A baker’s dozen,the year in South Brunswick

As we get ready to put together the South Brunswick Post’s first issue of 2007, it seemed as good a time as any to look back at the stories that kept us busy here last year.

What follows is a baker’s dozen (sorry, most of the links are paid):

1. Route 92 bites the dust.

2. Democrats elected in landslide as GOP disappears into the ether — while a former mayor mounts an unexpectedly robust write-in challenge.

3. Former state Senate President John Lynch, a major player in state politics and the unofficial boss of the Middlesex County Democrats for years, pleads guilty to bribery charges tied to a late-1990s plan by a South Brunswick sand mine to expand. He’s sentenced to 39 months in jail.

4. Police shooting case is settled after a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit against the officer, then-Sgt. Raymond Hayducka — the current police chief.

5. Planning Board overturns its own denial of a warehouse complex after the developer adds a $100,000 contribution to pay for a study of flooding in the area near the N.J. Turnpike.

6. Renovations begin and are completed at Deans Apartments after a nationwide nonprofit buys the complex. At the same time, the Township Council — with prodding from the South Brunswick Post — creates a rental inspection program.

7. Boris Boretsky, convicted for killing his wife in their Kingston home, is sentenced.

8. The Township Council takes the advice of a local middle school student and bans smoking at two township parks.

9. County gets involved in the pursuit of the Van Dyke Farm.

10. Community Center to be renovated and expanded.

11. Bank robber nabbed.

12. District completes expansion and renovation at elementary schools.

13. Bomb threats close high school.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Meet the new boss, same as the old boss

This is how the South Brunswick Township Council says happy new year, with a reorganization meeting and the swearing in of the sitting mayor for another four-year term.

Mayor Frank Gambatese (left, photo by Dennis Symons from today’s meeting), as he told us last week, has a somewhat modest agenda that includes the completion — finally — of Route 522 and a township-bus commuter system that will bring commuters to the train and bus.

Both are worthy goals.

Here are a couple of others we are hoping he and the Township Council can make happen:

  1. Preserve the Van Dyke Farm
  2. Begin renovation work at the Community Center
  3. Find a stable source of funding for the township Food Pantry and Human Intervention Trust Fund

And a couple of others that will require help from the state

  1. Widen Route 1 to three lanes in each direction
  2. Kill the MOM line

Happy new year from the Post.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Hung up on Saddam

There’s something unseemly about the glee with which some of The Washington Post is greeting the news that Saddam Hussein will be put to death.

Not that I have any tears to shed for the former dictator — he was, after all, a sadistic and brutal tyrant. But the manner in which the trial occurred and the willingness to continue with what is a barbaric practice — capital punishment — leaves me wondering about the future of this new Iraq the president keeps talking about.

The Post, which used its editorial board to help the president beat the drum for war and has been in defense mode ever since, offers one of the strangest endorsements of the expected hanging imaginable, a convoluted attempt to mesh the paper’s opposition to the death penalty with its desire to see Hussein brought to imperfect justice. Some snippets:

For those who oppose the death penalty, as we do, any execution is regrettable — and this one, should it come to pass, will follow highly imperfect judicial proceedings and may in the short term inflame sectarian divisions. But it’s hard to imagine the death penalty existing anywhere for any crime and not for Saddam Hussein — a man who, with the possible exception of Kim Jong Il, has more blood on his hands than anyone else alive. Should the world see his end in the coming days, the justice will be imperfect. But it will still be justice.

Regrettable? Fender benders and bounced checks are regrettable. The end of a life, no matter how despicable that life may have been, is certainly something else.

As for justice, the editorial admits that there were procedural flaws and political interference, significant problems that should not swept under the rug — not because Hussein may have been innocent of the crimes of which he’s been accused, but because allowing them to stand now taints the process in its infancy, leaving future trials at risk. The Post argument — that any justice in contemporary Iraq is likely to be flawed so flawed justice for Saddam is alright — is ethical relativism of the worst kind:

(T)here is something unreal about the cries of foul from human rights groups demanding perfect procedural justice from a country struggling with civil war, daily bombings and death-squad killings. The reality is that by the trial’s end, there was no significant factual dispute between prosecution and defense: Saddam Hussein acknowledged on national television that he had signed the death warrants after only the most cursory look at the evidence against his victims. That, he testified proudly, “is the right of the head of state.” Exactly what would a perfect trial be capable of discovering?

It’s the kind of argument that the Post has generally been critical of when made by death penalty advocates in the United States.

The New York Times, in its editorial today, takes the opposite view — that the trial of Saddam Hussein was a lost opportunity:

What really mattered was whether an Iraq freed from his death grip could hold him accountable in a way that nurtured hope for a better future. A carefully conducted, scrupulously fair trial could have helped undo some of the damage inflicted by his rule. It could have set a precedent for the rule of law in a country scarred by decades of arbitrary vindictiveness. It could have fostered a new national unity in an Iraq long manipulated through its religious and ethnic divisions.

It could have, but it didn’t. After a flawed, politicized and divisive trial, Mr. Hussein was handed his sentence: death by hanging. This week, in a cursory 15-minute proceeding, an appeals court upheld that sentence and ordered that it be carried out posthaste. Most Iraqis are now so preoccupied with shielding their families from looming civil war that they seem to have little emotion left to spend on Mr. Hussein or, more important, on their own fading dreams of a new and better Iraq.

What might have been a watershed now seems another lost opportunity. After nearly four years of war and thousands of American and Iraqi deaths, it is ever harder to be sure whether anything fundamental has changed for the better in Iraq.

The Los Angeles Times is more pragmatic, but just as critical of the rush to the gallows:

The most practical argument for sparing Hussein’s life is rooted not in procedural scruples or a rejection of the death penalty but in political strategy. Ideally, Hussein would have been convicted against the backdrop of an Iraqi government regarded as legitimate by all segments of society, including Sunnis who prospered under the despot’s rule. The current Shiite-led government in Baghdad falls sadly short of that description.

Assuming that Iraq’s president or vice president could commute Hussein’s sentence — and the appeals court insists that its ruling can’t be altered — the best argument for mercy is that it might appease Sunnis who regard Prime Minister Nouri Maliki as partial to his fellow Shiites. At the same time, sparing Hussein could further destabilize Iraq by outraging both Shiites and Kurds. Tens of thousands of the latter group died in a military campaign that forms the basis of a separate genocide charge against Hussein.

As with so much about Iraq, there is no simple answer to the question of whether the nation would be better off if the condemned keeps his date with the hangman. Hussein claims that he is prepared to join the ranks of “the true men and martyrs.” Iraq’s leaders need to ask themselves if that “martyrdom” will come, and if so whether it will be at too high a price.

As both Times point out, the arguments are not so much about Saddam Hussein, but about the future of Iraq, its civil society and its justice system.

Again, I shed no tears over Saddam Hussein and will lose no sleep should his life end. But sending him to death — especially after a trial that most view as flawed at best — is a failure that will reverberate for years to come.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Final route?

File this — the mayor’s promise, basically, that the Route 522 extension will be done this year — as too long in the making.

The highway, which has been held up for a variety of reasons, is on the cusp of completion and should make a difference on Ridge Road through Dayton and could take traffic off other east-west links.

So, let’s hope the DEP can get out of the way and let this thing get done.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick