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Holden Looks Back at 13 Years in Government

Mayor cites Hartley Dodge renovation, turf fields among accomplishments.

 

It was some years ago that Mary-Anna Holden was working as a paralegal for a law firm on Waverly Place when she was asked to help out the local Republican Committee, putting her background in public relations to use.

Fast forward to Jan. 1, when the governing body's annual reorganization marks the conclusion of Holden's 13 years of elected service to Madison, starting in 1998 as a member of the Borough Council and since 2007 as mayor.

Holden will turn over the office of mayor to former councilman and Democrat Robert Conley, who defeated Holden in the November elections.

While one chapter ends, another begins. Earlier this month, Gov. Chris Christie nominated Holden to the five-member Board of Public Utilities, the powerful state regulatory body overseeing utilities and telecommunications. Holden called the move "very exciting," but cautioned that her nomination will have to wait for Senate confirmation.

She sat down with Patch to reflect on her time in municipal government.

Patch: What progress has Madison made in the years since you were first elected to the governing body?

Holden: The borough is in better shape today than when I started on Borough Council in 1998. There are so many projects that, long-term, had been on hold, such as the rehabilitation of Hartley Dodge Memorial. There is the Public Safety Complex, which moved the police and fire departments out of Hartley Dodge, where they had been since 1935. I was mayor of Bayley-Ellard for two years [laughs]. We got county Open Space funding of $7.3 million for the Madison Recreation Complex and $1.75 million for the Bayley-Ellard fields. We addressed a lot of infrastructure changes: many miles of roads, electrical upgrades, sewer lines, some of which dated to 1905. Plus, all the borough departments went through a sea change in organization. Credit for a lot of that goes to [Borough Administrator] Ray Codey. Jack Dunne, who was mayor prior to my immediate predecessor, Woody Kerkeslager, left three sheets of legal paper of things he wished he had done. It was a great guide.

Patch: But progress did not come easily, right?

Holden: The turf fields were another huge project. There was a lot of opposition to development that was strictly political. It was not until Rob Catalanello came on Council that we had the votes to get it approved. It was not matter of explaining the economics of it, it was totally political, just to see that I fail at any and all costs.

Patch: Why?

Holden: Because some people who are no longer on the Council — [Democrat] Astri Baillie, for one—thought that the 49 Acres was their pet project and that the Open Space money was theirs to spend. You have to put the effort into getting something done. I believe in doing what’s best, not what’s best politically. Leave Republicans and Democrats at the door, you have to represent what’s best for the people.

Patch: What other accomplishments have been important to the borough?

Holden: Getting Realogy to move their corporate headquarters from Parsippany to Madison was a big deal, the same thing with keeping Pfizer in Madison. Right after Pfizer’s acquisition of [Madison-based] Wyeth [in 2009], we put on a full-court press. Pfizer, with 1,200 employees, is the largest employer in town and will be even after Realogy moves 1,000 employees into the former Verizon building.

Patch: Were these deals difficult to consummate?

Holden: People don’t know what goes on in back channels in these situations, especially with the settlement in the 49 Acres lawsuit. That came about because I knew the mayor of Florham Park, Scott Eveland. I am also a member of the Morris County League of Municipalities, there is a tremendous amount of institutional knowledge and contacts there.

Patch: What is on the agenda going forward for Madison?

Holden: The Green Village Road School is a huge project. What was exciting was setting the design standards for it, materials, how it’s going to look. We have had joint meetings with the Board of Education and discussed the sharing of financial information, and shared services. Communication with Superintendent [Michael] Rossi and Board president Lisa Ellis [has led to] good collaboration we never had before.

Patch: What’s next for you?

Holden: I still have my Madisons I want to finish visiting. I have been to 37, with nine more to go. I also kind of miss the corporate world.

Patch: Like Jack Dunne, what would be on your wish list?

Holden: I wished I could have followed through in making the library more of a cultural center. I would like to see us do more with the borough's Colombian community, how do we get them involved outside of the Colombian festival once a year? One of the disappointing things is the 30- to 40-year-olds who are not engaged in the community. They just expect things to happen. Volunteerism is so important, have to keep that going, pass it along. Go to your neighbor and ask them if they want to get involved, it’s that simple.

Related Topics: Mary-Anna Holden

Larry Bruce

7:08 am on Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Really biting journalism. This should be in the comedy section. And if you're going to falsely trash somebody you should at least spell their name correctly.

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MadInNJ

10:45 am on Wednesday, December 28, 2011

I'd love to hear how the Dems would have done it differently, so why not spin us a tale of how a Democrat mayor and council would have achieved the same results (or something even close) in the same time frame (or at any time), but without borrowing the money.

P.S. If you really expected hard-hitting journalism from the Patch based on its two years of covering Madison, you must have been reading the Madison Patch site from an alternate universe.

jerry stevenson

4:57 pm on Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Merry Christmas Larry to you and Nancy. Glad to see that the spirit of Christmas Scrooge is alive and well.

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Larry Bruce

6:12 am on Thursday, December 29, 2011

That's Hanukah Jerry. And as long as were on the topic of sarcastic greetings, nice job on "chairmaning" the Republican party into defeat in a race that was very hard to lose. Here's hoping they keep you on through the next election cycle.

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MadInNJ

1:09 pm on Thursday, December 29, 2011

Last time I checked, the Republicans retained the council 5 - 1, and that's the seat of political power in Madison.

As for "very hard to lose," nice spin, but political historians note that Madison's results have been following the top of the ticket for the past four or five years, so winning one of two council seats was actually contrary to current trends.

2012 should be interesting as Obama is unlikely to win Madison a second time around, and Menendez will be of little help too.

Larry Bruce

6:05 am on Thursday, December 29, 2011

@ Mad - You wouldn't like to hear anything of the sort. And, as is your style, your comment has nothing to do with what you purport to be commenting on. All you want to hear/read are your own right wing ramblings. The fact that you don't have the guts to use your real name kind of blows your credability however

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MadInNJ

12:58 pm on Thursday, December 29, 2011

Sorry Larry, but you called someone a LIAR, thought you'd at least be good enough to explain your statement.

As for "Right Wing Ramblings," nothing of the sort. In fact, the Dems running council during the past decade looked a lot like the Republicans running Congress - Borrowing a lot of money, and then after falling out of favor with the voters, trying to sound like Fiscal Conservatives. Now that takes real chutzpah, as does your attempt at arm-chair psychology.

Happy New Year

Madisonreview

9:31 am on Thursday, December 29, 2011

Do people not have better things to do in their lives then argue in the comments section on patch?

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Slip Mahoney

10:01 am on Thursday, December 29, 2011

I'd like to say I do but I really don't

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