stubin, 22, an Orthodox Jewish woman from the city of Passaic "whose body was recovered in the Passaic River this weekend," according to the first paragraph (L-1).

Yet, a few paragraphs later, Staff Writer Linda Moss confuses readers by saying "there was a body in the car [found at the bottom of the river], and as of Sunday night, authorities still had not officially identified the corpse as that of Stubin." 

Which is it?

The story raises more questions than it answers, says a reader in Hackensack:


Victor -- I read the article in this morning's Record about the young woman from Passaic who died in the tragic accident and there are more questions than answers in the article. 1.  If the police had not identified the body, how could she have been buried? Traditional Jewish law calls for immediate burial, but was there not a death certificate.
2.  There is really no description of what happened.
By chance, I ran into a Hasbrouck Heights police officer who told me that the woman went through a fence behind a funeral home in Wallington which backs onto the Passaic River.  
She must have entered the parking lot and then went through the fence and into the River.  If she was going to Passaic I can see driving through Wallington to find a bridge to cross the Passaic River, but it still does not make sense to me.
3.  Where was the rest stop on the Parkway where she was going to meet her brother?  Was it south or north of Maywood.  The stop was never identified.
4.  Most importantly, if the police officer in Maywood stopped her on the Esplanade and we want to go to the Parkway, why did he follow her to Summit Avenue in, I presume, Hackensack.  All he had to do was direct her to Passaic Street in  Maywood, which I believe is a block from the Esplanade, and she could have turned right on Passaic Street and picked up the parkway south in Rochelle Park.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Identifying with a sex addict

2010 Floods in Pakistan - A Race Against TimeImage by United Nations Development Programme via Flickr












Do Publisher Stephen A. Borg, Editor Francis "Frank The Castrato" Scandale and other male mucky mucks at The Record of Woodland Park identify with sex-addicted golfer Tiger Woods? Why, then, do they give his divorce and a Paramus tournament half of the front page today?


Front and center is sports columnist Tara Sullivan's gentle handling of Woods, starting with a lame lead paragraph. Nowhere in her story does the phrase "sex addict" appear, and none of the reporters who questioned him asked whether he is still screwing around or going for therapy or what.


It's not as if Borg and the editors are unfamiliar with addictions. Former Publisher Malcolm A. "Mac" Borg is a reformed alcoholic who was ordered by his doctor to stop smoking. The elder Borg's behavior when he was drinking was common knowledge in the newsroom, and the paper even ran a story about his DWI arrest.


I recall being invited to lunch in the corporate dining room with the elder Borg and Stephen Berger, who at the time was the new executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (1985-90), an agency I covered as a reporter for The Record. Mac used the F-word to ask Berger, whom he was meeting for the first time, when an aviation museum would open at Teterboro Airport.


The main headline worries if Woods will be able to rebuild his game and life. What about the lives of his ex-wife and the children whom he betrayed? Aren't the editors worried about them, too? Even if you are a rabid sports fan who loves golf, Woods' behavior is reprehensible. His story deserves to be banished to the back pages.

Blaming Obama


Now, Governor Chritie has jumped on the bandwagon of blaming the Obama administration for everything. He says unyielding federal bureaucrats, who denied New Jersey an education grant of up to $400 million, are "the kind of stuff, candidly, that drives people crazy about government...."


Emphatically no. What drives people crazy about government is that a conservative Republican like Christie comes along promising to cut property taxes, then turns around and eases the tax burden on the Borgs and other millionaires. How does he make up for it? He refuses to raise the low gasoline tax, which boosts mass transit, and cuts aid to the middle and working classes, including seniors, women and poor schoolchildren. What a fraud.


Flooding where?

In Local, it took the former Hackensack daily a couple of weeks to report what Pakistanis in North Jersey are doing to to help victims  of flooding (photo).


A day after the death of a Fair Lawn woman in a plane crash  in Nepal was all over Page 1, another Fair Lawn woman, killed by an NJ Transit train on Wednesday, is banished today to L-3, where the photo caption doesn't even give her name. I guess her life isn't worth anything to head Assignment Editor Deirdre "Mother Hen" Sykes, because she didn't die on her birthday or wasn't headed to Mount Everest.


No Hackensack news


 Local contains no news about the core Bergen County  towns of Hackensack, Teaneck or Englewood.


Reviewer returns



The Second Helpings blog on northjersey.com resumed Aug. 23, with an entry by Elisa Ung, the restaurant reviewer who has been on leave. It's ironic that the highly promotional blog carries the same name of a food-rescue group founded in Indianapolis in 1998 that today serves 50,000 meals to the hungry every month.


With Ung's return and the appoinment of a new food editor, readers can only hope food coverage improves. Since Bill Pitcher left as food editor Aug. 6, what had been poor coverage became pathetically poor.
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