Bring Fair Elections To Hoboken -- Vote YES on November 6th for Runoff Elections

This Election Day Hoboken voters have a question to vote on that could shape our city’s future -- whether we should use runoff elections if a candidate for Mayor or City Council doesn’t win a majority of votes. The answer is, YES! Runoffs are used in most every similar NJ municipality and require a candidate to earn 50% of the vote to win office. Hoboken doesn't though, and as a result are the only city in the state that has a Mayor elected with less than 50 percent of the vote. You might recall last year's crowded and confusing mayoral race, where we had six people running with 68 percent of residents voting against the candidate who won.   

It’s not really democracy if your vote doesn’t count.

Establishment politicians and special interests know this and use this broken system to divide our community and then pander to those smaller voting blocks, and win. Runoff elections would require candidates to create broader platforms and once elected, broader policies, which benefit the most number of residents as possible, not just the select few who elected them. Your support on this question would mean every vote counts -- making it harder for candidates to intentionally divide the community for political gain in future elections.  

The question will be at the bottom of the ballot and I really hope you will support and spread the word to see fair elections in Hoboken!

In just 60 seconds watch why runoffs are important to democracy and fair elections in Hoboken


Why Runoffs are Important?

Just last November, Hoboken had 6 candidates running for mayor and 14 running for City Council to fill 3 seats -- a political circus that confused and frustrated many voters. In response to residents concerns, an overwhelming majority (7-2) of the City Council approved a ballot referendum which would allow our community to collectively decide whether or not to re-institute runoff elections. Mayor Bhalla vetoed the ordinance, spreading half-truths and politicizing the issue, but the Council responded by overriding him (7-2) to let the people decide (click here to read the NJ.com article).  

Without runoff elections, true independent candidates face an uphill battle and a nearly impossible task to run for office without institutional support as crowded races favor the person who can raise the most money, which is usually the incumbent. That wasn’t always the case though.  In 2007, Dawn Zimmer lost her election to City Council in a four-way race to a long-time incumbent, but won head-to-head in a runoff.  Without a runoff, Dawn Zimmer would never have sat on the City Council...she would have lost in the winner-take-all scenario we have today.  A similar outcome also just occurred in the 2017 Jersey City Downtown Ward E runoff where the candidate backed by the establishment won in the general election, but lost to an upstart in the runoff. So, in trying to block runoffs, Mayor Bhalla is essentially limiting the viability for independents to run for political office in favor of himself and candidates that he supports.  

Reinstating runoffs allows local candidates a chance to make their case on municipal issues without having them distracted by the polarizing partisan politics found at the state and national levels. I believe that we need to continue to challenge the status quo to ensure that new energy and new ideas are encouraged and elevated by Hoboken's electoral process, not thwarted by establishment politicians.

Keep in mind, Mayor Bhalla was not supported by 68% of voters, earning less than 1/3 of votes. Runoffs would return majority rule, and his opposition to runoffs calls into question his ability to actually win a majority vote. It is further disappointing to see Mayor Bhalla spreading misinformation and half-truths to make his point.  

The Mayor has cited reduced voter turnout in the last Jersey City runoff where the mayoral candidate wasn't even in the runoff and fails to mention that the last time Hoboken held a runoff election for Mayor in 2009 turnout actually increased from the general election. Meanwhile, he suggests that he supports an instant runoff system that, while certainly worth exploring, is not currently allowable by state law and even if permitted, likely won't roll out before the next mayoral election. The mayor references “massive vote-buying” which although has significantly decreased over the years, is still sadly an issue but not unique to runoffs. Perhaps our mayor’s energies are best spent suppressing the referenced vote buying, not stopping the people’s right to decide whether or not they want a runoff election. Think about it, should we blame the voting process for Russian meddling, or should we aim to end Russian meddling?  

Sadly, all of this is meant to distract from the fact that Mayor Bhalla is concerned that re-instituting runoff elections would hurt his own chances of re-election as he has not demonstrated the ability to secure majority support or to work collaboratively with his fellow elected officials.  This is a deeply cynical ploy that puts politics over our city's values of transparency and openness.

The Question As To How Our Elections Are Run Is Now With You! Vote Yes On Local Question #1 To Bring Back Runoffs.


FAQ ON RUNOFF ELECTIONS



  • RUNOFF ELECTIONS CAN CHANGE THE FINAL OUTCOME…AND FAVOR INDEPENDENTS

    Some have contested that there is no change in the outcome of an election, however the election of Dawn Zimmer to Council upends that. In 2007 Zimmer ran in a four-way race, and came in second in the general but won the runoff. Just this year, James Solomon in Jersey City’s Ward E came in second in the 5-way Council race, and won the runoff. The same occurred with Reed Gusciora in Trenton, who ran in a 6-way Mayoral race, coming in second in the general but winning the runoff. When fractured voters have to decide between two candidates, the majority of total voters has been known to shift the course of an election. That’s democracy!  

  • VOTER TURNOUT HAS HISTORICALLY INCREASED FROM A MUNICIPAL TO A RUNOFF ELECTION.

    The last time Hoboken held a runoff election for mayor, in 2009, turnout increased from the general election. Mayor Bhalla's claim that voter turnout is reduced is not based in any recent fact and completely opposite of what we have historically seen in Hoboken (take a look at the reference chart)

    Further, using voter turnout from Jersey City's 2017 December runoff to show reduced turnout is not an acceptable baseline for making that argument. In that particular election, Jersey City's Mayor, Steve Fulop, won on the first ballot with 77 percent of the vote, as did 5 of 9 Council candidates and none of their names were on the runoff ballot.  As such, it's logical to see how overall voter turnout decreased proportionally when there weren't as many races left to decide.

  • THE COST OF A RUNOFF IS NOT $140k

    It has been suggested by some that the additional cost of the runoff is $140,000, without explanation of where this number came from.  Looking back, it appears to reflect the number that was used in 2012 for the savings relating to moving our municipal elections from May to November and eliminating the runoffs. The City Clerk has estimated that a runoff election would cost the City around $10,000.  For the ten positions (1 mayor and 9 council members) that oversee a $117,000,000 budget, don’t you want to make sure you elect the right people?

     

  • IF A RUNOFF IS NEEDED, IT WOULD BE IN DECEMBER, BUT NOT DURING THE “HOLIDAY SEASON”.  

    Pursuant with NJ State law, if a runoff is needed, “the run-off election shall be held at a special election on the subsequent Tuesday next after the first Monday in December”. Also keep in mind, if a candidate earns over 50 percent of the vote on Election Day, no runoff would be required.  

  • INSTANT RUNOFF / RANKED CHOICE VOTING IS NOT PERMITTED BY LAW AND WONT BE FOR OUR NEXT ELECTION.  

    Last January, the Hoboken City Council  unanimously approved a resolution urging the state legislature to consider passing law to allow municipalities to adopt instant runoff elections. If and when the state does permit ranked choice voting, Hudson County would still need to source new software and voting machines, implement new voting processes and policies, train election workers and educate voters on the new voting system.  Even supposing that instant runoffs were approved by the state legislature this year, they would not be fully implemented in time for our next Council election in 2019 or mayoral election in 2021.

  • ILLEGAL VOTES ARE MORE OF A PROBLEM IN A CROWDED GENERAL ELECTION THAN IN A RUNOFF.  

    All elections are sadly targets for vote buying, but runoffs make it harder for the illegal practice to be successful.  In a runoff it would require thousands of bought votes, in two elections. In a crowded general, it would perhaps require only a few hundred, once.  The smaller voting blocks that multiple-candidate general elections create make vote buying far more possible while runoffs dilute that.

CAN HOBOKEN BE MISLED?

Since I first challenged a long-time incumbent and ran for City Council three years ago, you've always known me as someone who’s willing to stand up against the patronage system and entrenched politicians that typify the political establishment in New Jersey.    

Which is why I am concerned with the direction Hoboken is headed politically. 

In June, Mayor Ravi Bhalla was censured by the NJ State Supreme Court for "unethical conduct" for failing to pay into his employee’s retirement account and being "nonchalant" about rectifying it for five years.  That’s not just wrong, it’s heartless.  In it's ruling, the Court opined that Bhalla had participated in “dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation,” yes....really.  This comes on the heels of another scandal Mayor Bhalla caused when he broke a campaign promise and took a second job at a politically connected law firm.  

And earlier this year, Hoboken paid $186k to settle two cases where Ravi Bhalla allegedly infringed on the first amendment rights of two residents who spoke out against him at City Council meetings.

But more recently, I uncovered that Hoboken taxpayers have unknowingly spent $10,000 over the past seven months funding the Mayor’s appeal of an ethics violation where he was reprimanded for voting on a business partner’s contract with the city.  The City's continued funding of his defense wouldn't be an issue if Ravi Bhalla hadn't lied to our city’s legal team, which directly led the city to enter into this folly in the first place. Instead of acknowledging his clear mistake, Mayor Bhalla instead has doubled down and ordered a city attorney to quietly defend him, without any transparency towards residents or the City Council.

In response, last Wednesday the City Council voted overwhelmingly (7-2) to terminate the contract with the law firm retained by the administration to stop this taxpayer ripoff. Yet again, instead of doing what’s right and accepting fault, the Mayor refused to enforce the resolution, setting the Council on a collision course with his administration that could have serious consequences.

How has our Mayor responded to these continued scandals? By lashing out at me for leading the charge to hold him accountable and trying to distract from his own problems by making false claims against me.

 

A DISTRACTION FROM THE ISSUES

To distract from the mounting controversy, this week a close friend of the mayor’s Chief of staff was sent to file a bogus ethics complaint against me.  They're saying that a long-awaited improvement to the city’s zoning that I am sponsoring along with Councilwoman Fisher is being done to benefit a campaign donor and developers. The truth is that this common sense measure would simply allow homeowners to add staircases to their backyards without dealing with an oppressive city bureaucracy. The Mayor would have you believe that this small change would be the end of the world, so he vetoed it, but nothing could be further from the truth.  This is something that the Zoning Board has urged the City Council to consider every year since 2012, and after half a decade of recommendations, it was approved by an overwhelming 7-2 vote. 

Updating our outdated zoning isn’t exactly a front-page issue, but it’s essential to keeping families in town and one of the main reasons I ran for City Council in the first place.   Read more about how out of date zoning hurts residents and forces them out of town.

The fact of the matter is that the donation was from a well-respected restaurateur in my district, not a developer or special interest as the mayor sensationalized and it had absolutely nothing to do with my decision to take up the zoning issue.  On the date of the contribution, the donor didn’t even own the property that he would later bring to the Planning Board.  As soon as I became aware that this donor was submitting an application, I recused myself from that meeting to avoid any appearance of a conflict. There is absolutely no merit to the mayor’s lies against me and worse, his attempt to defame a Hoboken-based small business for petty political gain.

Perhaps most telling, after concocting the story, Mayor Bhalla sent out a fake version of a news article to his supporters that intentionally removed crucial facts, such as editing the headline to change the meaning and mislead residents -- in doing so, trying to manipulate the local media to fit his own twisted and false narrative.
 

PUTTING POLICY FIRST  

Despite this political side-show, I remain dedicated to elevating good and rational policy-based ideas that help Hoboken and all residents.   The Mayor and his two allies on the Council are misrepresenting the goals and impacts of the proposed legislation and are attempting to turn a common sense policy decision to help homeowners into some kind of giveaway to developers.  For a spot-on analysis of what this ordinance actually aims to achieve, my colleague Councilwoman Tiffany Fisher has expertly broken it down and countered the mayor's false narrative.

Over the past two weeks, I have had the chance to listen to more community feedback on this issue and I plan to re-introduce revised legislation next month with additional assurances that limit this to the smaller, family-friendly, homes most negatively impacted by the city's flood ordinance.  Much like the original ordinance, the revised will continue to maintain the 60 percent principal lot coverage (30 percent rear yard) standard currently required by exisiting law, ensuring green space, light and air is preserved for all residents, while clarifying the code to allow them to safely access their backyards.  This is an opportunity to make a small but important change to the way our city treats homeowners, and I’m not backing down from it.

Ravi Bhalla might think that this political hit job, a gross misuse of his office and taxpayer resources, would silence me. He could not be more mistaken. He might also believe that he can scare Hoboken with wild accusations about donors and developers that don’t have a grain of truth to them. But I'm not going to stop fighting to hold his scandal-plagued administration accountable, or to keep moving our city forward. I know that Hoboken won’t fall for this kind of misdirection and that residents want the City Council to continue putting the needs of our city over the personal interests of the Mayor.

A Dog Park in Downtown Hoboken, and More....

With summer (finally) here, I wanted to quickly update you with what's going on around Hoboken and in City Hall.  From a new dog park in the first ward and plans underway for Court Street to standing up for equality and good government, it's been a busy spring!  

BUDGET IN THE BAG

In May, the City Council approved a $118.6 million budget that was exactly the amount requested by the mayor, but we were able to tighten up spending and reallocate funds to secure needed funding for:

  • A new city engineer and construction manager for all our infrastructure projects.

  • Technology upgrades to help modernize our recreation and rent control departments

  • Safety at intersections to study and install more stop signs

  • Historic preservation design guidelines - a long overdue first step in preserving our historic architecture.  

And though I advocate for all of Hoboken, I am specifically elected to represent my home district, the First Ward -- and fighting for the first, I was able to secure funding for two important neighborhood projects, a new First Ward dog park and improvements to Court Street....

 

A conceptual rendering of what the dog park could look like. Please submit your thoughts on the project by clicking here.  

A conceptual rendering of what the dog park could look like. Please submit your thoughts on the project by clicking here.  

 A DOG PARK ON HUDSON STREET @ GARAGE “B”

For too long dog owners in the dense southeast have not had an adequate place for our K9 companions to play, and as a result we’ve seen an uptick in dog waste along our streets.

In this years budget I've advocated for and City Council approved money to turn currently underutilized city property on Hudson between 1st and 2nd and turn it into a much needed dog run. Unlike other municipal dog runs, this one will be covered in permeable turf and not gravel so our dogs won’t come home covered in mud. This combined with the rollout of new garbage cans should help the administration combat rogue dog waste.  

More detail will be made available as planning gets underway, in the meantime -- please submit your thoughts on the project by clicking here

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REHABBING COURT STREET

After we earmarked money in last year’s budget, the City will finally begin fixing the sidewalks abutting court street this summer.  The disrepair of the sidewalks has long been a detriment to seniors, families with strollers, the disabled...and just about everyone that walks by.  Additionally, in this year’s budget, I secured funding for a complete engineering study of Court Street - a long overdue action plan on how to best repair and preserve our city's most historic street.  I will keep you up to date  as planning gets underway. 

 

THE TAX INCREASE NO ONE IS TALKING ABOUT

As I mentioned, the City Council approved the mayor's request of $118.6 million and you’ve always known me to be upfront and honest with you, so I’m going to say something you won’t hear from anyone else  -- our taxes went up.

You won’t see any impact to your individual tax bill though and the reason is something you need to be aware of as we move forward -- the City added $1.6 million in new residential construction over the past year and for the first time in eight years, we dipped into our “rainy day fund” by $1.4 million.  So the rise in taxes was covered by more residents using practically the same amount of city services while tapping into our emergency savings.  

The biggest cost-driver was health insurance, which increased almost $3 million.  In response, the Council passed a resolution urging the mayor to go to market and solicit competitive bids and see if our current broker remains the best deal for the City.  Surprisingly, the last time we shopped around for a competitive insurance contract was over four years ago and if the mayor is interested in cutting costs, we should start here.  Also of note, the mayor’s office substantially increased it’s operating line by 30 percent — the first major increase in almost eight years.  Contrary to state hiring limits, the mayor onboarded a political supporter to act in the newly created and questionably needed roll of “deputy chief of staff”, even though he already had a “chief of staff”.  Carving out city jobs for political patronage at the taxpayers expense is everything that’s wrong with local politics.

 

COUNCIL STOPS ILLEGAL PAY TO PLAY, ACTS AS WATCHDOG WITH MAYORS SECOND JOB

I endeavor to work with everyone, whether I agree with them politically or not, to ensure that policy always comes before politics.  Though I prefer to keep my goals set on ideas and collaboration, sometimes the reality of Soprano-state politics  confounds me and I simply refuse to stay quiet.

In April, I spoke out against Mayor Ravi Bhalla’s acceptance of a donation that wasn’t just over campaign finance limits, but also because he attempted to give that very same vendor a $50,000 City Contract -- which if approved, would have been a stunning breach of pay-to-play.  The City’s legal department not only failed to catch the campaign finance violation, but the mayor himself didn’t disclose the information and acknowledged fault only after I spoke publicly about the conflict.  The same department that failed to catch this violation are the same lawyers that are charged with acting as an oversight authority and ensuring the mayor’s second job at a politically connected zoning and land use law firm Given the mayors unprecedented decision to hold this second job, I will be introducing an ordinance at tonight's meeting to create transparency and see what, if any, conflict Mayor Bhalla's very active legal career has with his position as our mayor.  

 

OBSERVER HIGHWAY... FLOOD WALL?

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Hoboken is planning to construct an eleven-foot tall industrial flood wall parallel to Observer Highway over the next two years. This levy will be funded by $230 million in federal grants with the goal of making our city more flood resilient. Though it is imperative that we remain committed to protecting Hoboken against future storm surges — the placement of the wall is ill conceived.

I am advocating to see this plan amended to simply set the wall back from the roadway and allow for a future pedestrian promenade and East-West waterfront connectivity. Placing the wall closer to Observer may also prevent Hoboken Terminal from being reimagined as a European-style market as the approved rail-yard redevelopment would literally be walled off. If we leave the plan as it is, all we’d get is, well...a wall.  Please click

 

DOING SOMETHING ABOUT PREDATORY PARKING ENFORCEMENT

After helping countless neighbors who had been incorrectly written parking tickets with time left on their meter, the Council recently passed my ordinance to safeguard against this unsavory practice.  The new law now requires the Parking Authority to wait two minutes from the time a meter expires before writing a ticket, thus ensuring that all data has been correctly relayed to and received by parking enforcement officers. It also is a signal to the administration that the City Council discourages what many like myself believe to be predatory parking enforcement.  This is not by any means “free parking” rather a check on administrative authority to ensure all relevant information has been considered before writing a ticket.

 

STANDING UP FOR EQUALITY  

When I first took my seat on City Council our Human Rights Campaign: Municipal Equality Index score was 51% -- second lowest in the state next to Patterson.  After speaking out about this failing score and butting heads with the previous administration about it, I’m happy that we’re now at 92% and stand to score a perfect 100% this year.

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In April the City Council passed an ordinance sponsored by myself and Councilwoman Jabbour requiring all single-user bathrooms to be gender neutral. Concurrently, I was proud to sponsor a resolution with Councilwoman Giattino for more city services geared towards LGBTQ senior citizens and the transgender community. I was also happy to see Mayor Bhalla do what the last administration failed to — show support to the transgender community and sign an executive order acknowledging that gender identity is not a choice.  

I don’t play identity politics because there’s no gay, straight or trans way to fix a pothole. I may not agree with Mayor Bhalla politically and am deeply disappointed that he excluded me from speaking at the recent LGBTQ flag raising, but together we are products of Hoboken’s inclusive spirit and agree on equality....for everyone.

 

EXPANDING SIDEWALK CAFES

Dining alfresco is synonymous with summer in the city, but believe it or not the bureaucracy and dated zoning governing sidewalk cafes has prevented many from opening up.  I am proud to have worked with Council President Ramos and the administration on a long overdue ordinance that now gives restaurants more flexibility in establishing outdoor service areas.  Doing so helps small businesses succeed and gives us all more opportunities to enjoy our city’s streets this summer.

Have some fun in the sun!