Showing posts with label high property taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high property taxes. Show all posts

Thursday, May 9, 2013

In Hackensack, our property tax dollars simply disappear

The City of Hackensack gives residents who pay property taxes a 10-day grace period. Independent City Council candidate Victor E. Sasson paid his 2nd-quarter taxes on Tuesday, depositing a check for $3,953 in a lock box behind City Hall, below.

What will Sasson get for his money? Paved streets? Fewer insider deals? Not if residents remain cool to voting in Tuesday's City Council election, as they have in the past, ensuring a continuation of our crummy government.




Independent City Council candidate Victor E. Sasson asks, "Do you think it's fun to live in Hackensack?"

Sasson worked for 29 years as a reporter, copy editor and food writer at The Record on River Street, then bought a home in the city's Fairmount section in August 2007.

Since then, he has written increasingly higher property tax checks four times a year, the latest on Tuesday, triggering another bout of heartburn.

Where does money go?

He still doesn't really know where all of his tax money goes.

Long-time residents say Sasson's street hasn't been paved since 1979.

Business jets roaring overhead keep him up at night, and the city wakes him up by collecting garbage and recyclables before 6 a.m.

The city is one of the most inefficient around, operating a huge fleet of gas guzzlers, including as many as 15 driven home by city employees, and is just getting around to installing solar panels on city buildings.

No solar panels are planned for schools, however, and the district spends more per pupil than Ridgewood, with little academic success to show for it. 

Dreaded 'Zisaville' 

Most of the city officials who rule Sasson's life were installed by the corrupt Zisa family, making  "Zisaville" a dirty word.

All but one member of the current City Council have been in office for nearly 8 years -- plenty of time to rape the taxpayer with insider deals worth millions of dollars that have favored a select group of lawyers, landlords and developers. 

Disease of apathy

Thanks to apathetic voters, these autocratic council members were elected by only about 20 percent or less of the registered voters in 2005 and 2009. 

Many of the voters who don't want to get involved are living in Hackensack's large number of apartment buildings, where they pay property taxes passed along to them in their rent, although they might not realize that.

A good argument could be made that city officials adopted a policy of destroying single-family homes to make way for apartment buildings, knowing largely apathetic tenants would not seek reform at the polls.

Curse of the tax-exempt 

Living in the county seat, with a major medical center nearby, has proven to be a curse.

Hackensack University Medical Center owns $130 million in property that, as a non-profit, it pays no taxes on, shifting the burden onto homeowners and renters.

Several years ago, the hospital took over the city ambulance service and EMTs -- in an official sleight-of-hand that was another bad deal for taxpayers.

Bergen County owns tens of millions of dollars of tax-exempt property, as does Fairleigh Dickinson University, which has a Hackensack campus.

In the past 8 years, city officials have demanded little in lieu of all those unpaid property taxes.

Mordaga changes

However, on Feb. 4, Mike Mordaga took over the demoralized Police Department, and began asking county law-enforcement agencies for help in fighting crime.

Mordaga, the city's first civilian police director, also has asked HUMC to staff a room in the county shelter to cut down on the time and expense of taking homeless people to the emergency room.


NJMG and The Record

North Jersey Media Group and its flagship daily paper, The Record, abandoned Hackensack in 2009 -- dealing the final blow to a struggling Main Street.

And compliant city officials have done nothing to pressure the wealthy Borg family into redeveloping their 20 acres.

Some residents think the Borgs have abandoned the property, which has become an eyesore. 

Why no pool?

Hackensack, the most populous community in Bergen County, doesn't even have a city pool, and long-time residents blame racist officials who don't want black children to have any fun.

Last year, former state Assemblyman and Police Chief Ken "I Am The Law" Zisa was convicted of official corruption and insurance fraud, and sentenced to 5 years in prison.

But he has been allowed to remain free pending his appeal, and his cousins still serve as city attorney and head of the Building Department.

$6M in legal fees

Ken Zisa's legal problems, both civil and criminal, have cost Hackensack taxpayers $6 million in legal fees in the past 3 year, and most of that wasn't covered by insurance.

Still, the Zisa family political dynasty, backed by Democratic Party boss Lynne Hurwitz, was perpetuated by City Council members, who should have fired the police chief years ago to limit the city's liability. 

Sasson won't have to write another property tax check until August, but already the knot in his stomach is beginning to grow.

Front-page news

After largely sitting on the sidelines during Hackensack's City Council campaign, The Record today publishes a Page 1 story on the 11 candidates in Tuesday's election:


"Factions battle for control of city"

"Hackensack Council
race turns nasty"   
    

Sasson is identified on A-1 as the "one candidate running on his own, calling for lower taxes and better quality of life."

Here is a link to the story on North Jersey.com:


Six reform candidates battle corruption 


Below the story on the Web site, most of the candidates answer three questions from The Record's Hackensack reporter, Hannan Adely:

Q. What steps will you take to improve openness and transparency in government?


Q. The city is dogged by the perception that favoritism and cronyism are prominent in government. How will you ensure fairness and restore the public’s trust?

Q. What can and should the council do to improve the city’s downtown?

     

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Editors tilt at monster Port Authority

Weehawken's 9/11 memorial provides welcome respite from all of the construction noise along the Palisades south of the George Washington Bridge.


Today's front-page story on a U.S. senator scolding a senior Port Authority executive won't lessen the sting of scheduled Hudson River toll and fare hikes -- a year after they skyrocketed.

Commuters look to The Record for word on whether Governors Christie and Cuomo will stop the next round of hikes, but all they get is a lot of political theater, some of it rehashing an April hearing in Washington (A-1).

Tunnel vision

Am I the only one who thinks the Port's executive director, Bill Baroni, had a point when he accused U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., of taking decades of toll-free trips across the Hudson?

After all, the senior senator's name is emblazoned in huge letters all over that gazillion-dollar rail-transfer station in the Meadowlands, so why isn't Lautenberg using and promoting mass transit?

Page 1 today presents a "GOLDEN MOMENT ... "

On Monday, the main element on A-1 appeared under the words: "Golden opportunity."

One was a play on an Olympic gold medal, the other a play on New Jersey's Gold Coast. Enough already.

Taxing policies

On the front of head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes' Local section today, a story reports thousands of Orthodox Jews in North Jersey are burying their heads in the Talmud to help them forget the high property taxes they pay (L-1).

You can just hear them muttering during morning prayer, "Oy gevalt! Why do I have to pay taxes for lousy public schools I don't send my kids to?"

The Orthodox in Englewood and Teaneck are especially upset, because their attempt to open a Hebrew immersion charter school in September was shot down by the state, and those largely minority districts won't have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars toward its operation.

Today's Local also contains a rare Hackensack story that has nothing to do with former Police Chief Ken Zisa or the many lawsuits he still faces (L-3).

I got my property tax bill a few days ago, so I no longer have to wonder when The Record is going to report on approval of the Hackensack city budget and tax rate.

Monday's paper

Monday's Page 1 takeout on the tension between preservation and development on the Palisades south of the George Washington Bridge buries the lede.

The inefficient home-rule system of government's insatiable hunger for ratables has thwarted any regional consensus on saving the cliffs from greedy developers.

Today, most of the land south of the bridge is one big construction zone. 

The story doesn't even mention the costly duplication of town services that demand more and more tax money to support them.

Olympics in the news

If you're wondering why there is no local news in the paper, consider this:

The big element on Sykes' Local section on Monday reported a Pascack Valley memorial service for the 11 Israeli athletes killed by terrorists 40 years ago at the Munich Olympic Games.

Readers who thought they had seen that before were correct: The big element on Saturday's L-1 was Teaneck's service for the same athletes.