Posted by: laventhal on: November 24, 2008
http://www.nj.com/news/jjournal/jerseycity/index.ssf?/base/news-7/1227511533206120.xml&coll=3
The first business opened was an Edible Arrangements. The store, which specializes in bouquets filled with food, is likely most profitable during the holiday season when companies reward clients with carmalized popcorn and gourmet cheeses. With this Christmas slated to be one of the hardest in recent memory for retailers though, it’ll be interesting (read: suspensful) to see how a neubie on Grand St. fares.
Soon to come at Liberty Harbor: another organic dry cleaners, begging the inevitable question–what exactly is an organic dry cleaner?
Posted by: laventhal on: November 24, 2008
Last month Bob Cotter, the planning director of the Jersey City Redevelopment Agency, publicly feuded with the opinion staff of the Jersey Journal over an October 22nd editorial which criticized both his agency and Mayor Jeremiah Healy for a recently unveiled initiative to revitalize Journal Square over the course of the next decade.
The paper criticized the vision, whose far-reaching plans involve a new trolley system, an extension of the light rail, and a new skyscraper atop the current Journal Square PATH station, as “blurry” and “unbelievable,” further noting that the unveiling “smells of the kind of Xanadou development that is occuring in the Meadowlands,” and advising the city to “take lessons from how Hoboken has been developing its riverbank – with people and quality of life a priority.”
Not to be out-bloviated, the planning director shot back at the paper the next day in a press release published on the JCRA’s web site. Picking up on the paper’s themes of scent and vision, he responded by questioning the duration of time since the staff’s most-recent checkups for vision and, somewhat mysteriously–and perhaps sinisterly–their hearing. He continued his assault by praising the city and its planning board for the city’s rapid growth and “internationally acclaimed renaissance.”
Lastly, Cotter advised all citizens doubting the progress of the city to ride the light rail to the waterfront and “stop and have coffee at Starbucks, then watch the seniors doing Tai Chi in the little gem that is Town Square.”
Jersey City residents were not available for comment because they were too busy commuting to Manhattan, but one eager PATH rider noted that the Long Slip pedestrian bridge, which once completed will connect Newport with the Hoboken light rail station, will be a welcome addition to the waterfront in the spring of 2009.
Jersey Journal: pushing ‘vision’ much too hard
Bob Cotter, Jersey City Planning Director Responds to Jersey Journal Editorial
Posted by: laventhal on: November 23, 2008
Jersey Journal on the closing of waiting lists for Obama inauguration tickets
Jersey City Magazine on the bowling lanes at Barrow Street Mansion
Posted by: laventhal on: November 22, 2008
The Jersey Journal on how Hudson County residents can get tickets to the Obama inauguration
The New York Times on the possible Republican candidates for governor of New Jersey
Journal Square blog on reporting muggings in Jersey City
Posted by: laventhal on: November 22, 2008
The Jersey Journal on how Hudson County residents can get tickets to the Obama inauguration
The New York Times on the possible Republican candidates for governor of New Jersey
Journal Square blog on reporting muggings in Jersey City
Posted by: laventhal on: November 22, 2008
A ceremony honoring Archbishop Desmond Tutu – an important anti-apartheid activist – took place at City Hall in Jersey City. Those in attendance were disappointed to find out that the honoree was not even in the city. Confusion due to local newspaper reports caused three television crews, as well as a handful of print reporters, to show up for the event. Council members were at a loss to explain the cause of the mix-up.
In the Archbishop’s place, Thabo Mashulogo, a project manager at The Desmond Tutu Peace Centre accepted a plaque and key to the city from Mayor Jeremiah Healy and the council members in attendance.