Eldridge Hawkins, Jr. (born July 25, 1979) is the Mayor of Orange, New Jersey, a city of 33,000 residents in Essex County, New Jersey with an annual $53 Million operating budget. As Chair of the Management Reform Committee of the N.J. League of Municipalities, Mayor Hawkins is a leader in the campaign to reform the state's civil service and arbitration laws to give cities more power in collective bargaining with public employee unions. His determination to maintain vital services in the face of increasing costs and declining revenues received national attention as representative of the plight of many U.S. cities and states during the severe 2008-2011 recession. Hawkins serves as President of the New Jersey United States Junior Chamber of Commerce (Jaycees) and is also a law enforcement professional and businessman.
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Eldridge Hawkins, Jr. was born in 1979 in Livingston, New Jersey, the son of Eldridge Hawkins, Civil Rights lawyer and former Assemblyman (D-Essex) and Linda Cofer Hawkins, businesswoman and civic leader. He grew up in West Orange, New Jersey attending Seton Hall Preparatory School. He then attended Rider University and received his B.A. in Business Administration in 2001. After college, he pursued dual careers in business and law enforcement. He served as Director of Operations for the Carl Lewis Fund, Inc and as a Licensed Realtor Associate. He also worked as a Private Investigator and in 2004 became an officer in the West Orange Police Department, receiving two commendations and the Essex County P.B.A. Distinguished Service Award.
Having moved to Orange, he was preparing to run for the City Council in the May 2008 municipal elections when the incumbent mayor, Mims Hackett was indicted for bribery in a federal corruption probe.[1] After Hackett withdrew from his re-election campaign, Hawkins decided to run for mayor instead of city council. Entering a field of candidates with much more experience in politics, municipal government and business than himself, the novice candidate promised to make Orange safer, assure honesty and integrity, and intensify redevelopment. In a city concerned about crime, his law enforcement credentials proved a big plus. Hawkins’ reform campaign won the support of State Senator and former Governor Richard Codey, Newark Mayor Cory Booker, Assemblywoman Mila Jasey and two members of the Orange City Council. On May 13th, 2008, he was narrowly elected Mayor at the age of 28. The vote totals were: Eldridge Hawkins, Jr.- 1,061, Councilman Donald Page - 942, Councilwoman Tency Eason - 564, Zoning Board Chair Janice Morrell - 417, Community Activist Betty Brown - 285, and Planning Board Chair Dwight Holmes - 212.[2]
Hawkins assumed office on July 1, 2008 just as the U.S. economy was entering the worst economic recession since the 1930s. His initial acts as mayor involved major improvements to the Orange Police Department. He appointed a new police director, instituted community policing, conducted gun buyback events,[3] upgraded police technology, and established Special Police Officers.[4] In the process, he reduced crime [5]and restored the confidence of federal and state law enforcement agencies in the Orange Police Department. Hawkins’ second major initiative was to spur redevelopment and strengthen the city’s tax base. He upgraded the city's water supply so that the state would permit increased development.[6] He demolished the Walter G. Alexander Houses, a deteriorated high rise housing project and received state and federal funding to replace it with a neighborhood of low rise homes.[7]
He successfully sought designation as a “Transit village,” triggering state technical and financial help for transit-oriented development around Orange’s two train stations. [8] To promote Orange as a destination for shopping, dining, and entertainment, Hawkins secured funding for the city’s Valley Arts district, designated the historic Italian neighborhood as “Little Italy,”[9] and developed a plan for the revitalization of the city’s commercial corridors. To increase citizen involvement, Hawkins initiated televising and streaming video of City Council meetings, sponsored regular public forums, initiated a “Call to Service” initiative to enable ordinary citizens and not just the politically-connected to serve on boards and commissions,[10] and redesigned the city website to make it easier for citizens to communicate their concerns and get fast action.
Having promised an ambitious agenda but faced with declining revenues, Mayor Hawkins created public/private partnerships to stretch the city’s tax dollars. He partnered with the St. Barnabas Health Care System to provide health care services to residents of senior citizens’ housing;[11] recruited the Heinz Foundations to develop and finance a program of low cost prescription drugs,[12] and created a partnership with the Profeta Urban Investment Foundation, Seton Hall University Business School and the Intersect Fund to provide technical assistance and loans to Orange entrepreneurs.
In the aftermath of a $3 Million Dollar reduction in state aid to Orange,[13] Mayor Hawkins sought to increase the ability of New Jersey cities to cut spending through pension and health benefit changes, civil service and collective bargaining reforms, and relief from unfunded mandates. He spoke out against Governor Chris Christie's cuts in New Jersey's Urban Enterprise Zone program.[14] He was named as Chairman of the Management Reform Committee of the NJ League of Municipalities and led his fellow mayors in lobbying for changes in state laws.[15] To avoid a twenty percent increase in property taxes,[16] he was forced to layoff firefighters, police, and other city workers.[17]
The layoffs and difficult negotiations with public employee unions received national attention as emblematic of the plight of U.S. cities and states. [18] Fox Financial News Network focused on the implications for city and state budgets[19] while CNN highlighted the plight of the laid off workers. [20] In March, 2011, Orange was awarded a federal grant which helped Hawkins to negotiate an agreement with the firefighters union. The grant combined with work rule changes and other give backs enabled the city to rehire its twelve laid off firefighters and hire an additional twelve. This precedent-setting settlement also received national coverage.[21]