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Mercer County to salute Vietnam War veterans March 29

TRENTON, N.J. — Mercer County Executive Brian M. Hughes invites the public to join the County in recognizing National Vietnam War Veterans Day on Wednesday.

 

Photo: The Mercer County Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Mercer County Park.

Presented by Mercer County Veteran Services, the event will take place at 11 a.m. at the Mercer County Office Park gym, 1440 Parkside Ave., Ewing.

 

“I encourage the community to come out and help us remember the service and sacrifice of our Vietnam War veterans,” Mr. Hughes said.

 

“We cannot forget the brave soldiers who served our country during that conflict.”

 

Mr. Hughes will give opening remarks at the event, and Dr. Gerald Novik, a U.S. Army Vietnam veteran, will serve as keynote speaker. The program also will include the traditional placement of a wreath and a salute to fallen soldiers by Marine Corps League Trenton Detachment #207.

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Culture Government Local News Politics

Women’s History Month features Barbara Boggs Sigmund, political trailblazer

Barbara Boggs Sigmund (1939-1990) was the first woman elected mayor of Princeton when she won the 1983 election.

 

During her term, Sigmund dealt with issues related to affordable housing and town development. She previously served on the Princeton Borough Council and the Mercer County Board of Freeholders where she held the position of president in 1979 and 1980.

 

Sigmund grew up in a politically-minded family. Her father, former Congressman Hale Boggs, was a Democrat from Louisiana. He died in a shocking 1972 plane crash in the midst of his term as House majority leader. Her mother Corinne Lindy Claiborne Boggs succeeded him in Congress. Before his death, Sigmund’s father served for 31 years and her mother carried on the family legacy for another 20 years.

 

In 1974, Sigmund joined the staff at the Center for the American Woman and Politics at the Eagleton Institute at Rutgers University. Princeton University honored her by establishing the 2001 Barbara Boggs Sigmund Symposium on Women and Poverty. Sigmund suffered from cancer for many years of her life and was widely known for her iconic eye patch.

 

Source: New Jersey Women’s History

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Government Lifestyle Local News Programs & Events Regulations & Security

County Clerk advises residents on home title scam, Property Alert Service

TRENTON, N.J. — Mercer County Clerk Paula Sollami Covello reminds County residents about home title theft that can occur when someone forges the deed to your property so that the title is no longer listed under your name.

This kind of theft usually coincides with identity fraud. Con artists often use a falsified or stolen identity to hide their involvement in the theft. Then, they create a fake document that transfers ownership of the property to their own name instead of the name of the valid owner. Some property owners are much more likely to fall victim to deed theft such as seniors, individuals with second homes, or identity-theft victims.

 

To ensure that one’s property is protected, Sollami Covello reminds residents to register for the County Clerk’s Property Alert Service to provide property owners with important alerts concerning their properties. The Property Alert Service is completely free and alerts Mercer County property owners when the Mercer County Clerk’s Office records a document affecting a specific property. Residents can sign up for the alert system by going to https://records.mercercounty.org/PropertyAlert/ and registering.

 

It should be noted that the Property Alert Service does not prevent fraudulent activity from occurring; it helps monitor activity and transactions on properties. 

 

Anyone who suspects fraudulent activity should contact authorities. Additionally, if a County resident feels they have been victimized by property fraud, they may call our County Clerk’s Property Alert Hotline at 609-989-6470.

 

For more information, please visit the Mercer County Clerk’s website at https://www.mercercounty.org/government/county-clerk or call the office’s main number at 609-989-6465.

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Government Lifestyle Local News Programs & Events

New program in Mercer County can assist homeowners with HECM reverse mortgages

TRENTON, N.J. — County Clerk Paula Sollami Covello would like to inform homeowners in Mercer County with Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECM) about a new program from the federal government.

 

The HECM is a reverse mortgage loan insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) for borrowers who are at least 62 years old.

 

“As the County’s property recorder, I strive to keep residents informed of programs that exist to help them, especially when they may be under financial stress,” said County Clerk Sollami Covello.

 

This government-insured loan allows homeowners to convert their home equity into cash. HECM borrowers are a particularly vulnerable population and continue to experience difficulties due to the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. To remedy this, the federal government has taken significant steps to help facilitate economic recovery from the pandemic.

 

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which oversees the HECM program, recently announced a new repayment option that will provide protection for borrowers who have fallen behind on their property charges.

 

The Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF) provides financial assistance to eligible homeowners who have suffered financial hardships during COVID-19.

 

Mortgagees may provide a borrower with a COVID-19 “HECM Property Charge Repayment Plan” if the borrower has been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and is currently on a standard repayment plan. The maximum length of a repayment plan is 60 months. This 60-month time-period is not reduced by any time that a borrower utilized a standard HECM repayment plan.

 

For more information on this program, call the FHA Resource Center at 1-800-CALL-FHA, email answers@hud.gov or visit www.hud.gov/answers.

For more information on the services offered by the Office of the Mercer County Clerk, please visit the Mercer County Clerk’s website at https://www.mercercounty.org/government/county-clerk or call the office’s main number at 609-989-6465.

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Art & Life Business Education Government Lifestyle News Now! Politics

NJTV rises from NJN ashes; still seeks funds, name change is now NJPBS

MONTCLAIR, N.J. — Like several U.S. public television stations, New Jersey Network, (NJN), struggled for funding, but lost in 2011 and is now New Jersey public Television, (NJTV), operating from college campuses.

Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey decided he no longer wanted to be in the television business. Therefore, in June 2011, he stopped state funds to the 43-year-old NJN and closed the State-owned building in Trenton. This forced several employees out of work and left NJN to find a new business location, a different schedule, a smaller workforce, and a new name.

Photo by Michelle Dryden John Servidio, general manager of NJTV, sits in a conference room at Montclair State University in March, where he discusses the operations of the new television station. He said that NJTV is doing well, but it needs money to continue to operate as an improved public television station in New Jersey.
Photo by Michelle Dryden
John Servidio, general manager of NJTV, sits in a conference room at Montclair State University in March, where he discusses the operations of the new television station. He said that NJTV is doing well, but it needs money to continue to operate as an improved public television station in New Jersey.

John Servidio, general manager of NJTV and a Montclair resident, said that, “NJN was financed primarily by the State of New Jersey when it was in operation. Gov. Christie’s administration decided that it wasn’t wise for the State to be financing a station with a new show on it that was covering Gov. Christie and the administration so they stopped funding for that reason and to save some money.”

NJN had a staff of about 130 employees and operated on a yearly budget of approximately $33 million. When Gov. Christie cut funds to NJN, nearly all these employees were laid off. The governor hoped to save the state about $11 million, reports Peggy McGlone of The Star Ledger.

New Jersey’s new public television station now broadcasts mainly from Montclair State University, (MSU). Effective July 1, 2011, NJTV came on the air as an independent public television station that has a five-year contract with New York’s WNET Channel 13. WNET oversees NJTV’s programming, making it New Jersey centric, and also cost saving to New Jersey’s taxpayers, McGlone writes.

However, when NJTV first debuted, the ratings were lower because there were some New Jersey residents who believed it was now a New York property. NJTV has worked diligently to dispel that myth, said Servidio. The new network also suffered a bit at first because it had fewer staff members and a smaller budget. They have been operating with only 26 full-time journalists and on a budget of only about $9 million for fiscal year 2013.

Servidio said when New Jersey’s governor closed NJN, several companies put bids out to help develop a new network and WNET’s bid won. He said, “We had about a week, week and a half to put the station together.” However, they managed to set up the station by July 1, but it was not as professional as they would like it to be. With much fewer staff and great improvisation, he said that over 20 months, the station has improved and continues to get better.

Photo by Michelle Dryden The DuMont Television Center at Montclair State University houses the studios for NJTV since July 1, 2011, when NJN lost its state-owned building.
Photo by Michelle Dryden
The DuMont Television Center at Montclair State University houses the NJTV studios since July 1, 2011, when NJN lost state funding and its state-owned building.

Corporation for Public Broadcasting, (CPB), and Public Broadcasting Services, (PBS), currently are the primary financial supporters of NJTV, Servidio said. NJTV is among several U.S. public television stations that are under-funded by their states even though their main purpose is to gather content to serve their local communities.

The Jan. 29, 2007, U.S. Accountability Office Report shows that there are about more than 300 public television stations in the United States that evolved from a handful in the 1950s, and in 1952 the Federal Communication Commission, (FCC), decided that they should serve their communities locally.

The U.S. Accountability Office Report states that, “CPB’s primary responsibility is distributing federally appropriated funds to benefit public television and radio.” On the other hand, PBS is a nonprofit membership organization made up of licenses of public television stations. Fees paid by its member licensees, underwriting, and grants from CPB and other federal sources, fund PBS, the report states.

Larger public television stations, such as WNET of New York and WGBH of Boston, supply smaller public television stations with their programming. CPB and PBS do not necessarily produce programming. However, according to the report, “PBS acquires children’s and prime-time programming and operates a satellite-based interconnection system to distribute this programming to member licensees.”

Photo by Michelle Dryden Debra Falk is the director of communications at NJTV at Montclair State University in Montclair, N.J. She talks about the status of the new public television station, mentioning that it offers a variety of programming and has a great online presence.
Photo by Michelle Dryden
Debra Falk is the director of communications at NJTV at Montclair State University in Montclair, N.J. She talks about the status of the new public television station, mentioning that it offers a variety of programming and has a great online presence.

Therefore, many public television stations broadcast some PBS prime-time and children’s programming, but some like NJTV, also improvise with content bureaus on various New Jersey state college campuses to find other content such as local programs that include community events and history, arts and culture, public affairs and also non-broadcast services that help teachers, said Debra Falk, NJTV director of communications.

Even though NJTV gets grants from CPB and PBS, it also improvises for additional funds. NJTV rents its satellite tower at the MSU campus to other channels such as the Food Network to bring in needed funds. It also gets money from corporations, foundations, and from individual memberships, pledge programs and others, Servidio said.

It is very important that public television remains local serving its immediate constituencies, report authors, Amber M. K. Smallwood and Soo Jung Moon, who write an article titled, “Predictors of Localism in Public Television in the United States,” that appears in the 2011 Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media.

Smallwood and Moon’s article discusses “the goals and direction of broadcasters across the United States, especially public television stations.” They also note that, “in media regulation, localism was intended to distribute power among local communities to promote a healthy democracy.”

When the governor of New Jersey closed NJN, there were some locals who questioned the call and said they found it to be highly political and not democratic enough. Greg Tift, a local resident and State of New Jersey employee said, “It all depends on conservatism and liberalism.”

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/91916960″ params=”” width=” 100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

He claims the current governor is republican, who is considered conservative, and so he wants to control the messages that go out over the airwaves while he is in office and that is why he closed NJN, which was considered a liberal news outlet.

Photo by Michelle Dryden Jim Hooker stands in front of New Jersey statehouse recently as the is a former news anchorman of NJN, the previous public television station in New Jersey. He speaks about how he handle the demise of the former station and what he is doing for employment now.
Photo by Michelle Dryden
Jim Hooker stands in front of New Jersey statehouse recently as a former news anchorman of NJN, the previous public television station in New Jersey. He speaks about how he handled the demise of the former station and what he is doing for employment now.

Former NJN Anchorman, Jim Hooker, also said there was a school of thought that NJN was closed to appease a wealthy political family in the north. However, Hooker also said the family denied the rumor.

Like many of his colleagues, Hooker did not immediately find new employment. He said he worked for a local political website, and then briefly as a writer for CBS in New York, before coming back to New Jersey where he found a more stable position as a chief of staff employee for a senator.

The City of Trenton North Ward Councilwoman, Marge Caldwell-Wilson, expressed dismay that the governor put so many well-known people who had became an institution in the community, out of work and left a vacant building in her ward in the city.

Photo by Michelle Dryden Marge Caldwell-Wilson is a City of Trenton councilwoman for the north ward. She is active in the community; seen here on a recent Wednesday evening at a Mill Hill District community meeting. Caldwell-Wilson also had opinions about the closing of NJN.
Photo by Michelle Dryden
Marge Caldwell-Wilson is a City of Trenton courncilwoman for the North Ward. She is active in the community; seen here on a recent Wednesday evening at a Mill Hill District community meeting. Caldwell-Wilson also had opinions about the closing of NJN.

“It was very upsetting to find that the governor was not going to fund public television anymore. Apart from the fact that I miss the regular scheduled programs that were on NJN; I think they did an amazing job, but I am concerned about that empty building that’s just sitting there,” Caldwell-Wilson said.

Public television is among other media forms like newspapers and magazines that have financial challenges. Three authors, David D. Kurpius, Emily T. Metzgar, and Karen M. Rowley, try to analyze this crisis in their article, “Sustaining Hyperlocal Media: In search of funding models,” that appears in the journal of Journalism Studies.

These authors believe traditional media are shrinking because it is typical of a mature industry. They argue it is a gradual decline and that we must meet the challenge by trying to find alternative ways to fund new media.

They also note that it is good news for public television because they can fill the niche of providing the local news that traditional media no longer seem to be reporting in detail. Recently, more people are going online and traditional print media are losing advertising revenues.

They also state the newspaper advertising revenues dropped an estimated 23 percent over the past two years since 2010, but newspapers are trying to embrace their online communities.

Kurpius, Metzgar, and Rowley
contend that public television has the advantage to remain hyperlocal and fill the news gap with local content and they too can have an online presence.

The U.S. Accountability Office Report states that, “today there are 349 public television stations, owned and operated by 173 licensees, which reach 98 percent of the households that have televisions.”

With hopes that NJTV will gain wider viewership, Falk of NJTV said that they have tried to improve the new public television network by broadcasting in high definition (HD) and also by creating a much better and more robust online presence.

Servidio said he hopes the station will get much better as the economy and viewership improve. Hooker, NJN former anchorman, said he believes NJTV will pass “something of a taste test” and will survive beyond five years.

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