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Media Must Look For
Corruption In Ocean County!
Citizens Alert Committee Notes Creation
Of Useless Jobs; Huge Spending And Tax Increases "Perpetrated For
Selfish Interests"
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Dover Council
President McGuckin, the pay-to-play lawyer who took part in the
April patronage raid
on Brick schools
by
greedy GOP attorneys, is up for re-election in November |
Editor's Note: The Citizens Alert commentary represents a strong
feeling on the part of the public that the legal and virtual
corruption referred to again and again by the Asbury Park Press and
the Ocean County Observer (political pay-to-play payoffs, million
dollar pension scams by lawyers with contrived public salaries;
creation of useless public payroll jobs, corrupt double-dipping on
costly public employee health insurance; influence peddling and
malfeasance by public officials like the Sawmill issues in Seaside
Park, wholesale violations of the Open Public Records Law like the
Seaside Heights Business Improvement District, etc. etc.) should be
thoroughly investigated by the proper authorities.
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Dover
Councilwoman Maruca, Director of the Seaside Hts. Business
Improvement District, is up for re-election |
Many citizens have expressed keen
disappointment with the arrogance of the Republican Council in Dover
Township, and made reference to the four council members "up for
re-election" who approved every penny of the record spending increase
last year, including the political payoffs, and now want the voters to
believe the ludicrous lie that they are "fiscal conservatives."
We agree with the Citizens
Alert initiative.
The text follows of the
Citizens Alert letter, as published in the ocean County Observer
To the editor:
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Richard Ciullo, Central Regional School Board member &
hired character assassin on the
McGuckin-Maruca-Kubiel-Hill campaign payroll
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Dover Councilman Maurice Hill, the
Admiral who botched Dover's affordable housing response, is up
for re-election |
We applaud the investigation to uncover fraud and abuse in Monmouth
County that the Asbury Park Press completed.
We thank the newspaper for its relentless effort to bring some light
on these political and self-serving machinations of people in
authority.
"But We Do Not Live In Monmouth County"
We thank the newspaper, but we do not live in Monmouth County.
Perhaps it is now time for the newspaper to look a little deeper into
what is happening in our county - Ocean County.
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"Doctor" Moriarty, former Dover Democrat boss, who
tried to extort candidate Brush two years ago, is a
hired character assassin on the
McGuckin-Maruca-Kubiel-Hill campaign payroll
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High paying jobs have been created here, and meetings are held in the
afternoon, rather than at a more convenient time for people to attend.
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Clueless Dover
Councilman Brian Kubiel ("I never saw a snowplow in my
neighborhood") is up for re-election |
In Dover Township, we have witnessed the under-handed way the
pay-to-play referendum was dealt with, the arrogance of this council
and, last but not least, how the four ward councilpersons, up for
re-election, have dealt with the proposed budget.
We certainly don't want any tax increase after last year's hefty
increase, but we don't want behind-the-scenes machinations perpetrated for selfish
interests.
We want an honest and open discussion between mayor and the Township
Council.
We want them to work together. We want them to find ways not to burden
the citizens with added taxes.
Toms River Citizens Alert Committee Inc.
Editor's Note:
Angelo DiGiovanni is a leader in Citizens Alert, and was one of the
prime movers of the change of government in Dover Township. We
included his photo and a reference to his prior statements as part of
our original article on the Citizens Alert letter.
We are advised that
the letter was intended to reflect the views of the Citizens Alert
membership, and was not written for any single individual, so we have
adjusted the reference points of the article to reflect this reality.
We regret the delay of several days in making this adjustment.
This article originally prepared for publication 8/28/05; adjustments
to the text and editor's note added 9/8/05.
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