James J. Kennedy | |
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Member of the New Jersey General Assembly from the 22nd Legislative District district |
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Assumed office January 12, 2016 Serving with Jerry Green |
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Preceded by | Linda Stender |
Mayor of Rahway | |
In office January 1, 1991 – December 31, 2010 |
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Preceded by | Daniel Martin |
Succeeded by | Richard B. Proctor |
Personal details | |
Born | February 9, 1953 |
Spouse(s) | Lori Kennedy |
Residence | Rahway, New Jersey |
Website | Legislative website |
James J. Kennedy (born February 9, 1953) is a Democratic Party politician who is serving as a member of the New Jersey General Assembly representing the 22nd Legislative District since January 2016. He previously served as Mayor of Rahway, New Jersey from 1991 through 2010, when he declined to seek a sixth term.
Kennedy won his first nomination in the 1990 Democratic primary election, when he contested the re-election for Daniel Martin, who at the time had been mayor for 20 years.
Kennedy owns a local store, Kennedy Jewelers, that was adversely affected by the decline of the city's downtown area during the 1970s and 1980s, and he was president of the Rahway Chamber of Commerce during the later 80s. While serving on the board of trustees for the Rahway YMCA, Kennedy befriended Jim McGreevey, a lawyer then residing in neighboring Woodbridge who would ultimately become New Jersey's governor.
Kennedy and his wife, Lori, a kindergarten teacher who retired in June 2011, have one son, Sean, who operates the jewelry store on a day-to-day basis. The couple previously had another child, who died when he was two years old. Lori Kennedy filed petitions to run for school board in the November 2012 election.
McGreevey encouraged Kennedy to challenge Martin in 1990, the year before he took on Joseph Demarino to become Mayor of Woodbridge.
As mayor, Kennedy set out to transform the central business district, which he did by refurbishing the train station, eliminating unsightly older buildings and creating an open plaza, attracting private investment from developers who built hundreds of units of new housing. Rahway committed millions of dollars in public funds to the development of a new public library and municipal recreation center on property adjacent to City Hall. The marquis of Kennedy's redevelopment scheme was the 16-story Carriage City Plaza, a 16-story hotel and condo project that went into foreclosure in 2010, after the housing market crash left developer Carlos Silva unable to sell more than 62 of the 222 units at Sky View at Carriage City Plaza, and leaving 72 units leased, another 88 unoccupied.