The 4th Ward Gazette: An Englewood, NJ Newsletter focusing on the events impacting the 4th ward, its residents and the family and friends who care about the traditions and welfare of Englewood residents. Members of our "Neighborhood Watch Program" do not carry guns. We carry telephones and cameras. The 4th Ward Gazette is dedicated to uplifting the hearts & minds of a people long overdue for some success & recognition. It is a warm friendly bear hug for a Community.
Always
Vote like the lives of your children depend on your doing so!
Sunday, November 5, 2017
Thursday, October 26, 2017
Wow! And Wow again....
Corner of Teaneck Rd & Englewood Ave. |
Check out the sign on this pole on Teaneck Road in Teaneck, New Jersey. It is a sign promoting Englewood School Board Candidates. I guess the strategy is that they will cover every "gateway" into our fair city. It must be really nice to have that much money to waste. How are you going to serve the Residents of a City when you have not taken the time to learn where the borders are. At best, read the signs. This is Teaneck Road. I could see the mistake if it was on the border, but this is way up the hill on the main thoroughfare. It demonstrates that these Candidates know nothing about the Geography of Englewood and even less about the children.
Teaneck Code: § 3-3 Use of poles and trees; advertising generally.
[R.O. 1951, ch. 3, § 5.] No person shall place any sign or advertisement or other matter upon any pole, tree, curbstone, sidewalk or elsewhere in any public street or public place, except such as may be authorized by the Township Council.
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
A Day of Presence!
Neighbors and fellow citizens, my name is Ricardo Whilby. I am a long time Englewood resident. The current state of affairs in this town needs to change. The powers that be need a wake up call, and that is where WE THE PEOPLE MATTER come in.November 6, 2017 is Day of Presence in Englewood, NJ"Did you know that "Day of Absence" is a one act play written by Douglas Turner Ward, the founder of The Negro Ensemble Company"? It tells the story of what happens in a southern town when all of the black and brown people disappear for a day. Issues within the work still ring true 51 years later. It is time for us old folks to make it clear to the children that we are "present" and we have their backs. They matter and we care about them. http://www.theasy.com/Reviews/2016/D/dayofabsence.pp
Just think of it, where do we start;
- a failing school system,
- no Equity in Public Education
- no safe haven for children
- an agenda to re-gentrify our town,
- no low income housing that older Englewood residents that have been here for life can afford,
- too many broken promises,
- Politicians with fake zeros in city budgets,
- the steady rise of our property taxes that only have a upward trajectory from here.
- no Community Policing
- And no Community Center!
We are being pushed out. Pressure from above and pressure from below. I can remember my father as the owner of Almay's refusing to play the game or pay city officials that would try too extort a God fearing honest small businessman.Today the challenges that face us in this town harking back to pre Civil Rights conditions, and if you don't think so then go back to sleep. Go along to get along until reality reconnects you to that which you already know, but are afraid to confront and deal with.
Jim Crow is alive and well. Discrimination is doing just fine. Systemic racial inequality is on the rise from the white house to city hall. This is why we will rally and march together right here in Englewood to let our voices be heard. We will march as a community to let our children know that they are not facing the issues of the day alone.
We must awaken our corrupted officials by marching. It is time to march as one powerful force to bring the message home. It is also time to MARCH into the voting booth bringing it home to those who have posed as our friends.
We are awake and we are aware.
We are using our power.
The Puppet masters are no more. We the people demand change. We demand accountability. We demand that the corrupt political machine that takes and doesn't give leave our town. We demand the fruits of our labor. We demand good schools, affordable housing, safe streets, equality, fairness, and respect. Lets come together with our individual struggle and collectively work with each other for the greater good and growth for the city.
Join us on November 6, 2017 at 3:30 PM on Herring Field. Tryon Avenue across the street from the Janis E. Dismus Middle School where we will rally and march down Tryon Avenue and up Knickerbocker Rd. to DMHS in support of the students of Englewood. Help us show all Englewood students
that we are
"present" and "accounted for"
in support of them and their education.
We the People, all love Englewood.
Thank you,
Ricardo Whilby
Friday, October 6, 2017
Moved Across From The Police Station
This building is now located across the street from the police station. I guess the time comes in our neighborhood when we must realize that the rhetoric expoused by the Crafter of the Master Plan do not apply to some.
Some of us can do nothing to preserve the integrity of our neighborhoods. Seems only money and influence can do that. So the Developers build apartments that make our homes seem tiny. They build them on stilts so that the contaminated ground beneath is not disturbed. Meanwhile, where do we put all of the traffic and the deer? That is correct. The stilts are not just for parking and the river beneath. There is a blue dot beneath the soil there where Caddy Corner Gas Station used to be. And what about the statistics on School bus accidents in that area?
Who among you did not prefer the friendly look of the Salvation Army building that stood on this site for years?
For over a year this building has stood empty with no signs of revitalization. It has been added to the collection of ghost properties in the Englewood landscape, yet the Developers persist. I mean, there might even be a piece of green grass that is not covered with concrete. We can't have that.
Did anyone ever think that maybe it is time to stop building new adding new structures. Englewood is 4.9 square miles with plans to gut downtown with a double light rail track that already promises to bring thousands of strangers to town. 4.9 square miles that is already 95% developed.
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