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Re: Embankment fights continues with new plan
#31
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StEviE ("I want to do something great for Jersey City") Hyman's plan would be a disaster for Jersey City's long term development.

My PointE is that this should be patently obvious to all, including our dear mayor and city council.

Jersey City now has a unique, contiguous historistic district that is overwhelmingly 19th century in character, stretching from Hamilton Park through Harsimus Cove and Van Voorst Park to Paulus Hook. These types of neighborhoods, with brick houses and brownstones, will never be built again, except for something like Liberty North, whose developers have respected the existing architecture in Van Voorst and Paulus Hook by building new town homse. (My hats off to them for that.)

These neighborhoods are historic, indeed national treasures that should not be altered with 5 or 6 thirty story Grove Pointe-esque StEviE Hyman McCondos.

Imagine if five or six thirty-story StEviE PointE McCondo towers had been built in the center of Park Slope, the West Village, Beacon Hill in Boston, Society Hill in Philly. Would those neighborhoods have been as desirable today? What about the left bank in Paris? There are modern towers on the edge of Beacon Hill, Society Hill and parts of Paris, for example, and they completely destroy the cityscape.

StEviE ("I want to do something great for Jersey City") Hyman's towers would bisect the heart of the contiguous Harsimus Cove and Hamilton Park Historic districts for a distance of approxmiately three quarters of a mile. In other words, from almost any point in those neighborhoods, we will be able to see SteviE ("I want to do something great for Jersey City) Hyman's towers.

Hyman's plan would:

DESTROY JERSEY CITY'S HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODS;

DESTROY WHAT MAKES JERSEY CITY UNIQUE; and

DESTROY WHAT MAKES JERSEY CITY A DESIRABLE PLACE TO LIVE.

Do any posters on JCList honestly believe that the McStevie Condos at Grove PointE have made Jersey City a more desirable place to live?

Did the developers at Grove PointE "do something great for Jersey City"? (At least Grove PointE wasn't in a historic district.)

It's obvious that StEviE Hyman is not concerned about Jersey City, Harsimus Cove, Hamilton Park, the residents of those neighborhoods or the Embankment.

SteviE ("I want to do something great for Jersey City") McHyman just wants to line his pockets, and to hell with the neighborhood and the rest of us.

As the rarely prescient IanMac once posted"

"Hyman's proposal is not a compromise . . . this is another proposal that has been tweaked to attempt appeasing just enough people to achieve his goal: profit."

Well McSteviE, I am not appeased.

Pick another neighborhood to ruin, not mine.

And while your at it, try to find one with little to no historic significance.

That way your legacy will be less destructive.

Posted on: 2007/12/19 16:37
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Re: Where is the cheapest movie theater in Jersey City area?
#32
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Quote:

nprosario wrote:
Nope! Im aging gracefully. I look like in my early 20's and Im in my late 30's. :) I've ALWAYS felt the same way. I like peace and tranquility. I hate having to strain to hear a movie because the teenagers next to me wanted to talk about x-y-z. Or a lovers quarrel. Or the newest sneakers. Or how the movie sucked.

Im of the opinion that you carry yourself a certain way, no matter what your background or current circumstances at the time are. Respect and simple common sense have always been my credo! :)


I was just kidding. I find that sometimes the high school kids at Newport can get annoying. Until going there I'd never seen anyone chuck his soda at the movie screen, and the kids who take calls during the movie are just plain rude.

Posted on: 2007/12/13 15:21
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Re: Where is the cheapest movie theater in Jersey City area?
#33
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Just can't stay away


Quote:

nprosario wrote:
All those hood-rats, teenagers give me a headache!!


Aging is bummer, isn't it?

Posted on: 2007/12/12 20:54
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Re: Willie Flood hires son twice for $50G-plus ( Yes, that son )
#34
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Quote:

Flood II didn't return calls to comment. Willie Flood called her son "a very industrious and bright man."

He "grew up in the church" and helped distribute turkeys this past Thanksgiving, she added.


A drug dealer who grew up in church and distributed turkeys on Thanksgiving . . .

Hmmn . . . sounds familiar . . .

Ah, yes - channeling Frank Lucas - has anyone seen American Gangster?

Posted on: 2007/12/5 21:20
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Re: HONORING Jersey City's Greatest Preservationist
#35
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Quote:

JPhurst wrote:
Quote:

pazman wrote:
When I read this I thought - what a damn shame.

If Stevie Hyman had been around in 1966 he could have hired his phalanx of lawyers, gotten the old courthouse knocked down and "done something great for Jersey City."

Instead, we now have this 100 year old beaux arts eyesore that's no longer usable for its original purpose.

Think of how many McHomes Stevie could have built for us!!!

Tragic.


Actually, back in the 1980s, Steve Hyman supplied the copper roofing for the building.


Sure, the building had already been saved, so Stevie had to figure out some other way to make a buck.

Posted on: 2007/12/5 0:00
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Re: HONORING Jersey City's Greatest Preservationist
#36
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Just can't stay away


When I read this I thought - what a damn shame.

If Stevie Hyman had been around in 1966 he could have hired his phalanx of lawyers, gotten the old courthouse knocked down and "done something great for Jersey City."

Instead, we now have this 100 year old beaux arts eyesore that's no longer usable for its original purpose.

Think of how many McHomes Stevie could have built for us!!!

Tragic.

Posted on: 2007/11/29 3:40
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Re: They want to hit, too - Hudson Reporter
#37
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This is a nice story. Thanks for posting it.

Posted on: 2007/11/29 3:31
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Re: Willie Flood hires son twice for $50G-plus ( Yes, that son )
#38
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This would be funny if it weren't so outrageous and pathetic.

Well, it's good to know that Flood II will be working in the Hudson County Register's office, which is responsible for "recording, filing and preserving all formal written documents affecting real property within the County. . . . The documents are checked for compliance with the statutory recording requirements, priced and then recorded."

In short, if you want to know why the office misplaced your property records, perhaps it has something to do with the quality of their hires.

At least Flood I is nothing but consistent. By hiring Flood II she seems to have abided by her personal and governing philosophy - making sure that government gives children direction and steers them away from drugs. Here's an excerpt from a 2005 Jersey City Vibe profile on Flood I:

Councilwoman Willie Flood - At Large
Monday, July 11, 2005

The once and future councilwoman knows what issues to focus on. One of the most fundamental debates in national politics centers on the role of government in our lives. For Willie Flood, this role is clear. ?I worry about our children,? Flood begins. ?So many of them have no serious direction and are attracted to selling drugs and easy money. I want them to move up.? As much as she believes parents and educators play a critical role in helping young kids rise in society, Flood sees the need for city government to play an active part. ?We need to try to provide more affordable housing for their parents."

Posted on: 2007/11/29 2:04
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Re: FBI raids Arabic deli on Grove St.
#39
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Quote:

brian_em wrote:
This is why we need strict immagration laws.

The one arm man was always nice to me, but I felt like a traitor when I realized that their store was funding a terrorist group in pakistan. I think of all the money I have spent there and how it was going to fund radical islamist groups that kill innocent people.

I will never ever shop there again, and I'm surprised it is still open.

I'm also surprised that people on this site are not trying to blame this on George Bush.


No, that's ok, we'll blame it on you.

Posted on: 2007/11/3 6:39
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Re: NJ transit to build pedestrian bridge from Hoboken to Newport
#40
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The article sets a new record for political-puff-quote to actual reporting ratio.

Posted on: 2007/9/10 19:47
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Re: Not the '70s anymore for Kiss' Catman interviewed at his Jersey City home
#41
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Just can't stay away


I never understood why Kiss was popular. Not the music, the makeup or the pyrotechnics.

They're not like the greats, like ABBA and the Bay City Rollers, man.

Now that's music.

Posted on: 2007/7/24 14:30
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Re: So much for all of you folks who predicted a JC/NYC RE Crash
#42
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From Marketwatch:

New-home sales plunged 16.6% to 937,000 in January

Sales of new homes plunged 16.6% in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 937,000, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. It was the lowest sales pace in four years, and was the biggest percentage decline in 13 years. Sales are down 20.1% compared with January 2006. The decline in sales was much sharper than expected. The inventory of unsold homes dipped to 536,000 from 537,000, representing a 6.8-month supply at the January sales pace, the most since a 7.2-month supply in October. The median price of a new home was down 2.1% year-over-year at $239,800.

Posted on: 2007/2/28 18:36
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Re: So much for all of you folks who predicted a JC/NYC RE Crash
#43
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CCitizen, congratulations on your good year. You took a chance and won.

January 2007 was the warmest on record, which obviously had an effect on the housing market. Wall Street bonuses were also at a record level, which had an obvious effect on the housing market.

All of the real estate folks are talking about the end of the real estate slowdown.

However, it's possible think that we may not have even seen the beginning. Remember, foreclosures are at an alltime high, and are set to increase even more this year.

Let's see what happens.

Posted on: 2007/2/21 1:10
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Re: Montgomery Greene Condo Bldg
#44
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Time equities is one of the developers. That pretty much says it all.

Posted on: 2007/1/30 20:41
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Re: Montgomery Gardens Housing Complex -- Dent in Gangs Reign of Terror
#45
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"Lifted the rock off"?

Posted on: 2007/1/9 15:25
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Re: 5 YEARS FOR TEEN SCAMMER had BMW shipped to Dickinson High School - defrauded bank $470,000
#46
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I agree, what a waste. This kid sounds whip-smart, engineering school material, and now he's going to prison. A real shame.

Posted on: 2007/1/6 20:54
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Re: Jersey City's "Rick A. Ross Institute for the Study of Destructive Cults" takes on David Lynch & TM
#47
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Just can't stay away


I studied with guru Crazy Eddie. His chants were truly INSANE!

Posted on: 2007/1/2 17:38
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Re: Best things to order at the Vietnamese place on Newark
#48
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Just ate at Nha Trang for the first time a few weeks ago and have already been back three times!!!! The food is simply amazing, especially for the price. And the Vietnamese coffee is delicious. The place looks a little shabby, but for anyone who wants a great, healthy meal (and on the cheap), I can't recommend this place more highly.

Posted on: 2007/1/2 17:08
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Re: Epps 'appalled' at OT, vows to correct it
#49
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I heard that Epps is looking to take on a third job since the pay for maintenance workers is so good.

Posted on: 2006/12/20 15:36
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Re: NYT Op-Ed on apathy
#50
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I guess it's a good idea stop corruption in the state, but what can we really do about it?

Nothing ever changes anyway.

Posted on: 2006/12/11 4:37
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Re: La Conguita in Times
#51
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Had a great meal last night at La Conguita with the missus. We had two bowls of garlic soup, a large avocado salad, roast chicken, rice, beans and plantains, a bottle of Spanish red wine, rice pudding, flan and two espressos for only $34.

Incredible!!!

Posted on: 2006/12/10 6:15
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Re: Jersey City School Board Gives Huge Pay Raises
#52
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What? No raise for Mr. Epps?

Posted on: 2006/11/25 3:42
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Re: Why would anyone ever want to serve on the city council???
#53
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Just can't stay away


Quote:

Althea wrote:
I just attended my first neighborhood association meeting and it was one of the most painful experiences of my life. Why would anyone want to subject themselves to tons of angry people constantly complaining? Maybe 95% of your constituents are nice and understanding, even want to help. But that last 5%...


It's called democracy.

Posted on: 2006/11/15 15:19
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Re: 3 stories: Politicians double-dip/Spinello's multiple jobs/Government workers earn several salaries
#54
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That's the problem - in New Jersey it's legal.

Not the case in Delaware.

Attached is the link to the Delaware "Double Dipping" statute, which requires the auditing of dual-jobbed state employees and the pro-rating of salaries for any overlapping time records. If the employee double dipped he/she is considered to have enriched himself at the expense of the state and must reimburse his/her salary.

http://www.state.de.us/pic/sections/conduct/bulletins/ethbul9.pdf

Posted on: 2006/11/13 16:31
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Re: 3 stories: Politicians double-dip/Spinello's multiple jobs/Government workers earn several salaries
#55
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THREE members of the Jersey City Council - Mariano Vega, Bill Gaughan and Viola Richardson - are double dipping.

Why is this allowed?

Posted on: 2006/11/13 15:57
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Trump Jersey City Selling Well
#56
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November 5, 2006
In the Region | New Jersey
Maids, Spas and Sweeping Views
By ANTOINETTE MARTIN
WHILE virtually all signs point to a housing market gone limp, sales at two opulent projects in Hoboken and Jersey City indicate that there is still vibrancy at the very high end.

At the 55-story Trump Plaza condominium tower rising in Jersey City, more than 100 of 445 units priced from $425,000 to more than $2 million were sold in the first 10 days. At the W Hotel under construction beside the Hudson River in Hoboken, 22 of 36 condos offered at prices from $775,000 to $4.5 million were sold in three weeks.

The Trump building, the first of two planned towers that will be the tallest residential structures in New Jersey, has only dirt, foundation, scaffolding and cranes right now at its site at Washington and Bay Streets, a block from the Exchange Place PATH station. The W, which will be the first of its brand in New Jersey, currently has a similar look at its site on River Street in Hoboken.

Nevertheless, both projects have sales offices near their construction sites, with scale models, streaming video, detailed floor plans and mockups of finished rooms.

At Trump?s lavish sales office on the 13th floor of an office building on Montgomery Street in Jersey City, condo shoppers can get a bird?s-eye view of the construction site and the panoramic view across the river that many tower occupants will enjoy.

The sales office has the same back-lighted onyx walls, Macassar ebony portals and French limestone floors that are planned for the two-story lobby of Trump Plaza, as well as kitchen, bath and room models in the two interior styles that will be offered ? one more ?glamorous,? the other more ?contemporary,? according to the sales agents.

The amenity package includes maid service, valets, porters and the use of Zipcars ? Mercedes Benzes available for hourly rent. In addition, 41,000 square feet of ?lifestyle attractions? have been built into the project, including a Roman-style spa, a golf-game simulator, a children?s playroom, an outdoor pool, a rooftop green-space and a landscaped plaza.

One-, two- and three-bedroom units at Trump Plaza will range from 750 to 2,050 square feet.

A majority of the condos ? about 300 ? will be one-bedroom units, according to Dean S. Geibel, managing partner of Metro Homes, a partner in the project. All of the one-bedroom units at the W in Hoboken were quickly sold, leaving the larger units, priced at $1.85 million and up.

Mr. Geibel?s company, based in Hoboken, originally proposed the two-tower project in Jersey City and sometime later joined with Trump to build it.

?We determined there is a strong market for young professionals, especially those working in Jersey City?s ?Wall Street West? and the Wall Street across the river, who want the Trump lifestyle of on-the-go urbanity,? Mr. Geibel said. Many of the amenities are pitched directly to such a buyer, he noted ? the ultra-modern stainless-steel washer-dryer unit tucked under the kitchen sink, for example.

Mr. Geibel acknowledged that the common charge was higher than at other waterfront properties ? $560 to $611 for one-bedroom units, $811 to $1,050 for two-bedrooms, and more for three-bedroom top-floor units ? but added that this was because the amenity package was ?unprecedented? in New Jersey.

He said the strong pace of initial sales justified the decision to build so many units at a time when inventory had swollen and prices had begun to drop across the state and nation. ?The Wall Street economy is bullish,? with the Dow Jones industrial average recently setting record highs, Mr. Geibel said.

?Plus, when you are offering a world-class building with outstanding views, the highest-quality service and unbelievable amenities ? all with the Trump name on it ? buyers are going to show up,? he said. ?We didn?t really have any doubt.?

At the Hoboken W, the one-, two- and three-bedroom condos on the top nine floors of the 225-room hotel and the two 26th-floor penthouse units with four bedrooms are all higher than neighboring buildings in the Waterfront Corporate Center, giving them unobstructed views from floor-to-ceiling windows and from balconies.

The glass-and-zinc-faced tower was designed inside and out by Gwathmey Siegel and Associates, an architecture firm in Manhattan known for innovative modernist style that will stand out amid Hoboken?s traditional squat brick structures, according to the builders, the Applied Development Company of Hoboken.

?This is going to be so different and special for Hoboken that some people have been waiting anxiously to buy homes ever since word got out a couple of years ago that we were going to build it,? said Michael Barry, a principal at Applied Development.

Home buyers at the W will have access to the hotel?s planned high-end restaurant, the Living Room lounge and bar area with a view of the Manhattan skyline, the Bliss Spa, 24-hour room service and the chain?s concierge service, which is dedicated to fulfilling whims.

?You can call downstairs and say you?d like to arrange a four-course dinner for a party of 12 in three hours, and have it done,? Mr. Barry said. ?You can be seized with the desire for Beluga caviar and Champagne at midnight, and the staff will scurry around and find just what you want.?

Condo residents can also pay extra for daily housekeeping and laundry service, pet walking and grooming, houseplant maintenance, in-home spa service and so on, Mr. Barry said.

The condo units feature 10-foot ceilings ? as do those in the Trump building ? and bamboo floors, granite floors and counters in the kitchens, built-in wine coolers, and soaker tubs and glass-tile walls in the baths.

The W condos will be ready for occupancy in the summer of 2008, according to Mr. Barry, and the Trump Plaza building is slated to open in late 2007, Mr. Geibel said. Construction of the second Trump tower, which will be 50 stories, will begin once a large percentage of units in the first tower have been sold, Mr. Geibel added.

Posted on: 2006/11/6 19:41
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Jersey's high cost of housing tops nation - Ownership eats up residents' incomes
#57
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Jersey's high cost of housing tops nation
Ownership eats up residents' incomes
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
BY ROBERT GEBELOFF
Star-Ledger Staff
After moving to Chatham last year, Katie Young began to notice a harsh new fact of Jersey life.

She and her husband make more money than their old friends back in North Carolina. Yet, after spending $3,500 on her mortgage and taxes, there's not as much left to spend at the end of the month.

"It's crazy" she said. "We cut back on vacations, going out to dinner. We drive a Honda Civic. Everything is very basic."

Thousands of other families are living like the Youngs, new Census data indicates.

The Great Housing Boom that marked the first half of this decade didn't just drive up home prices -- it changed the way New Jersey families spend their money.

The Garden State now leads the nation in home ownership costs, and the number of residents devoting more than 30 percent of their income toward mortgages, property taxes and insurance is soaring, according to the new figures.

It now costs the typical homeowner $1,938 per month to own a house in New Jersey, well ahead of California and Massachusetts, which were second and third, and far ahead of Hawaii, the most expensive home-ownership states at the beginning of the decade, the new figures show.

And those are just median costs. One in six Jersey homeowners now pay more than $3,000 a month, compared with one in 14 just five years ago.

"We're very rich, but what these figures suggest is we're not really as wealthy as we think we are," said James Hughes, dean of the Bloustein School of Public Policy and Planning at Rutgers University.

While the typical New Jersey household earns 27 percent more than the national average, homeowners pay nearly 50 percent more to keep a roof over their heads, the new numbers show.

The figures released today come from the 2005 American Community Survey, a new annual demographic study by the Census bureau. While the survey covers a broad range of topics, the new information pertained mostly to housing.

Though such demographic statistics generally don't change much in five years, the state of New Jersey's housing is a notable exception.

Home values nearly doubled -- from a median of $170,800 in 2000 to $333,900 last year. These figures are similar to those reported previously by other organizations such as the National Association of Realtors.

But what the Census data shows more clearly is how these higher costs have translated into greater financial stress. Many state residents are going to be grappling with the ill effects for years to come, the new statistics seem to suggest.

Financial advisers generally don't recommend that homeowners spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing costs. But that threshold was exceeded thousands of times this decade as homeowners took out bigger loans, put less money down and then saw property taxes rise faster on an annual basis than in the 1990s.

Five years ago, less than a third of homeowners were over the 30 percent mark. By last year, it was two out of five, and nearly a quarter of homeowners reported paying more than 40 percent of their income on housing costs.

"There are people all over this state leveraged out the wazoo," said Michael Jannone, a financial adviser at Tomorrow's Financial Services in Lincroft.

But many homeowners are willing to take on the debt to get into the "right" house or the town.

Anne Feltquate moved to Montgomery Township this year after her husband David, a medical doctor and a Ph.D., landed a job as a drug researcher Bristol-Myers Squibb. Already saddled with student loans, the couple took out two mortgages to pay for their $750,000 new home.

They pay nearly $5,000 a month for their new home.

Because one of their two children has autism, she said, getting into one of the state's top school districts was a huge priority.

"We kind of feel like we bit off more than we can chew," she said. "But people are always recommending buying at your uppermost limit because you expect your income to increase every year. So it's tight this year and maybe it will ease up."

She said she drives a hand-me-down minivan to save on car payments and that she can't afford to put much into the children's college fund.

"But it's not like it's way out of control," she said. "Nobody dragged us here kicking and screaming. It was our choice to live here and I'm grateful I can put food on the table."

In some cases, the rising costs are changing the very nature of towns.

In the 1990s, Montclair became very popular with middle-class families who wanted to live in a racially diverse community with an elegant stock of housing and bustling downtown.

The price war that ensued has changed the economics, said Fleming Meeks, a town resident and editor of Smart Money magazine.

"We moved here eight years ago, and the people who could afford to move here then couldn't afford to move here now," he said. "The people moving off of our street are more like me. The people moving in are investment bankers."

It's not only new residents with big mortgages that are driving up the state's average housing cost.

George McGrath figured he had found the perfect way to save money on housing. The Cranford firefighter years ago decided to live 50 miles to the west.

He also took a second job as the part-time construction official in Mountainside.

But this year, he got the shock of his life -- the taxes on his two-bedroom bungalow in Lopatcong were going up nearly 20 percent, thanks to a township-wide property revaluation.

"I know in this state, $600 seems like nothing," he said. "But that's $50 a month. That's like getting a second gas bill or electric bill. People say that if you can't afford your housing, you should go down in size. But my bungalow is 945 square feet. I can't get any smaller.

For many New Jersey residents paying high housing costs, the future will not be financial ruin, said Jack Oujo, a financial adviser from Wall. But the future isn't necessarily bright either.

"I think they're going to have to be working into their 60s and 70s instead of retiring, or be willing to accept a dramatic reduction in their lifestyle," he said.

Because mortgage loans tend to mask the true cost of homes -- unlike other luxury items where consumers realize the actual costs up front -- many consumers don't even realize the holes they're putting themselves in, he said.

"A lot of people in this state are living way beyond their actual means, and the day of reckoning is coming," he said.



Robert Gebeloff covers demographics for The Star-Ledger. He may be reached at (973) 392-1753 or rgebeloff@starledger.com.




? 2006 The Star Ledger
? 2006 NJ.com All Rights Reserved.

Posted on: 2006/10/3 21:52
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Re: Epps check to school board member raises eyebrows
#58
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Just can't stay away


I am begining to learn why New Jersey's reputation for corruption is well-earned.

It's beyond me why Jersey doesn't have a law preventing someone from holding two public offices. I don't see how Epps can perform both jobs simultaneously. As a result, both the students of Jersey City and his legislative constituents suffer.

It's also beyond me why there isn't a law preventing the king of charitable "giving" by Epps to a supervisor who will vote on Epps' salary increase. Durbin's statement that he will judge Epps objectively is ridiculous. It's like relying on Bush's statements that we should "trust" that he won't abuse his continually expanding executive powers.

There must be a system of checks and balances.

Posted on: 2006/10/2 15:40
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Re: Greenville Lex Mob -- All-out Melee Involving 40 Officers and 200 Residents -- Cop brutality claimed
#59
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Quote:

CapnJon wrote:
yeah, i was just walking along like a good citizen and these cops appeared and beat me up for no reason....


bullsh*t!


Maybe, but that would be for a jury to determine.

Posted on: 2006/9/29 15:28
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Re: Cars blowing through stops signs-Hamilton Park Area
#60
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What about placing traffic cameras at a few of the more egregious corners. The city could clean up in fines.

Posted on: 2006/9/27 14:45
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