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Re: Hydrant pic sparks city into action- developer built house with a fire hydrant blocking its driv
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Home away from home
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2007/6/12 19:00 Last Login : 2013/5/10 16:39 From Donny City
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Obviously a few "inspectors" got their palms greased, as usual
Posted on: 2007/7/28 21:43
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Re: Hydrant pic sparks city into action- developer built house with a fire hydrant blocking its driveway
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Home away from home
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2006/11/13 18:42 Last Login : 2022/2/28 7:31 From 280 Grove Street
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10/10 to the developer for being able to keep everyone quiet on site when it was blatantly obvious there was a hydrant in the way. I guess there wasn't any building inspectors checking on that site during construction and for codes or problems that needed addressing!
The hydrant will have to be relocated at the City's expense.
Posted on: 2007/7/28 11:36
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My humor is for the silent blue collar majority - If my posts offend, slander or you deem inappropriate and seek deletion, contact the webmaster for jurisdiction.
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Hydrant pic sparks city into action- developer built house with a fire hydrant blocking its driveway
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Home away from home
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Hydrant pic sparks city into action
Friday, July 27, 2007 By EARL MORGAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER Officials in Jersey City are scrambling to determine how a developer was allowed to build a two-family house with a fire hydrant blocking its driveway. A spokesman for Mayor Jerramiah T. Healy said the directors of several departments are seeking answers. After a photo appeared on the front page of The Jersey Journal yesterday, Jersey City Housing Task Force Director David Donnelly and the newspaper were besieged with phone calls about other infractions of the city's zoning regulations. Officials from the Jersey City Municipal Utilities Authority, the Building Department and Donnelly said they could not give a definitive answer as to what city agency is responsible for seeing to it that driveways aren't constructed if fire hydrants are blocking them. In a statement issued yesterday, Bob Antonicello, acting Director of Housing, Economic Development and Commerce, said the hydrant-blocked driveway "obviously was an error, but the HEDC is looking into how the error can be corrected, if possible." Antonicello noted that the city has experienced a boom in the construction of in-fill housing in the past few years, with several hundred structures either under construction or completed. "We're looking at ways to allocate more resources for inspections to the zoning office," Antonicello said. The new building at 1 Oxford Ave. is one of a dozen two-family homes either undergoing construction or recently completed on the south side of Oxford Avenue, between Kennedy Boulevard and West Side Avenue. According to Jersey City tax records, 1 Oxford is owned by International King Corp., located at 62 Sackett St., Jersey City. The company's phone was continuously busy and no one in the company could be reached for comment. Jennifer Morrill, Healy's spokeswoman, said Donnelly and members of the city's housing task force visited some two-family homes on Oxford Avenue that were found to have illegal third apartments. The owners will be issued summonses for violating the city's building codes, Morrill said.
Posted on: 2007/7/27 22:55
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