Multiple public speakers at the Newark Municipal Council's Dec. 9 special meeting criticized what they called untimely end‑of‑year spending and persistent building maintenance failures.
Deborah Salters asked why the council was approving an "almost $7,000,000" contract to supplement leasing vendors for snow removal before holding a comprehensive planning meeting on the city's snow plan. "How are we saying yes to almost $7,000,000 and you have not had the necessary meeting? That's a problem," she said. Salters also raised questions about planned vehicle purchases in the '25 and '26 budgets when the council had not adopted a 2026 budget, alleged misuse of city water vehicles, and said the council pays about $249,000 a year for five parking spaces per councilperson in a lot the city sold for $1.
Louis Shockley reiterated concerns about large equipment purchases and argued the city should instead invest in local workforce training. "We need welders," he said, urging investment in labor programs rather than more city cars.
Council members acknowledged the public concerns. Several members, including Councilman Gonzales and Councilman Kelly, discussed the need to inventory vendors for snow and ice removal and to get DPW's snow plan. The Business Administrator asked for the fumigation company name so staff could check payment status after a council member said the city owed a small business roughly $8,000.
The meeting also included repeated council complaints about senior complexes with recurring heat and water outages and unclean common areas; council members asked the Housing Authority director for rapid remediation and clearer maintenance oversight. Those operational failures were cited by public speakers as examples of wasteful spending and misprioritized city contracting.
The council recorded the public comments, directed administration follow‑up on vendor payments and the snow plan, and then proceeded to the Housing Authority presentation and executive session.