It certainly doesn’t give me any pleasure to say it, announce it, or ask you to prove it to yourselves. Based on their words and actions, it’s an obvious conclusion that the Atlantic Highlands Mayor and Council have finally convinced me. They really don’t want the people of Atlantic Highlands to know what they’re doing, or what’s going on. Nor do they care an awful lot about regionalization.
And they’re doing it in so many ways, some of them even effective. All of them costing money and hurting residents who really want to know what’s going on in town. People who thought, rightfully, that since the days of Thomas Jefferson, they had that right to ask questions and what’s going on in their hometowns and every level of government.
The Council lost the Battle to keep people from asking questions at public meetings. Kind of silly the way they lost it, though. But effective.
You see, when people in the audience kept complaining they couldn’t ask questions because the borough attorney kept saying they couldn’t, one of the council members, or maybe more than one, thought that maybe they should listen to the people for half a second and check it out.
So, the administrator, who said he has the right to direct the attorney to research any issue raised by one or more council members. Did ask to have something done. But he did not ask another of the dozen or so attorneys on the borough’s payroll to check out the legality of Ms. Schaeffer’s directive. No indeed, he asked Ms. Schaeffer to research it herself.
Now you have the borough attorney getting paid to research the fact she had the law wrong in the first place. Then she fixed it up with a letter she wrote, and she read it to the mayor and council first in secret, then to the public minutes later.
So is the answer for an attorney to make mistakes, then get paid to research their own mistakes? But in the end, outside of any added costs for correcting an error that went on for too long, that’s fixed, and the public can ask questions. Great news. You should be asking yourself … What’s going on?
Next let’s look at the upcoming Council meeting.
The second meeting of April is not on a Thursday night like every other month. It’s a Wednesday night. According to the administrator, “that’s because to my knowledge, the meeting was scheduled for the 26th at the request of a council member who had a conflict in schedule.” He did not name the councilman or councilwoman who made the request.
Not to worry, said the administrator, ”to my knowledge the meeting was in the yearly schedule for council meetings approved by mayor and council at the reorginazation meeting.”
But I did not get any answer to my question of whether that reason still exists that made it so important to switch the meeting to conduct borough business to another night four months ago still exists.
Well, wanting to be sure I had my facts right, I did look at the reorganization once again. Yep, it’s there, right smack in front of your eyes on page 20 of 33 pages of reorganization meeting. It gives the date of the second meeting in April as April 26, and the administrator was correct once again. The resolution doesn’t give the actual day of the week, just the date of the month. So, with no reason to think four months ago that it’s changed from a Thursday to a Wednesday one month out of the year, I’d say it’s easy to overlook, even for someone who takes the bother to go through 20 pages of a meeting four months previous.
Ah, but look a little closer at that reorganization resolution. You get a little hint something might be different here if you’re astute and read closely. Right smack next to the April 26 date there’s a little asterisk like this *. But the * doesn’t refer you to anywhere else or tell you why there’s a little * there. Could be a typo for all anyone knows since there’s no given for what it means.
Ah, something must be wrong. So I went to the AHNJ.com home page that is so full of up-to-date news about what’s going on in Atlantic Highlands.
It’s usually pretty wonderful, though now I wonder about that as well since I don’t know what news is NOT put on that page. Lots of good stuff is listed, things from the Employee of the Month, Election Poll Workers are needed, the upcoming Garage Sale, congratulations to the Police Chief on yet another accomplishment the borough can take pride in, and even the change in recycling so it’s also going to be the Fifth Wednesdays of the month, something Councilman Jim Murphy has been announcing the last couple of meetings. But there is absolutely nothing saying that, in spite of the large letters at the top of the page that proclaim Council meetings are the 2 and 4Th Thursday of the month, not a single word saying that simply isn’t so in April. You should be asking yourself … What’s going on?
But there is still another insult to the integrity of those interested in watching their municipal governing body at work. Yet another insult to taxpayers, residents, guests or any outsider who wants to attend a meeting of the governing body of this town.
Check out the borough’s magnificent calendar that goes free to anyone who wants it and is full of great old-time photos of life in the quieter, softer, different Atlantic Highlands. There are always some available for the taking on the counter at Borough Hall, a really nice gesture.
But look at April. Check out April 26. You’ll read on this calendar the taxpayers paid for, that they’re recycling, for Zones 2 &4, there’s an Open Space meeting, and there’s a Henry Hudson Board of Education meeting!
But there’s no Atlantic Highlands Borough Council meeting listed on April 26.
Study the calendar a little closer. Yep, there it is….
The taxpayer funded Atlantic Highlands calendar most folks hang near their desks or in their kitchen cabinet clearly shows the Atlantic Highlands Borough Council meeting is at 7 p.m….April 19. You should be asking yourself … What’s going on?
So, if you went tonight, sorry, hopefully it did not happen and the calendar is wrong and the reorganization meeting, asterisk or not, and the administrator’s e-mail to me, are accurate.
The meeting is set for next Wednesday, April 26, at 7 p.m.
Again, is there something wrong here as well? That is the same night as the Henry Hudson Regional School Board of Education meeting… a regularly scheduled meeting.
Doesn’t anyone on the Atlantic highlands Borough Council think that at the height of all the discussion about whether the current superintendent should be re-hired for another two or five years, at the height of the long-drawn-out time when so many are trying so hard to get a regionalization question put on the ballot so the people can have their say, this is a smart idea? After hearing council members refuse to answer questions at meetings and instead telling residents to go to board of education meetings and ask questions of them, is it really fair to schedule their own meeting the same night as a board of education regularly scheduled meeting?
Or is that a way to reduce the number who attend one or another of those two important meetings?
You should be asking yourself … What’s going on?
There were two Councilmen missing from the April 13 Council meeting, and one Councilwoman Zoomed her participation to fulfill the quorum requirement. The two absences were unannounced, the meeting went on no problem, on its normally scheduled Thursday.
So then why does one Councilperson’s known unavailability three months ago hold sway over the whole town NOT having the Council meeting held on its normally-scheduled Thursday this month?
This type of political favoritism is EXACTLY what should not be allowed. If you’re not available, so be it, let the record show your absence. It’s not the end of the world.
I would hate to think that this upending of the April meeting schedule was done solely for the purpose of protecting someone’s attendance record, could that be the reason? Someone should ask at the April 26 meeting who it was that requested the meeting be moved.
Thanks. I’ll do a story before next week, however, I cannot attend the meeting because I’m committed to Middletown library Wednesday night. I would encourage you to see if several others want to ask about the changed meeting as well. We fought to enable us to ask questions at meetings, let’s take advantage of it by having more people ask questions.
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