Category: Past News

(Sep 02, 2009) I’d hate to be the one to break it to you, but summer is over. OK, not officially, but lets be honest, with school right around the corner (parents stop smiling), and Labor Day in a matter of days, I think it’s safe to say that summer is now a part of our collective past.

With this bit of sad news, I am happy to announce a new “season” of  The Village Neighborhood Association!

As many of you already know, our monthly meeting schedule coincides with the very school calendar that signifies the end of summer. Continue reading →

A TRUE Jersey City classic! For five nights beginning next Wednesday, August 12th, through Sunday, August 16th, Sixth Street will be the place to be in downtown Jersey City. For all you newbies, check out this New York Times article to get yourself caught up to speed.

The VNA was fortunate to be able to be a part of last year’s event, and we’re thrilled to be back again this year. Look for our booth!

La Festa Italiana
Wednesday, August 12th – Sunday, August 16th 2009
6:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Councilman Steven Fulop

Ward E Councilman Steven Fulop

Friends,

Yesterday was truly a low point for Jersey City. Seven high-ranking members of the Mayor Healy’s administration, including City Council President Mariano Vega and Deputy Mayor Leona Beldini, were arrested by Federal agents and charged with public corruption. These arrests were made as part of an even larger investigation, and more charges may be filed as it develops.

This is a sad day for Jersey City. We should have pride in our city, not be embarrassed by the conduct of our city’s leadership. Just this morning, a major news channels started their broadcast by describing that they were reporting from Jersey City as “the epicenter of corruption.”

While the individuals named in today’s indictments deserve their day in court, the sheer scale and widespread nature of these allegations is nothing short of outrageous. The conduct alleged describes not just the conduct of a few individuals, but a pervasive culture of corruption that infects our political system at every level.

This system must change.

As the only elected official in Jersey City who has never run as part of the old-guard political machine, I can tell you first hand that this culture of corruption serves as a back door tax on all citizens. It has become a part of the well-known cost of doing business in our city, draining our pocketbooks and degrading our quality of life.

Ultimately, it is not enough to remove corrupt individuals from public service. We must remove the financial incentives within our system that enable this type of conduct to persist. That is why I sponsored legislation in 2007 aimed at ending such obviously ethically-challenged practices as pay to play and double-dipping. Today’s events show all too clearly why I was the only member of the city council who voted in favor of such reforms.

While today is a black eye for the city, I am hopeful that the actions of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office will serve as a first step in what will undoubtedly be a long road toward honest and open government.

I will continue to speak up against corruption and unfair practices, even when mine is the only voice within the city government willing to do so. In that regard, I am troubled that Mayor Healy has stopped at merely suspending the individuals involved. A cloud of suspicion will hang over every vote and decision these individuals make, and there are too many pressing issues our city must address. We cannot continually question the motivation behind each of their decisions.

I am therefore publicly calling upon the councilman and deputy mayor who were indicted yesterday to resign their appointed and elected positions immediately. My stance was published in this article in yesterday’s Jersey Journal , which I encourage you to read. Furthermore, I will be introducing a resolution to the city council at our next meeting, Wednesday, July 29 that formally requests that Mayor Healy amend his executive order regarding the closed – door abatement negotiation committee to which Healy appointed Mariano Vega as chairperson.

In addition, I believe it is crucial that a formal review of Council activities be performed to see what city business may have been impacted by public corruption. Individuals and businesses that engage in bribery should not be allowed to benefit at everyone else’s expense. We must send a clear message that corruption will not be tolerated in Jersey City.

I assure you that the arrogance and selfishness of a few will not be allowed to ruin the good works and progress of our city. On that you have my word.

Sincerely,

Councilman Steven Fulop

For an easy way to follow Councilman Fulop’s most recent comments regarding this matter, head on over to the Latest News section of his website.

THIS SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2009

10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Location: Fourth Street (between Newark Avenue and Merseles Street – see map below)

The LINEUP:

!! FREE Starbucks coffee beginning at 10:00 am

!! 20+ local artists and crafters

Erica Radol • Michele Iervolino • Christine Moss • Pamela Mieser • Kristi Elles • Christine Resuma • Glen DeCastro • Debbie Manville • Jaden Roges • Anna Almquist • Christina Alessi • Dierdre Kennedy • Jim Legge • Luca Cusolito • Mike Markman • Carl Ellis • Kate Stillings • Billy Moore

!! 30+ tables of Flea Market goodness

!! Live Music sponsored by the Lucky 7 Bar:

12:00 pm — Melinda Davis www.myspace.com/melindajdavis
12:45 pm — Ear the Man
1:30 pm — Bern & The Brights www.myspace.com/bgroove
2:15 pm — One Foot In
3:00 pm — Ace Case www.myspace.com/acecasemusic

!! Food Sponsors:
Madame Claude Cafe
Carmine’s Pizza Factory
Hamilton Park Pizza

!! Vintage Clothing, Photos, Jewelry and more

!! SILENT AUCTION: One brand new 2009 Diane von Furstenberg wrap dress personally donated by Diane.  (size 6)

!! Music and computer gear

!! Raffles

!! Fun for the kids

Reserve your space now! This event is open and FREE to local artists who would like to showcase and sell their work. Contact us here

Join our list of corporate sponsors

Based on a similar event held in the fall, we expect a total turn-out of over 500 people!

In addition to becoming a proud sponsor of The Village Weekend, for your kind contribution we will also…

“The Tiramisu” $100 +
…post your logo on our website for the month leading up to the event and for two months thereafter*. Print your logo on all promotional fliers, and feature your promotional material at our sponsors’ table during the Village Flea Market. If your business would like to participate in the event, please contact us.

“The Zeppole” $75
… post your business name on our website for the month leading up to the event and for two months thereafter*. Print your business name on all promotional fliers, and feature your promotional material at our sponsors’ table at the Village Flea Market.

“The Cannoli” $50
…print your business name on all promotional fliers, and feature some of your promotional material at our sponsors’ table at the Village Flea Market.

“The Napolean” $25
…feature some of your promotional material at our sponsors’ table during the Village Flea Market.

*Total posting time: three months. Our website has received over 9,500 hits since launching eight months ago.

Please make checks payable to:
The Village Neighborhood Association
365 Second Street
Jersey City, NJ 07302

Contact Information
Rob Crow
[email protected]


Saturday, May 30, 2009
12:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Guided walking tour with John Gomez & Joshua Parkhurst.
The tour begins at 12:00 pm at Madame Claude Cafe located on the corner of Brunswick and Fourth Streets.

Presented in partnership with The Jersey City Landmarks Conservancy, and hosted by historians John Gomez and Joshua Parkhurst, The Village Neighborhood Association welcomes you to “Walk in Their Footsteps”. John and Joshua will take us step-by-step through the historic past of  The Italian Village.

Take the tour and receive a coupon from Madame Claude Cafe for a FREE Crepe!

Sunday, May 31, 2009
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Location: Fourth Street (between Newark Avenue and Merseles Street – see map below)

BUSINESSES: If your business would like to participate in the event, please contact us.

CALLING ALL ARTISTS! – This event is open and free to local artists who would like to showcase and sell their work. Please contact us to reserve your spot in our Artist’s Space!

RESIDENTS – If you are planning on selling at the Flea Market, please contact us ASAPto reserve your space.

In collaboration with The Fourth Street Art and Music Festival, we are inviting residents to dig through their closets, basements, and storage, and get ready to sell some stuff!!

How you go about it is totally up to you:

1) Sell it yourself — If you would like to stay with your belongings and sell them on your own, go for it. We only ask for a $10 fee to reserve the space.  Table rentals are available for an additional fee of $10. So for a total of only $20 down, the proceeds of your sales are yours to keep!! Please contact the VNA as soon as possible to reserve your space and/or table.

2) Donate to the Community Table — The VNA will have a community table available for items you would simply like to drop off.  All proceeds go directly to the VNA to help cover our operating expenses.  Following the event, the Salvation Army will pick up any items not sold.  So no matter what, your donations are going to a worthy cause.  Also for your convenience, feel free to contact the VNA if you would like to drop off your items prior to the flea market.

Most everyone is well aware at this time of the shooting at a deli on Coles between Sixth and Seventh Streets. Below you’ll find a press release from the HPNA regarding information for the candlelight vigil to be held this Friday at 7pm in Hamilton Park.

Also below are links to a WABC video report that aired last night, and some relevant newspaper articles.

P R E S S R E L E A S E – H P N A

12:00 noon January 28, 2009 – For Immediate Release
Contact: Hamilton Park Neighborhood Association
Olu Howard, President
917-855-2212 or [email protected]

On January 27th 2009, the Hamilton Park neighborhood of Jersey City lost a vivacious community member to a violent and senseless criminal act. Mr. Kirik Parikh was shot and killed while doing what he did almost every morning –
pouring coffee and selling newspapers at their family-run deli. The Parikh’s store at the corner of 7th and Coles Street was a welcoming place for not only the residents of this quiet brownstone neighborhood, but also for the students and staff of McNair High School, located just across the street. Unfortunately, this horrific act of violence comes on the tails of the Hamilton Park Neighborhood Association (HPNA) making recent complaints to local police about increased criminal activity in the area and neighbor concerns regarding safety and police responsiveness.

In the wake of this awful tragedy, the HPNA invites the entire downtown community, neighbors, businesses, students and workers to gather together at a candlelight vigil in memory of Mr. Parikh. We will gather at the Hamilton Park gazebo on Friday, January 30th at 7pm. Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy, Freeholder Eliu Rivera, and Ward E Councilman Steven Fulop are invited to speak, as well as any neighbors or friends who may have a few words to share.

We will then walk to Mr. Parikh’s store in remembrance of his fine character. He was a good neighbor to all of us and will be sorely missed. Fund information for donations to his family will be available at the vigil.

WABC Video Report 1

WABC Video Report 2

MURDERED IN A.M. ROBBERY AT DELI
Popular Downtown merchant shot after threatening to call the police

Wednesday, January 28, 2009
By MICHAELANGELO CONTE
JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

A popular owner of a Downtown Jersey City grocery store was gunned down at his business yesterday morning after arguing with the shooter in a failed but deadly robbery attempt, officials said.

“This was clearly a gratuitous act of gun violence taking the life of the hard-working gentleman,” said Hudson County Prosecutor Edward DeFazio of the death of Kiritkumar Parikh, 57, of Van Winkle Avenue, inside his Albert’s Grocery at Coles and Seventh streets.

At about 9:50 a.m. the gunman entered the store and after a short time approached Parikh at the counter, took out a semiautomatic handgun and demanded money, DeFazio said.

When Parikh, who was there with his wife, refused to comply and said he would call the police, the man fired two rounds, one of them fatally wounding the shop owner in the left upper torso, officials said.

The gunman ran from the store without taking anything, DeFazio said.

The wife, who speaks little English, called her daughter instead of police, but a customer who walked in on the bloody scene dialed 911, he said. Police haven’t determined if the robber fled on foot or in a vehicle, but investigators are reviewing security video, DeFazio said.

Family members arrived shortly after police. Filled with disbelief and grief, they cried in the middle of Coles Street.

Police escorted them first to a nearby laundromat and then to McNair Academic High School, across the street from the store.

Robin Daniels, who was doing wash at the laundromat yesterday, called Parikh “a neighborhood guy.”

“He looked out for everybody,” Daniels said. “It’s just shocking. He was the kind of guy that when you bought a lottery ticket, he said, ‘Good Luck.'”

Zoima Moya rushed to the scene when she heard of the shooting and was in the laundromat when family members came in.

“They were crying and upset,” Moya said. “This is very upsetting because this is a nice man, a nice family.”

At about noon, staff from the state Regional Medical Examiners Office arrived and Parikh’s body was loaded into a van. With a police escort, family members followed the van to the medical examiner’s office in Newark.

At about 3 p.m. the victim’s two daughters, both in their 20s, and some other family members, returned to the store and retrieved a few items from behind the counter.

The suspect is described as an African-American, around 6-feet-tall, of thin build and wearing dark clothing, DeFazio said.

Anyone with information about the killing is asked to call the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office’s Homicide Squad at (201) 915-1345.
=======================

Mourning deli owner who knew them well
Wednesday, January 28, 2009

McNair Academic High School was locked down yesterday to keep students out of the way as police investigated the killing of a store owner who sold them sandwiches, sodas and snacks.

“I feel like it’s a disgrace,” said 12th-grader Manuel Malcampo of the fatal shooting of Kiritkumar Parikh, 57, of Van Winkle Avenue, inside his deli at Coles and Seventh streets. “It’s a very senseless act and it makes you feel unsafe even in a community like this. Everyone is discussing it and the teachers feel really bad about it.”

Manuel said school officials informed the students over the public address system.

“I never thought something like this would happen here,” said 11th-grader Peter Habib. “The students are confused and upset and just devastated.”

Parikh knew the students so well that he’d place what they wanted on the counter seconds after they walked in, Peter said. Ninth-grader Gina Dayawon shopped at the store almost every day.

“The couple was so adorable,” Gina said. “The students are all wondering what reason would you have to do that to them.”

MICHAELANGELO CONTE

The Village Neighborhood Association, and the Matzel & Mumford Organization, are collaborating in an effort to collect unwrapped toys (for young children and teens), and other donations, to support the Jersey City Police Department’s East District’s Annual Holiday Toy Drive.

With your help, it is our goal to provide these gifts to the East District on December 18, 2008. Your kind donations will later be distributed to hundreds of Jersey City children at their event on Saturday, December 20, 2008 at P.S. #4 on Bright Street.

Through the generous support of the Matzel & Mumford Organization, and for your convenience, a donation box has been set up at their Crescent Court Sales Office located at 296 Newark Avenue.

We invite you to stop by with your donations during business hours, 11am to 5pm, and Tuesday’s from 12pm and 8pm. Donations will be collected through Wednesday, December 17, 2008.

“This year has been especially difficult for many families and now more than ever, it’s important to give back,” says Glenn Ward, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for The Matzel & Mumford Organization. “All donated items will be turned over to the police department’s East District on December 18th to be distributed to those a little less fortunate this holiday season.”

Happy Holiday’s

The Village Neighborhood Association