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Ukraine Visitor Receives Warm Welcome

Anna Kapustyan (l.), a Professor of History at Kremenchuk State University in central Ukraine, attended a Union County Freeholder Board meeting while on a recent visit to New Jersey. Professor Kapustyan was presented with a copy of a February 6 Freeholder Resolution sponsored by Freeholder Angel G. Estrada (r.), in support of human rights protests in Ukraine. Professor Kapustyan, who is a parliamentary representative for her home town, is active in political and environmental issues in Ukraine.

Full text of Resolution 2014-101:

WHEREAS, the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders wishes to express its support for the people of Ukraine to protest peacefully while seeking for President Viktor Yanukovych to rescind the country’s restrictions of free speech and human freedoms; and

WHEREAS, on November 21, 2013, Kyiv suddenly announced the suspension of trade and association talks with the European Union after years of careful negotiations, and opts for reviving economic ties with Moscow; and

WHEREAS, over 100,000 Ukrainians have rallied in Kyiv against suspending talks with the European Union, marking the largest protest in Ukraine in almost a decade; and

WHEREAS, the Ukrainian police resorted to force by firing tear gas at demonstrators, arresting thousands, and killing four protestors; and

WHEREAS, after the use of force, over 350,000 Ukrainians came together at Independence Square to protest against President Yanukovich and his government for encouraging deadly violence against the citizens of Ukraine; and

WHEREAS, despite massive opposition, President Yanukovich has held talks with the leader of the Soviet Union, Vladimir Putin, on strategic partnerships between both countries.

NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Board of Chosen Freeholders of the County of Union hereby expresses its support for the human rights of the Ukrainian people and their support for strengthened relations with the West.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution, suitably prepared, be presented to Sonia Owchariw, as well as the Ukrainian people. Signed and Sealed: February 6, 2014.

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Special Olympics Information Meeting at Galloping Hill Golf Course, April 7

KENILWORTH, NJ – Special Olympics New Jersey is looking for anyone who might be interested in becoming a Special Olympics athlete, coach or volunteer. An information session, hosted by the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders and the Department of Parks and Recreation, will be held on Monday, April 7, at Galloping Hill Golf Course in Kenilworth from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.

“Beginning this year, Union County is partnering with the state chapter of the Special Olympics national organization to bring developmental, recreational and team sports to Union County for children living with disabilities,” said Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak. “We welcome Special Olympics New Jersey to our wonderful facility at Galloping Hill Golf Course and invite the public to learn more about this great opportunity.”

The information session on April 7 will outline a number of Olympic-style sports that will be organized in the program. There also will be information about year-round training and competition, developmental sports and school programs.

“We hope to attract parents and athletes of all ages to this initial information session,” said Freeholder Sergio Granados. “In addition, we invite our local special education supervisors and school superintendents, municipal recreation leaders, and organizations that work with special needs individuals, to learn how they can get involved in changing lives through sports.”

Galloping Hill Golf Course, located at 3 Golf Drive (off the Boulevard) in Kenilworth, is a facility of the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders. For more information about the Special Olympics information session, please call Manny Ramirez at 908-527-4781.

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Union County Means Business Series Begins Season 3

(From left) Union County Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak speaks with New Jersey Senator Raymond Lesniak, Kean University President Dawood Farahi and U.S. Congressman Albio Sires at the kickoff of the third season of the Union County Means Business Networking Breakfast series entitled “Outlook 2014; Legislative Update” at Kean University in Union. The second annual Union County Women Mean Business summit will take place on Wednesday, May 28 at Galloping Hill Clubhouse 3 Golf Drive in Kenilworth. For more information about the series, visit www.ucnj2.org/ucmb. (Photo by Jim Lowney/County of Union)

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Recycle Unwanted Electronic Equipment at E-cycling Event in Cranford, March 29

CRANFORD, NJ – The County of Union will sponsor a recycling event for electronic equipment on Saturday, March 29, so Union County residents can get rid of unwanted computers, televisions and other electronic equipment in an environmentally proper manner.

The special E-cycling event will take place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the campus of Union County College located at 1033 Springfield Avenue in Cranford.

All residents of Union County are eligible to participate at no cost. There is a limit of six electronic items per car.

“Computer monitors, old televisions and other electronic devices are the source of a considerable amount of dangerous material, including lead, mercury, cadmium and PCBs – and it is unlawful to dispose of them with the regular garbage,” said Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak, liaison to the Union County Solid Waste Advisory Board. “Up to 95 percent of most electronic appliances can be recycled. This is a responsible way to keep hazardous heavy metals out of our environment.”

Electronic equipment that will be accepted on March 29 includes computer monitors, hard drives, modems, keyboards, CPU’s, mice, printers, scanners, speakers, televisions, tablets and e-readers, VCR’s, fax machines, telephones, circuit boards, CD’s, DVD’s and video cassettes.

All that residents need to do is drive to the site with their unwanted electronic equipment. Workers at the site will unload the vehicles.

Pre-registration is not required for this special Saturday collection.

Refrigerators, washers and dryers, microwaves, and air conditioners will not be accepted, but they are accepted at Union County’s Scrap Metal Recycling Program.

 

A complete list of the materials that will be accepted on March 29 is available at the Union County Bureau of Recycling and Planning website: www.ucnj.org/recycle.

The electronics collection will be held rain or shine, for Union County residents only and not for businesses. Proof of Union County residency is required.

In addition to the special March 29 recycling event sponsored by the County of Union, there are local businesses as well as 14 municipalities that provide E-cycling opportunities for residents. Visit the websitewww.ucnj.org/recycle or call your municipal recycling coordinator for more computer and electronics recycling options.

Goodwill and Dell have teamed up to recycle computers. Goodwill in Union County is located at 126 Route 22 West, Springfield 07081, next to Macy’s Furniture. Call Goodwill at 973-912-0156 for more details or visit their web site: www.reconnectpartnership.com.

Best Buy stores now offer electronics recycling, including TVs, computer monitors, DVD players and other consumer electronics. Visit their website (www.bestbuy.com/) for store locations, or call toll-free for information about electronics recycling: 1-888-237-8289.

Staples also offers a computer recycling program seven days a week. For more information, visit the Staples web site for store locations: www.staples.com.

Waste Management accepts “covered electronics” (televisions, monitors, computers, etc.) at  629-647 Amboy Ave., Elizabeth 07201, Monday-Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; 908-629-9270.

An alternative drop-off program for recycling electronics equipment is available Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at Newtech Recycling, located at 600-A Apgar Drive, Somerset NJ 08873; 732-564-3110. Visit www.newtechrecycling.com .

For more information about recycling events, please call the Union County Recycling Hotline at 908- 654-9889.

 

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18th Annual Union County St. Patrick’s Day Parade

Union County Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak, Vice Chairman Mohamed Jalloh and Freeholders Alexander Mirabella, Bruce Bergen, Linda Carter, Angel G. Estrada, Sergio Granados and Vernell Wright march in the 18th Annual Union County St. Patrick’snews/ Day Parade on Morris Avenue in Union.  (Photo by Jim Lowney/County of Union)

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Save the Date: Pulaski Skyway Meeting Set for Union County

Union County, NJ – Union County commuters and other stakeholders will get a chance to learn firsthand about their travel options during the upcoming Pulaski Skyway closure at a public meeting hosted by the New Jersey State Department of Transportation (DOT). The meeting will be held on Wednesday, April 2, 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., at the Kean University STEM Building, opposite the main campus at 1000 Morris Avenue. Free parking is available at the rear of the building.

“I encourage all members of the commuting public to attend this meeting, so you can contribute your questions, insights and concerns as DOT prepares for the closure,” said Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak.

DOT will close both of the northbound lanes on the Pulaski Skyway for two years starting on Saturday, April 12. The closure is needed in order to perform rehabilitation work on the 80-year-old structure.

The Skyway is not located within Union County but the closure is expected to impact traffic patterns throughout the region, including Interstate 78, Route 1&9, and Route 22.

“The Freeholder Board asked DOT to conduct a public meeting in Union County because the impact of the closure will go beyond the Skyway to affect many other commuters who travel in and through Union County,” said Freeholder Sergio Granados, who is liaison to the Union County Transportation Advisory Board.

For more details about the Skyway closure, including rail, bus, vanpooling, and carpooling options, visit DOT online at pulaskiskyway.com.

Convenient links to all regional transit are also available on the Union County website at ConneXions,ucnj.org/connect.

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Union County to Receive $240,000 NJTPA Grant to Update Transportation Plan

 

The North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority (NJTPA) Board of Trustees has approved a $240,000 federal grant for Union County to complete an update of its County Transportation Plan.

The plan will reflect the significant changes in the local and regional transportation system since the previous update in 2002. The new document will reflect emerging trends affecting the County and region, including consideration of the County’s need to adapt to climate change, foster sustainability, support economic activity in town centers, and protect and enhance the natural and built environment.

“The County Transportation Plan should be updated regularly so it properly reflects the realities on the ground, like recent infrastructure projects and changes in how and where people are traveling,” said Freeholder Angel Estrada, who also serves as Second Vice Chair of the NJTPA Board. “We appreciate the grant funding from the NJTPA, which will help offset the cost of this important study.”

A public participation plan will be established at the beginning of the study to generate input from residents, local governments and other stakeholders. The study is expected to span approximately 24 months.

The plan update is one of five county- and city-led studies that were approved for funding at Monday’s NJTPA Board of Trustees meeting.  The study is projected to cost $300,000, which will be paid for through the $240,000 NJTPA grant and $60,000 from a local match. Funding for the project will begin on July 1.

The effort is part of the NJTPA’s Subregional Studies Program, which provides two-year grants on a competitive basis to the 13 counties and two cities represented by the NJTPA Board. The program is designed to help counties and cities develop transportation improvement strategies established in the NJTPA’s Regional Transportation Plan.

Further details on the study are available on the NJTPA website at http://www.njtpa.org/Planning/Subregional-Planning/Studies.aspx.

The NJTPA is the metropolitan planning organization (MPO) for 13 northern New Jersey counties. Under federal legislation, MPOs provide a forum where local officials, public transportation providers and state agency representatives can come together and cooperatively plan to meet the region’s current and future transportation needs. It establishes the region’s eligibility to receive federal tax dollars for transportation projects.

The NJTPA Board consists of one local elected official from each of the 13 counties in the region (Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union and Warren), and the cities of Newark and Jersey City. The Board also includes a Governor’s Representative, the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Transportation, the Executive Director of NJ TRANSIT and the Deputy Executive Director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

 

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Meals On Wheels March for Meals Campaign

Union County Freeholder Sergio Granados helped Meals On Wheels Executive Director Donna Sullivan load food for delivery at the agency’s headquarters in Linden during this month’s March for Meals campaign. The non-profit agency delivers up to 1,500 meals a day to homebound seniors in Union County. The program is primarily supported by a grant from the Union County Division on Aging, as well as donations from private sources and public organizations. If you would like to know more about the organization or are interested in volunteering or making a donation call 908-486–5100.  (Photo by Jim Lowney/County of Union)

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County of Union Moves Forward with Plan to Sell Runnells Specialized Hospital

UNION COUNTY, NJ—Citing the desire to finalize negotiations with a potential buyer of Runnells Hospital that would maintain high quality health care, the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders approved a measure granting the Union County Improvement Authority permission to pursue and complete a negotiated contract of sale with Center Management Group of Flushing, NY. The measure passed 7-1, with Freeholder Angel Estrada voting against it.

It is estimated that a final sale would save the County $56 million over the next five years, and generate an estimated $500,000 in new property taxes a year to Berkeley Heights and Union County by putting the property back on the tax rolls.

The Freeholders mandated a number of conditions be met for the completion of sale, requiring that Center Management:

  • pay not less than the appraised value of $26 million to the County;
  • give current Hospital patients the right to remain at the Hospital;
  • protect the Hospital employees, in good standing, by offering the right of first refusal and providing as many employment opportunities as possible at the Hospital and at Center Management Group’s other locations;
  • guarantee a five-year capital improvement plan;
  • commit to sharing revenue with the County for any new health care related services or facilities Center Management Group adds to the Hospital;
  • agree to a deed restriction that will require the Hospital remain a health care facility for long-term care patients;
  • and agree that a certain percentage of beds at the Hospital shall remain available for Union County residents and to indigent patients.

“Every angle was analyzed and every option was put on the table,” said Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak, adding the decision “of this magnitude” was “not an easy one and required two years of work.”

“Ultimately, this Board believes we’ve made the best decision possible toward maintaining the financial viability of the hospital and quality care for its patients,” Hudak said. “Employees in good standing will also have a first right of refusal at employment with the proposed operator.”

Since 2006, New Jersey’s Medicaid Program and the Federal government have been underfunding  long-term care facilities, and Medicare/Medicaid rates have been reduced each year, making it difficult for any county to operate Runnells.

As a result, the County has paid a total of more than $30 million over the past two years to subsidize the facility. This year the total subsidy amounted to $13.5 million.

Because Counties have in part experienced decreasing reimbursements, several counties in recent years have sold their nursing homes to private operators:

These Counties include: Burlington (2012), Camden (2013), Cumberland (2011), Essex (1996), Hudson (2002), Mercer (2010), Salem (2009).

 

BACKGROUND AND PROCESS

Facing an uncertain financial future of declining Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, the County of Union in 2012 retained Complete HealthCare Resources-Eastern, Inc. to independently and objectively analyze and evaluate possible options for the Hospital. The study was to seek ways to reduce costs and enable the Hospital to react to a changing health-care environment by determining if and how Hospital operations could continue in the present environment and the future in light of  the anticipated reduction in the Medicare/Medicare reimbursements and increases in the County’s subsidy of the Hospital.

After analyzing the operations of the Hospital, CHR issued a report in January, 2013, which concluded that due to declining reimbursements, decreasing occupancy rates and Medicare census, rising employee and operational costs and capital expense requirements, the County should consider several options for the continuation of the Hospital, such as revenue enhancements, expense reductions and alternative ownership.

Based upon the conclusions and recommendations of the CHR Report, the County determined to explore transferring the Hospital operations to the Union County Improvement Authority for the possible transfer of such operations to a third-party, while simultaneously evaluating methods of revenue enhancement and expense reduction.

The Authority is authorized to cooperate and plan with the County for the acquisition or operations of a public facility such as the Hospital, including the purchase of the County’s rights, title and interest in the Hospital and the possible sale and lease back of the Hospital operations to a third party to provide for the continuous public operation of the Hospital.

Later in 2013, as authorized by their respective resolutions, the County and the Authority entered into a Memorandum of Understanding,  pursuant to which the Authority is required to undertake a Request for Qualifications and Proposals (“RFQ/P”) process seeking a private provider that wished to purchase or lease the Hospital.

The Authority then established a Review Committee, which included representatives from the County and the UCIA, for the RFQ/P process, and which received five (5) proposals in December 2013, four (4) of which were for the purchase of the Hospital and one of which offered a lease option, and the Committee determined to proceed to interview four (4) of the proposers having found one (1) proposal incomplete.

The Review Committee interviewed the Proposers at least twice, and has, in compliance with the requests and suggestions of  the Board of Chosen Freeholders, sought additional information from the Proposers, and allowed the Proposers to make revised offers.

The Review Committee sought and received an independent appraisal of the Hospital, which appraised value was determined to be $26,000,000 and the Review Committee finally presented the Proposers with a series of questions and also requested that they provide a “best and final offer” to purchase the Hospital.

By the end of February, the proposers submitted responses and their best and final offers to the Review Committee, and the Committee prepared a report of the proposers, proposals, and a recommendation of one of the Proposers, Center Management Group, with which to negotiate a contract of sale of the Hospital.

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Passengers Already on Board with New Bus Service for Pulaski Skyway Closure

Union County, NJ – With closure of the Pulaski Skyway coming up on April 12, a new bus service to help reduce traffic tie-ups is already rolling through four Union County municipalities. The new service, bus no. 95, is one of several transit alternatives available to Union County residents that have been arranged by the New Jersey State Department of Transportation (DOT) with NJ Transit.

The DOT Skyway project will close both of the northbound lanes for two years starting on April 12, in order to rehabilitate the 80-year-old structure.

“We know that the next two years will be challenging ones, and DOT has made a good start on providing the public with more mass transit options,” said Freeholder Chairman Christopher Hudak. “We encourage the commuting public to take a look at DOT’s options and test an alternate route before the April 12 closure date, to help your trip go as smoothly as possible.”

The Pulaski Skyway is not located within Union County but the two-year closure is expected to impact regional arteries including Route 78, Route 22, and Route 1&9. Local traffic may also be affected.

“The closure will directly impact both Union County residents and many other commuters who travel in and through our County, far beyond those who currently use the Skyway,” said Freeholder Sergio Granados, who is liaison to the Union County Transportation Advisory Board. “Transit options like the new 95 bus can help, but there is also a need to plan for the possibility of commuters clogging local roads to avoid heavily traveled arteries including Route 22 and Route 1&9.”

Bus 95 began service on Monday, March 3. It operates between the new Park-and-Ride at the Sears parking lot on eastbound  Route 22 at Terrill Road in Watchung, and Newark Penn Station. Parking at the new Park-and-Ride is free.

From Watchung, the new service travels along existing local bus stops on Route 22 through Scotch Plains and Mountainside. It continues local stops through Springfield and Union Center. After that it returns to Route 22, where it goes express to Newark.

Inbound service is available only during morning rush hours. Outbound service is available only during evening rush hours, for a total of 16 rides.

Additional trains and rail cars are also being added to NJ Transit trains that service Union County along the Raritan Valley and Morris & Essex lines.

Complete details on the Skyway project and all transit options, including help with vans and carpools, are available from DOT at pulaskiskyway.com.

Links to all regional transit are available on the Union County website at ConneXions, ucnj.org/connect. A direct link to the DOT Pulaski Skyway website is also conveniently located on the Union County home page,ucnj.org (click on the Pulaski Skyway icon).

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