Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Pequannock waterfowl hunt proposal draws mixed views


PEQUANNOCK - A day after several residents and animal rights advocates voiced their opinions both for and against the proposed waterfowl hunt at PV Park, the general opinion of the Township Council remains unchanged: Although it's willing to consider alternatives, the hunt will go on if the governing body feels it's needed.

Some, like Edita Birnkrant, the New York director of the nonprofit animal advocacy group Friends of Animals, urged the council to abandon its plan for a culling, and said that a plethora of other factors, such as dog excrement found in the trails around the 27-acre park, could influence the high levels of fecal coliforms that have caused the lake's occasional closure in past years.
Edita Birnkrant, of 'Friends of Animals,' speaks to the Pequannock council. 
"The testing you did on the water does not implicate waterfowl - in fact, almost never do waterfowl negatively impact coliform levels," she said.

Others, however, like Wren Place resident Carol Angelillo, were not convinced. The lake was part of the reason she moved to Pequannock, she said, but last year, her son became sick at about the same time the lake closed due to elevated bacteria levels.

"I appreciate everything you've done to try and help the lake, and I just want you to know that I support you in whatever you deem necessary to help keep the lake safe for all of us," she said.

About a dozen attendees spoke on the plan over the course of the meeting, and public opinion appeared split. But, Mayor Rich Phelan said Wednesday morning, the council's opinion has not shifted.

"I'm looking to work with the residents that have an issue with this, and we're looking at whatever alternatives we can come up with," he said. "But, as a last resort, we will go through with the hunt [if needed]."

Email: janoski@northjersey.com

http://www.northjersey.com/news/204547321_Some_residents_also_in_favor_of_Pequannock_waterfowl_hunt.html

Controversy surrounding Pequannock Valley Park duck hunt continues


PEQUANNOCK - The Township Council continues to explore other avenues of removing the waterfowl from PV Park, Mayor Rich Phelan said Friday morning, even though it still plans to go through with a hunt whenever local officials deem it necessary.

The comments came after a Tuesday night meeting of the governing body where Phelan said that the council had received a number of form letters about the proposed hunt. Many came from across the country (including one from Canada and another from Great Britain), but only about six were from township residents, and those were the six he was concerned about.

"I’ve been in contact with people who have an issue, and we’re very sensitive to what they have to say," he said.

Phelan told the public Tuesday that he’d done further research into more non-lethal means of driving the animals away from the 27-acre park off of Alexander Avenue, but found that some, such as a $6,000 kite-flying proposition, are not only expensive, but are not guaranteed to work on ducks.

The mayor said he’d taken a ride to the park to take pictures that day and found no evidence of waterfowl yet (although Councilman Jay Vanderhoff said that the geese had left their "evidence" on the floating dock).

If, after the hunt, the town still fails fecal coliform tests, the township will pay to have a sort of DNA test done on the bacteria to find out exactly where it’s coming from, he said.

Elevated coliform levels closed the lake several times in 2010 and 2012, and forced it to remain closed until the levels fell back to normal. Typically, said Phelan, the town fails tests after heavy rains, which he thinks likely washed the excrement into the water. The Department of Environmental Protection has said the lake is too large to be chlorinated.

"We’re exploring every avenue," he said Friday. "But over the years we have tried everything and [the hunt] is almost a last-resort situation. I’m not a fan of doing it, but I’m concerned about the bacteria counts in our lake and the health issue it poses."

Still, no date has been set for a culling because, as the mayor said, no waterfowl have yet been sighted in the lake.

Email: janoski@northjersey.com

http://www.northjersey.com/news/202958161_Controversy_surrounding_Pequannock_Valley_Park_duck_hunt_continues_of_opposition_to_goose_hunt_.html

Pequannock approves waterfowl hunt at PV Park


PEQUANNOCK - Frustrated by its futile efforts to keep the waterfowl out of Pequannock Valley (PV) Park, the Township Council has approved a hunt to rid the lake of the ducks and geese. Their droppings, officials say, are driving up bacteria levels in the water and causing frequent closures in the summer.

The major offenders, Mayor Rich Phelan said Thursday, are a family of about 30 ducks that have made their home in one section of the 27-acre park located off Alexander Avenue. A variety of remedies have been tried in past years to drive them, along with their geese brethren, off the beach and out of the water, including the use of fake wolves, plastic fencing, and fires on the sand.

Residents have also been encouraged to walk their dogs in the area, but the waterfowl continue to return.

"The problem with [the waterfowl] and the methods you use to frighten them is that you have to continually vary them," Township Manager Dave Hollberg said Wednesday. "It's very labor intensive, and they do tend to come back."

Officials said that the droppings contaminate the water, especially during the hot, still days of August, and sometimes cause the daily bacteria tests to show elevated levels of fecal coliforms. As a result, the lake sat empty on several summer weekends in 2010 and 2012, and remained closed until the rates returned to normal.

The idea of shooting the animals outright was proposed at a recent department head meeting, Hollberg said, and led the town administration to apply for the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) permit that would allow it. The permit was granted, and the governing body formally approved a resolution on Tuesday night that gave the culling a green light.

The hunt will be held before the lake officially opens for the season on Memorial Day weekend, and will be conducted by licensed firearm owners from the town. Those who live within 200 feet of the PV Park property line will be notified, Hollberg said, and "appropriate security measures" will be taken to ensure that no one trespasses.

"The police will work with our other departments to establish a safety plan, and the area around the [lake] will be closed and secured," he said.

Aside from the cost of the DEP permit, there are no expenses associated with the proposal. But, if all goes according to plan, one culling might be enough.

"My understanding from people who hunt is that once you shoot a couple, they tend not to come back," said Hollberg. "We'll see what happens."

Councilwoman Melissa Florance-Lynch endorsed the hunt on Tuesday night as a last-ditch effort to keep the water clean and the lake open this year.

"We've done everything to try to control the waterfowl at PV Park," she said, "and I'm supporting what we're trying to do here because it's been a real problem, and it's a health hazard to the town."

Phelan agreed, and said Thursday that the town wants "our people to be safe and [PV] to be open.

"We've tried all kinds of things... so we're hoping it's successful," he said.

No official date has been set for the hunt as of yet.

Email: janoski@northjersey.com

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Permanently unforgiven: time to pardon Jack Johnson


"When whites ran everything, Jack Johnson took orders from no one. When black Americans were expected to defer to whites, Jack Johnson battered them to the ground." – Ken Burns, "Unforgivable Blackness"

It was over a century after the death of Confederate General Robert E. Lee that a nameless worker at the National Archives found his amnesty oath, written and signed and forgotten by history amongst the plethora of records sitting in the State Department.

The discovery led President Gerald R. Ford to pardon the traitor general, a man who had taken up arms against his country with the sole intent of destroying it, and the corpse was given a country again.

How long does it take, then, to pardon a man who committed no crime other than that mighty offense of being born black in the wrong era? In that case, it appears the government is far less forgiving.

Jack Johnson was one of six children born to former slave parents in Galveston, Texas, in 1878. After a half-dozen years of schooling, he dropped out to work on the docks, and eventually, like so many whose life-paths tend to end in cul-de-sacs, he turned to boxing as a way out.

And what a boxer he was.

Bald-headed and well-muscled, he’d grown to a solid 6-foot-1-inch in height, and even though he weighed somewhere between 190 – 220 pounds, he could move and hit like no one before him. His speed and power were unprecedented, his techniques unrivaled.

But no black man had ever held the heavyweight title before, mostly because being the champ back then meant that you were somewhere between a king and God himself. Plainly put, it was a white man’s title, and nobody was particularly eager for that to change.

So, when the "Galveston Giant" knocked out Canadian champion Tommy Burns on the day after Christmas in 1908, it was much more than just another KO in the squared circle — it was an uplifting moment for every African-American from the Atlantic seaboard to the Pacific coast.

"No event in 40 years has given more satisfaction to the colored people of this country than has the signal victory of Jack Johnson," said the Richmond Planet.

The following years were tumultuous, though; it was hard enough for white America to have a black champ, but having one like Johnson, who dressed sharp, flaunted his money, kept company with prostitutes, and — worst of all — married white women, was absolutely intolerable. One after another, white challengers were lined up to put Johnson back in his place, and one by one, he defeated them.

Even the legendary Jim Jeffries — the hardened former champ who had retired undefeated and once drank a case of whiskey in two days to cure himself of pneumonia — was pulled out of retirement and made into the establishment’s newest "Great White Hope."

Johnson, of course, whipped him, and on July 4, 1910, beat the 35-year-old Jeffries from post to post until his corner threw in the towel in the 14th round. That night, 20 were lynched during the race riots that burned across the nation as angry whites reacted to African-American celebrations of the victory.

Once it became clear that Johnson would not be beaten on the canvas, the government went a different route — make him fight in the court room instead. And so in 1913, at the height of his career, he was tried for violating the Mann Act, a law that prohibited the interstate transportation of females for "immoral purposes."

Although it was originally intended to prevent prostitution, the wording was loose and ambiguous and could make a crime out of any number of situations — including one where a universally-despised black heavyweight traveled over state lines with the white prostitute he was involved with.

Johnson was convicted by an all-white jury, but skipped bail and went on the run instead. After seven years in Europe, South America, and Mexico, he finally returned to the U.S. in 1920 to serve his jail time. Released in 1921, he spent much of the rest of his life as the stereotypical aging champ — broke and fighting in show after show (to his body’s chagrin) just to earn money for food and beer. He died in a car wreck on June 10, 1946, after racing away in anger from a North Carolina diner that refused to serve him.

His influence, however, would linger, and had profound affect on generations of black boxers afterwards (including one who, 20 years later, would also refuse to be subservient when the white man wanted him to.)

In the years since Johnson’s death, there have been a number of calls to grant the fighter the posthumous pardon he so dearly deserves, but all have died either in Congress or, more recently, on the stoop of President Obama’s White House, which quietly ignored a 2011 congressional resolution urging exoneration.

One more push is being made by Senators Harry Reid (D-NV) and John McCain (R-AZ), however, and another boxing legend — "Iron" Mike Tyson himself — has joined the fight by starting a petition (which can be found at change.org) urging amnesty for the man who "paved the way for black boxers like me."

Four thousand and 90 have signed already. More should.

It is time, America. Not to "forgive" Johnson — after all, he committed no crime, and we should not presuppose that we can forgive an innocent man.

No, it’s time to admit to the crimes of our own racist past, and do our best to make amends by pardoning the man whose only misdeed was being born black in a time when America, quite frankly, hated them. Every day he remains a convict is another that the stain of injustice lies, dried and bloody, upon our hands.

When we finally pardon Johnson, it will be us we’re absolving. And one can only hope that the great champion can find it in his heart forgive us…wherever he may be.


Email: janoski@northjersey.com

http://www.northjersey.com/community/history/more_history_news/203528701_Permanently_unforgiven__time_to_pardon_Jack_Johnson.html?page=all

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Rios vs Alvarado II: Soul-cleansing violence and the blood of boxing


There was a spot just behind the forward-leaning right glove of Mike Alvarado's guard that, in the earliest rounds of Saturday night's contest, may as well have had a bullseye painted on it.
His opponent, the heavy-fisted, iron-jawed Brandon Rios, aimed his left hook at that spot every time he was close enough, and one couldn't help but wince every time he torqued it around Alvarado's hand with brutal affect. He hurt Alvarado badly with a stiff jab in the second, and for a minute it looked like the fight might end earlier than it did the first time the two met in October of 2012, when Rios stopped him in the seventh.
"Mile High Mike," as the Denver-native Alvarado is called, would not be so easily dispatched, though. Smiling and grinning through the worst of Rios' barrage - whistling in the dark, some might say, but still - he came back in the later rounds, moving and boxing with the clean footwork that gave him his best (and maybe, only) chance at beating the fearsome puncher.
His movement confounded Rios, kept him off-balance, and wouldn't let him land anything more than a one or two-punch combo. No combinations meant few openings. Few openings meant that Rios' city-wall-shaking left hook stayed in its holster.
All the while, Alvarado strafed him with Diego Corrales-style looping right hands that whipped the Californian's head to-and-fro and dragged attention away from his own face, which was a swollen, bloody mess by the final bell.
One wound up with the interim WBO super-lightweight belt. Both went to the hospital. Neither had serious injuries. Everyone - and I mean everyone - won.
Too many times do boxing fans (casual or otherwise) walk away from a much-hyped fight with a sense of disappointment, a lackluster apathy that drains the energy from a sport built solely upon the electricity inherent to a good brawl. Too many times do we fork over too much money to watch men who care too little move too much and take too few chances. But once in a while, we're reminded why we love it. Saturday night was why we love it.
Welterweight champ Timothy Bradley put it succinctly afterwards when he called the affair a "bloody war" that saw "both fighters put their lives on the line."
It wasn't just hyperbole. When a man's face - inflated with blood and decorated with a scalpel cut over the left eye that looks like it's going to make the whole thing burst - looks like Mike Alvarado's did, and when you see Brandon Rios take flush shots that would lay low lesser men, have no doubt that there are indeed lives on the line.
It was all of the black beauty of this sport, rolled up into one night. And boxing, which so often likes to jam its own hand in the garbage disposal just because it feels so good when it stops, didn't fuck it up. No $70 pricetag, no anti-climactic ending, no shaking your head at 12 a.m. and wondering, "Why do I even watch?"
Fights like this are the lifeblood pumping through every vein of the sport. They lend inspiration to every amateur who spends his Friday night with his head tight against the side of a heavy bag instead of a bottle of whiskey, every kid shadowboxing in the mirror pretending he's Rocky. They create new boxing fans instead of disgusting the old ones, and build legends instead of destroying them.
Fights like this, as Roy Jones Jr. said, are what movies are made of. Fights like this blow MMA out of the water.
And we cannot forget that men like Brandon Rios and Mike Alvarado are the ones who make this sport what it is, even when "what it is" might not always seem clear. It's not Floyd Mayweather and his rap sheet or Manny Pacquaio and his swarms of hangers-on, not David Haye and his bluster or Wladimir Klitschko and his overwhelming ... prudence. It's the simple, brutal violence that cleanses the soul and reminds us just how brave some men are.
There will, inevitably, be a rubber match between these two; after 19 rounds of carnage, it's only right that it, of course, happen again. When it does, take a second to truly appreciate the lengths to which these men are going to in the name of sport and victory; not many will willingly hasten their own deaths by fighting with reckless abandon and declaring, "Fortune, it is you I follow!"
In reality, that's what these two are doing. And we the fans are lucky to be watching.