February 22, 2008 - 9:31am

In Nutley, Cocchiola battles the curse of the Mayor

Nutley has a Commissioner form of government and all five commissioners are elected in one election held every four years.  By tradition, the top vote-getter becomes Mayor.  In 2004, Joanne Cocchiola became Nutley’s first woman Mayor when she led Mauro Tucci by 55 votes (and incumbent Peter Scarpelli by 686 votes) in the race for Commissioner.   But one historical trend that bodes poorly for Cocchiola: in at least 40 years, Nutley voters have never given a Commissioner two consecutive terms as Mayor.

Former Senate President Carmen Orechio, a Commissioner since 1968, was Mayor from 1972 to 1976, again from 1980 to 1984, and for a third time from 1992 to 1996.  Harry Chenoweth received more votes than Orechio in 1976 and again in 1984.  When Chenoweth retired, Assemblyman John Kelly ran for Commissioner and became Mayor after getting more votes than Orechio, but four years later -- in 1992 -- Kelly was ousted as Mayor when Orechio reclaimed the post. Nutley gave a non--incumbent, Garry Furnari the most votes in 1996, but four years later, Furnari (by then a State Senator) came in fourth in the May Commissioner race and Scarpelli became Mayor. 

The battle for the #1 slot -- in effect the mayoral election -- is often close: Scarpelli won it by 60 votes (over Orechio) in 2000; Furnari by 102 votes (over Scarpelli) in 1996; and Orechio by 71 votes (over Kelly) in 1992.

Comments

Whatever happened to Gary Funari


That's a name you don't hear anymore.

 

02/22/08 9:27 am

Garry Furnari


He resigned from the State Senate in 2003 to become a Superior Court Judge.  Paul Sarlo took his seat.

02/22/08 9:34 am

More accuarately....


Furnari was pushed out by the BCDO and Joe Ferriero who wanted the senate seat.

Furnari lacked the stones nor the support to compete in a primary so he cut a deal for himself that removed him from the race and he was appointed to a county judgship in Essex.

Sarlo was then appointed to the seat with no opposition. He was elected to the senate in 2003 and re-elected last year in an extremely close race against Lyndhurst gadfly Mike Guarino who opposed EnCap.

Even though Bergen County is roughly 60% of the voting public, Nutley received Sarlo's assembly seat (Scalera) and Schaer won the other seat in 2005 when Republican Paul DiGaetano didn't seek r-election.

2009 will be very interesting since Scalera & Schaer both polled badly in the Bergen portion of the district. They ran against token opposition like Sarlo and barely held on. In fact, Schaer came in second to Scalera in Passaic City and won Bergen by less than 200 votes.

36 will be a targeted district given the overall poor performance of the incumbents. Look for someone from Rutherford to run for Assembly.

02/22/08 6:32 pm

District 36 = '09 target


Put a solid Bergen candidate, preferably from Rutherford as the epicenter of South Bergen angst, combined with a good Nutley candidate.  Add a toxic gubernatorial environment, given how this district has been screwed over by all levels of government (ENCAP, Xanadu, weak school funding, etc), and this should be a prime time battleground given the clear weakness of the two zeros pretending to represent District 36.

02/22/08 10:38 pm