Hsueh-nanigans

Share post:

Please consider the November 20 E-mail notice — sent by an entity called CityConnections.com — announcing the agenda for the West Windsor Council meeting later that same day. It is yet another brazen and inadequate notice the Hsueh Administration is trying to perpetrate on West Windsor taxpayers and the public.

(1). How can this administration provide barely 5.5 hours’ public notice for the agenda? Is the next Council meeting scheduled at 0500 hours on a Sunday?

(2). I realize this is a major expansion of the hour or so public notice for Council’s previous pre-Hurricane Sandy EMERGENCY meeting on October 29, in which the meeting was held during a NJ STATE of EMERGENCY.

If the township offices and public institutions were closed (US Postal Service), which item(s) on the previous agenda were sooooo critical that they could not await even a 5-hour notice as done today?

West Windsor is the poster child for irresponsible government! Would anyone try this in Princeton or Plainsboro?

(3). Who in West Windsor Township is responsible for sending out these derelict, tardy notices?

(4). If this notice is sent by West Windsor Township, where is the CityConnections.com office within West Windsor? And how much has all of this outsourcing cost WW taxpayers year-to-date? Can’t anyone working for the Township — including the mayor — write a notice or press release? We know seventh graders who could.

There is absolutely no end to the arrogance displayed by the Hsueh administration. The West Windsor Council is complicit and remiss in permitting and accepting these egregious transgressions.

Pete Weale

Penns Neck

CE-WWPN

Related articles

Independent exits Lawrence Council race after petition challenge

Brad Moore, who launched an independent campaign for an open seat on the Lawrence Township Council, has withdrawn...

Township Council to hold special meeting to update residents on the Master Plan process

A special meeting has been set for June 11 to update residents on the status of Lawrence Township's...

Upper Freehold schools grow greener with tree grant

More than 140 brand-new “large caliper” shade trees native to New Jersey have been planted throughout the Upper...

The Gazette welcomes long-time reporter Lea Kahn

Beginning with this issue, the Lawrence Gazette is pleased to welcome longtime Lawrence Township reporter Lea Kahn to...