A reader writes…
I will be proposing marriage to my girlfriend this coming Sunday, August 1st in Montclair and need help with my needlessly complicated plan.
BY Liz George | Wednesday, Jul 28, 2010 9:00am | COMMENTS (27)
A reader writes…
I will be proposing marriage to my girlfriend this coming Sunday, August 1st in Montclair and need help with my needlessly complicated plan.
BY Bill Dobbs | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 4:30pm | COMMENTS (59)
Bill Dobbs, a long-time activist and gay civil libertarian, lives in Manhattan, but ever since he learned of the shooting death of Dean Gaymon he has been personally riveted by the case. He wrote to us about his trip last week to see where Gaymon died. The sign shown in the picture is actually in six panels. The entire message is transcribed, from Dobbs’s photos, at the end of this piece.
BY Liz George | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 3:53pm | COMMENTS (6)
A Bloomfield woman was fatally struck by an NJ Transit locomotive yesterday morning. A NJ Transit spokesperson tells Baristanet that Jennifer English, 29, was struck on the Montclair-Boonton rail line by a single locomotive traveling east. Authorities are trying to determine why English was on the tracks.
UPDATE: Baristanet has confirmed through a friend of English is trying to confirm that English was the same Jennifer English involved in a horrific car accident that killed Brian English exactly five years ago.
BY Brian Glaser | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 1:29pm | COMMENTS (22)
Today’s New York Times featured an article in which the headline really nailed the core content of the story: “95% of Trains Are on Time? Riders Beg to Differ.” The piece focuses primarily on New Jersey Transit’s suspicious (and, according to the Times, lightly cooked) on-time numbers vs. riders like me who know that the Midtown Direct pretty much never, never, ever pulls into Penn Station on schedule.
BY Erika Bleiberg | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 12:50pm | COMMENTS (4)
A spokesperson for the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office announced that there will be no investigation into the alleged July 17 fight between two Bloomfield police officers, which resulted in a trip to the hospital for Officer Bruce Calkin, a 14-year member of the force. According to Bloomfield Life, Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #214 President Anthony Argento said at a July 26 township council meeting, the township should “probe who leaked news of the fight to the media and take “appropriate action” on those responsible.”
In the same meeting, Police Benevolent Association Local #32 Vice President Nicholas acknowledged the fact that arguments sometimes happen in the department, though he, like Argento, stressed that these issues should be handled confidentially through the Internal Affairs Unit.
In other Bloomfield police news, Lt. Richard Wallace reported a theft that we categorize as a “people steal the weirdest things” crime. The victim of this crime appears to be the US Military Recruiting offices at 554 Bloomfield Avenue, though it’s unclear whether the item came from the Army, Navy or Air Force, as they share an address (and maybe a scale).
07-19-2010 500 Block of Bloomfield Ave. The victim stated that unknown person(s) entered the office and removed weight scale used for recruiting. There were no signs of forced entry.
BY Debbie Galant | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 12:00pm | COMMENTS (2)
The multi-talented Michael Reitman, who is always showing up with his camera to document everybody else’s gigs, takes center stage himself tonight (Tuesday, July 27) at the Isabel Rose Cafe at Montclair Public Library. The Isabel Rose open mic night series is the fourth Tuesday of every month from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Reitman, tonight’s featured artist, takes the stage at 8 p.m. He will play original songs and covers, in styles ranging from blues to folk. Photo by Leo Reitman.
In other musical offerings tonight, the Montclair Community Band plays an outdoor concert at 7:30 p.m.
BY Kristie Cattafi | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 10:35am | COMMENTS (7)
The See-Click-Fix page on Baristanet lets readers report problems around town. Besides reporting pot holes and streetlights that are out, users have found another way to use this tool — to address crime on Mission Street.
Someone reported violent crime on Mission Street, asking that it be made a police priority:
Park a police car on this corner, put out a net and scoop up the dozens of criminals that commit violent crimes every single day. Seriously, what does it take before the MPD makes this area a priority? Does someone have to die first?
Readers have been vocal about ongoing crime concentrated on or near Mission Street; when we phone surveyed readers in 2007, a resident left this audio message, detailing the loitering problem and how people who live on the street are suffering.
BY Erika Bleiberg | Tuesday, Jul 27, 2010 9:00am | COMMENTS (0)
At last night’s sparsely attended Millburn Zoning Board of Adjustment meeting — the third in the ongoing Chai Center synagogue saga (proposed to be built at the corner of Old Short Hills Road and Jefferson Avenue) — there was theoretical speculation about topics such as the amount of garbage produced by a wedding of 140 people, and how much space a car needs to do a “K” turn. With a focus on details, membership lists were scrutinized regarding numbers of congregants who live in Millburn and would walk to Orthodox Jewish services versus those who would drive. There was also discussion of access for emergency vehicles, environmental impact and the effect of planned lighting on adjoining properties.
BY Liz George | Monday, Jul 26, 2010 5:10pm | COMMENTS (11)
Two fire trucks, police and ambulances are on the scene of an accident at Harrison and Llewellyn Aves. The driver of the overturned car was conscious when he was placed on the stretcher for transport. No information about the cause of the accident has been released; onlookers at the scene are saying they heard the car flipped after being hit by another car, a white sedan, who they heard ran a red light.