Month: December 2023

Excellent Qualifications

Excellent Qualifications in Asbury Park’s Top Job - Former Mercer County administrator Lillian Nazzaro is new City Manager


Independent Asbury Park Arts Council Leads The Initiative - TriCity News December 14, 2023


TriCityNews

Local weekly paper covering regional news and events, by Dan Jacobson, December 20, 2023


The City Council last week filled the most important position in our city — the city manager.

The city manager is the CEO of the city government. Make no mistake about the power of this post. It’s big. State law even bars a council member from communicating directly with a city employee without first going through the city manager. Elected officials who violate that law can be subject to removal after a hearing initiated by the city manager! (That set-up is to prevent meddling by politicians in city operations.)

The city council is meant to act like a Board of Directors, setting policy and monitoring the performance of the city manager, who also has broad power to hire and fire employees. Of course, the city council has ultimate power: they can fire the city manager if they disapprove of their performance. Obviously, that’s something you never want to see happen because it means there’s been much upheaval.

Complicating all this? Less and less talented people want to make a career of these high-profile positions, where the amount of shit you get is unprecedented with the advent of social media. So this is not an easy post to fill when you have a vacancy. (Current City Manager Donna Viero is retiring at the end of the year.)

But on paper, and personal first impression, it looks like the City Council found a great candidate to hire, current Mercer County Administrator Lillian Nazzaro, who will start January 16. Nazzaro has excellent credentials, especially because of her prior career before becoming a county administrator five years ago: Nazzaro, 60, was an attorney for over 25 years.

Almost 15 of those years were spent doing legal work for Mercer County, including serving as the top attorney, before she became county administrator five years ago. As county counsel, Nazzaro dealt with everything an administrator handles, since they’re always following legal advice. Like contract negotiations, employee discriminations cases, civil rights cases, construction lawsuits, injury
lawsuits. You name it. That’s a hell of a background.

Also understand the size of the government that Nazzaro has run for five years as Mercer County administrator. (And talk about a trial by fire: the pandemic hit about one year into her tenure!) Mercer County, which includes the capital city of Trenton, has an annual budget of $380 million with 1500 employees. In comparison, Asbury Park has an annual budget of $55 million, with 247 full-time employees, 52 part-time and 227 seasonal employees. Nazzaro is obviously ready for this.

Deputy Mayor Amy Quinn noted that Nazzaro is “the first woman appointed as County Business Administrator in Mercer County history, is an accomplished professional with a proven track record and her legal experience will make her an invaluable asset to this administration. As City Manager, Lilly will oversee day-to-day operations, strategic planning, and implementation of policies to further enhance the quality of life of Asbury Park residents.”

And, on top of all that, Nazzaro lives on a farm in Mercer County where she raises and breeds alpacas with her fiancé! Quinn made a point of highlighting that, with undisguised delight, after the vote to hire Nazzaro.

Of special interest to this newspaper, of course, is how the new city manager will work to help preserve and increase our city’s status as a nationally known center for the creative, as well as the regional engine for the growth of arts and culture.

Nazzaro said that the arts and culture in Asbury Park was a big part of the attraction, along with our diversity — all of which Nazzaro said she’ll give a high-priority to promoting, just as she did in Mercer County. She noted that the Division of Culture and Heritage in the Mercer County government reported directly to her as administrator and she found that a particularly rewarding part of the position.

In fact, one of the first people Nazzaro met at the Council meeting after getting appointed was Asbury Park Arts Council (APAC) Executive Director and Board member Carrie Turner, an important arts and cultural leader in the city. The non-profit APAC is independent of the city, but acts in collaboration to broaden the reach of arts programs. The APAC, for example, has access to grants that don’t go to governments, and the group developed and wrote the Arts and Culture Plan that the city adopted as part of the master plan. That will be a guiding document for key decisions. The APAC also directly gets involved with programming, such as by assisting in public murals and public art projects. So this is an important group for promoting creativity in Asbury Park.

Nazzaro said she was excited to meet Turner at the Council meeting, and she said she’s going to start meeting with APAC after she takes over as city manager on January 16. Nazarro said she understands that the Asbury Park Arts Council is an important partner to the city.

And Nazzaro also is well aware of one of the biggest challenges facing Asbury Park — the balance between change and preservation. That’s not an easy one, and a lot of it is in the control of a force beyond the power of human beings. Specifically, the forces of economics. (Yes, that includes greed!)

Nazzaro said that when she drives around the city she’s struck by the range of homes, from old Victorians to high rises. And she understands the challenges of gentrification in how it displaces people.

“I’d like to preserve Asbury Park as much as possible,” she said. “I know gentrification is going to be an issue because of redevelopment. For me it’s really important to recognize that and balance it. So that’s going to be something that I’m going to watch closely. I want to really make sure there’s the right balance in preserving Asbury Park as well as progressing.”


Asbury Park’s newly adopted Arts & Culture Plan Wins...

Asbury Park’s newly adopted Arts & Culture Plan wins County recognition for leadership in planning, exemplary public private-partnership


Collaborative effort between city, residents and artists leads to blueprint for vibrant cultural future


Tap into Asbury Park

Online Newspaper, By Alissa Deleo December 20, 2023


ASBURY PARK, NJ – The City of Asbury Park, known for its vibrant, multi-faceted arts scene, was recognized on Monday, December 18, by the Monmouth County Planning Board for the creation and adoption of the Arts & Culture Plan as a component of the City’s Master Plan.

The plan articulates a vision and strategies to promote the City’s cultural assets, stimulate economic growth and improve residential quality of life.

The Arts & Culture Plan is the result of an 18-month collaboration between the City of Asbury Park and the non-profit Asbury Park Arts Council (APAC).

In 2017, one of the co-founders of APAC, Mike Sodano, participated in the City’s decennial Master Plan Re-examination Committee.

As a local creative business owner, he worked with other committee members to formally recognize the need for an Arts & Culture plan for Asbury Park.

As a result, the committee recommended that the City create and adopt an Arts & Culture Plan as a component of the City’s Master Plan.

With the official recommendation for an updated master plan, Sodano, then owner of the ShowRoom Cinema, enlisted Jenn Hampton, co-owner of Parlor Gallery and curator of the Wooden Walls Public Art Project, to form the Asbury Park Arts Council.

They added several more like-minded townspeople and APAC was officially incorporated in 2019, with a primary goal to work with the City on the creation of an Arts & Culture Plan.

The Covid-19 pandemic slowed but didn’t stop APAC’s progress.

They began an active dialogue with City officials and advisors and conducted research into other plans.

During this time, they also raised their first grant funds from Monmouth Arts, the local county arts agency, to support the project.

The groundwork and research paid off in 2022 when APAC received significant grant funding from the Monmouth County government from COVID-19 relief funds earmarked specifically to support non-profit organizations.

APAC and the City of Asbury Park then engaged the leading architecture, planning, and design firm, FCA, to work with them on developing the Arts & Culture Plan.

An added bonus was that FCA’s Director of Planning and Urban Design, Eric Galipo, is a life-long resident of Asbury Park.

With the City, APAC, and FCA ready to start work on the Arts & Culture Plan, a steering committee of creative leaders and local, regional, and state government representatives kicked off the project in August 2022.

The planning process began with inventory, information gathering and public outreach activities that included online surveys, appearances at many community-based events, individual interviews, topical focus groups and multiple public open houses.

The information gathered informed the development of goals and strategies for the plan that culminated in six major recommendations and an implementation framework that lays out sequential steps for achieving the goals of the plan.

The recommendations focus on funding, staffing, partnerships, branding, placemaking and the development of a new community culture center.

The plan was adopted by the City’s Planning Board this past fall as an amendment to the Master Plan, incorporating it as an official part of Asbury Park’s vision for long-term growth and development.

At the Planning Board presentation of the document, Steering Committee member and Asbury Park resident Mary Eileen Fouratt, who works for the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, noted, “I am impressed with the amount of outreach conducted in creating this Plan. I work with communities statewide and not all of them take this much time to see what residents need.”

The Merit Award recognizes the partnership that brought the Arts and Culture Plan to fruition, as well as the way it advances many of the goals and objectives of the Monmouth County Master Plan, including supporting comprehensive planning approaches, promoting the protection of cultural resources and supporting creative placemaking.

“As a collective, our goal was to develop a strategy that uplifts the arts and culture within the Asbury Park community––through detailed research and local engagement; the plan outlines initiatives to bolster access to activities for creators, residents, and visitors,” Eric Galipo said.

“As a life-long Asbury Park resident and professional urban designer, I was honored to be part of the Plan’s development, and it’s affirming to see the Plan receive this recognition and award,” Galipo added.

Asbury Park Mayor John Moor, who is also a Planning Board member, said that the City greatly appreciates the recognition by the Monmouth County Planning Board for its Arts & Culture Plan.

“I believe we may be the only municipality in Monmouth County that has a plan like this, and I could not be more proud of the teamwork that went into getting it done,” Mayor Moor said, adding, “I especially like the way the recommendations of the Plan are presented as not “all or nothing,” or “now or never,” but laid out in incremental steps that are more realistic for the government to achieve.”


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