January 6, 2016 • www.theobserver.com • Vol CXXVIII, No. 32 Visit our
BUSINESS DIRECT on
COVERING: BELLEVILLE • BLOOMFIELD
Do your antiques have value?
RY
Page 26
• EAST NEWARK • HARRISON • KEARNY • LYNDHURST • NORTH ARLINGTON • NUTLEY
Into the drink
By Ron Leir Observer Correspondent KEARNY – Get ready to comb through all that stuff you’ve been storing in your attic or china closets. Maybe you’ll re-discover that long-lost coin, stamp collection and comic books. Or your granddad’s pocket watch or maybe a precious heirloom of some kind. It could turn out that any or all of those items may have untold value you never dreamed of. You’ll get a chance to find out this spring when the Kearny Museum Board presents “Antique Appraisal Day” on Sunday, April 17, from 1 to 4 p.m. on the top floor of the Public Library, 318 Kearny Ave. Sandra McCleaster, vice president of the museum board, said the event format will be patterned after Public Television’s “Antique Road Show,” except that there are no plans to televise it. “We will have an expert appraiser and people will be invited to bring their treasures and they will be appraised,” McCleaster said. “It should be very entertaining.” The expert is Jon Felz, senior vice president of RZM Fine Arts & Antiques of Pearl see ANTIQUES page
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NPD
The Honda CRV in Third River, Nutley, before it was pulled out by a crane.
By Kevin Canessa Jr. Observer Correspondent
Nutley Police Department said. Shortly after 10 a.m., the 71-year-old man acpolice and fire departments cidentally drove his responded to the area of car into the Third Franklin Ave. and Harrison River the morning of New St. to find a white Honda Year’s Eve in Nutley, but CRV overturned in the wasn’t seriously injured, the river. Police say several res-
A
idents, police officers and firefighters jumped into the river to rescue the driver, a Hamburg resident, who was waist deep in water — but not trapped in the vehicle. The driver told police his foot may have slipped off the brake, causing his CRV
to jump a cement-parking barrier and to crash through a 5-foot fence. He then plummeted 10 feet from the parking lot into the river, the NPD said. The driver, whose name see RIVER page
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Seeking to keep aid, lose watchdog By Ron Leir Observer Correspondent
KEARNY/HARRISON – Two West Hudson communities currently receiving transitional state to help offset property tax impact are looking to get out from under
201-460-8000 LYNDHURST OFFICE 761 Ridge Road, Lyndhurst, New Jersey C21Semiao@Century21.com
the aid’s ties to Big Brother watching. To get the cash, Kearny and Harrison must agree to submit every significant municipal expenditure, whether for issuing bonds, investing in new capital improvements or hiring new employees, to the
oversight of state fiscal monitor Don Huber. If the monitor does not approve, he can block the municipality’s proposed action. One example occurred last year when Kearny looked to float a bond to cover part of the cost for a dog park partly
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subsidized by a grant from the Hudson County Open Space Trust Fund but, according to town officials, the monitor vetoed it. The town then cobbled together the funds needed by see TRANSITION page
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201-991-1300 KEARNY OFFICE
213 Kearny Ave, Kearny, New Jersey
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