7 file to run in Woodbridge school board election

Molnar
The election is April 27 -- a Wednesday this year because of the Jewish holiday of Passover, which ends on Tuesday.
Township Republican chairman John Vrtaric is making a bid for the non-partisan board after trying for years to become mayor, councilman or fire commissioner. Fellow Republican Tom Maras is making his second try in as many years for the school board.
Former board president Brian Molnar is seeking his third term on the board but he won’t be on the same slate with Diane Acquisto, who is seeking her fifth term. Instead, Molnar will run with Monica Michelle Smith and zoning board member Frank Della Pietro III.
Board member George Yuhasz did not file for re-election.
The full list:
Diane C. Acquisto, 59, (D), Remsen Avenue, Avenel
Brian Molnar, 46, (D), Third Avenue, Port Reading
Frank Della Pietro III, 47, (D), Liberty Street, Fords
Thomas E. Maras, 66, (R), Wick Drive, Fords;
David Pinkowitz, 42, (D), Tammy Place, Iselin
Monica Michelle Smith, 36, (D), East Cedar Street, Colonia
John Vrtaric, 65, (R), Amboy Avenue, Woodbridge proper













me 2:50 pm on March 10, 2011 Permalink
David Pinkowitz needs to check his salary facts with districts of a similar enrollment. marlboro bus drivers make $29. per hour to driver busses as well. Please check all facts before shouting out across the news how wrong things are!!!! How can anyone vote for a man who doesnt know how to check his facts?!?!?!?!
David Pinkowitz 11:56 pm on March 10, 2011 Permalink
Woodbridge has more than twice as many students as Marlboro and almost twice as many even if you add in Marlboro High School, which is in a different school district; therefore, I’m not sure where the similar enrollment argument comes into play. Piscataway and North Brunswick are both comparable in size to Marlboro and I made the point in my post at http://on.fb.me/eiVpPj that they have lower salaries.
I could not find a copy of Marlboro’s most recent contract, so I’ll accept your numbers. I do want to thank you, though, for making my point. The Marlboro Board of Education planned this year to cut half their bus routes in favor of contractors. Only when the union reopened the contracts did the employees get a promise to retain their jobs, but at a 30% pay cut. You can read about that here. http://bit.ly/fYzi8d
The fact is that these high salaries are unsustainable in Marlboro and they are unsustainable in Woodbridge. The only solution for residents is not to simply cut the budget, but to also vote in Board Members who will negotiate a fair contract. Brian Molnar was on the negotiation team last time and he failed. Neither he, nor his running mates, who presumably think similarly to him, should get another chance to fail. That’s part of the reason I am running and offering an alternative to business as usual.