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Candidates for Ward B council seat debate and tell what they'd do with win
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Candidates for Ward B council seat debate and tell what they'd do with a Nov. 2 election victory
Saturday, October 23, 2010 By MELISSA HAYES JOURNAL STAFF WRITER From cleaning up West Side Avenue to holding the line on taxes, candidates running for Jersey City's Ward B council seat offered a plethora of goals to improve the city. More than 100 people crammed into Duffy Hall on West Side Avenue Thursday night for a debate hosted by the Jersey City Independent and the West Bergen/Lincoln Park Neighborhood Coalition. David Donnelly, who was appointed last year to fill the vacancy created when Ward B Councilman Phil Kenny pleaded guilty to corruption charges and resigned, faces challengers Isaiah Gadsden, Earlin Thomas, Diane Verlingo, Esther Wintner and Raymond Skop. Skop did not attend the debate. Donnelly defended his first year on the council, saying he secured funding to install six security cameras on West Side Avenue, fought the closure of three public libraries and didn't vote for last year's tax hike. He said if re-elected he would create a commission to carefully review the budget and gather public input and call for a desk audit of management employees to ensure they are earning their salaries. "I solve problems. I work on problems," he said. "That's the role of a council person." Verlingo said if elected, she would focus on cleaning up West Side Avenue. "We have stores that have been closed for many years that are just an eyesore. The streets are filthy," she said. "We need better lighting there, we need the cameras to go in, and we need more pedestrian friendly sidewalks." Gadsden said he would teach adults and youth about the financial market and real estate, as well as how to create a small business. "How do we bring property taxes down? How do we bring the crime rate down?" he asked. "You create jobs." Wintner said the city has to spend more responsibly. She said members of part-time appointed boards like the Jersey City Incinerator Authority and Municipal Utilities Authority shouldn't get health benefits. She also said city officials should give up their cars. "We need to stop spending this money, stop borrowing and start going through the patronage system that we have here," she said. Thomas said there needs to be more programs for youth and the unemployed. He said there also needs to be a greater police presence to combat crime, but added that increasing community block watches could help, too. "Let the criminals know we are out there to watch them," he said.
Posted on: 2010/10/23 9:54
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