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That this discussion confine itself to the content and its presentation with regard to various aspects of relationship between and amongst the municipalites in Hudson County and the Hudson County Board of Freedholders. ] (]) 23:31, 12 January 2011 (UTC) | That this discussion confine itself to the content and its presentation with regard to various aspects of relationship between and amongst the municipalites in Hudson County and the Hudson County Board of Freedholders. ] (]) 23:31, 12 January 2011 (UTC) | ||
This matter has not been resolved. I will be taking this to the NJ project. I will also be reporting to the proper administrative authorities the aspects of your behavior and Alan's behavior that have constituted violations of policy, and/or its spirit, including reverting during discussion, ] on arguments that apparently refute your claims, use of logical fallacies or intellectually dishonest arguments, and so forth. ] (]) 18:23, 14 January 2011 (UTC) | :This matter has not been resolved. I will be taking this to the NJ project. I will also be reporting to the proper administrative authorities the aspects of your behavior and Alan's behavior that have constituted violations of policy, and/or its spirit, including reverting during discussion, ] on arguments that apparently refute your claims, refusal to respond to observations about mendacious statements, use of logical fallacies or intellectually dishonest arguments, and so forth. ] (]) 18:23, 14 January 2011 (UTC) |
Revision as of 18:26, 14 January 2011
Thanks
To The Ornamentalist for taking the iniative and doing the work of getting this up and running!
Ratings/priorities
In anticipation of tagging articles which come fall under the HCTF thought it would be an idea to get some sort of idea/consensus as how to rate them in terms of importance. Identified are some areas that should be considered though likly to be many more.
- Municipalities: H
- Neighborhoods: mid
- Steets: low, w/ exceptions
- Education:
- higher
- private
- municipal systems
- Sites:
- National Historic sites: H
- NJ Historic sites: M
- Cemeteries: M
- LSP:
- Undesignated, should be or are noteworthy:?
- Historic Events:
- national significance: H
- Black Tom (explosion)
- Battle of Paulus Hook
- Burr-Hamilton duel
- Frank Hague
- local significance
- Transportation
- Is it an idean to do a template to reduce some repetition found in each article?
- HBLR:H
- hubs:M
- sinlge stations:L
- roads/streets:L w/ exceptions
- Geography
- waterways
- landforms
- parks/preserves
- People:
- Mayors:
- politicians (dead or alive)
- Politics:
- current official
- historical
- districts
- Economy
- not really discussed in a any significant way
- Is this ongoing? Perhaps National Register of Historic Places listings in Hudson County, New Jersey should be Mid or High importance for the Task force, and each of the specific NRHP-listed places would be Low importance by default, or higher for any specific special reason that applies. --doncram (talk) 18:02, 24 June 2010 (UTC)
So I'm kind of back
still no reliable internet, using wifi. I added new section for accomplishments related to this task force. In fact, any work I do under the scope of HC I will probably put here. I'll be back soon for good. Hope all has been well with you guys - Theornamentalist (talk) 21:05, 28 June 2010 (UTC)
- Welcome back. Nice work on Three Pigeons. I left some notes there. I have down lots of work on HOTH, but haven't yet float article, and needs some clean up. When a little more presetable, will let you know. (sooner than later)Djflem (talk) 06:47, 29 June 2010 (UTC)
Assessments
So I am trying to get a basis from Rhvanwinkles work and Djflems outline above, and I have some comments. Since this is just regarding Hudson County, I think it would be okay to bump up some importances, and remodify, an example being that I think municipalities, like UC or NB should become Top priority as opposed to the proposed High, mainly because the category Top exists as based on the project, and we should use it. I can't imagine Kearny being Top on other project (and maybe it doesn't belong here at that spot either) but I believe we should use the full spectrum of the scale, or else we'll end up with a ton of mid and low importance articles. Let me know what you think. And when are we gonna get together? - Theornamentalist (talk) 00:09, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
- Firtly, thanks for getting the grid going. Something don't seem to show up and I wonder if there's something up with that. Is there a delay? for evalution? Do you know how evaluation numbers are determined? I agree that we should use full range, and had forgotten that TOP was a choice. JC, UC, Hob, and maybe Bynne should be top as largest towns as should Hoboken Terminal. No longer extant Railroad terminals in New York City? Believe Bergenline, JSQ, and Exchange Place are high as extremely important commerical districts as is Paulus Hook as earliest settlement and most significanltly transformed district. (Have moved Hamilton to mid are other historic disticts). What about bridges on List of crossings of the Hackensack River?. By the way is there a list choice in grid for non-featured lists for that and Historic districts in Hudson County, New Jersey? Some are as significant as tunnels, certainly Pulaski Skyway is is high? I will continue to tag to get stuff of the board, but my choices are flexible.Djflem (talk) 07:16, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
- I agree with what you said about assessing. It can be done manually here, or a bot does roughly every day (I think). Regarding some of the lists and stuff, I'm not sure, since that river flows through all of north Jersey, it certainly is important and relevent (as it shaped the county), so I dont know... btw, I'm looking forward to HOTH. I can see it will take some cleanup, but you have a lot of great content and expanded by a ton. Let me know when (if) you'd like to go over it and if you'd like any help. - Theornamentalist (talk) 12:51, 2 July 2010 (UTC)
I've added 3 things to TOP list: HBLR, LSP, and Hob Term, all of which have county-and are national significance. Whaddya think? As I move around tagging, I realize that in order to accurately list HC articles we may need to bump things up as some stuff that would go in low or mid would be seriously diminished in importance when compared to other items in category. Two specific areas are Category:Neighborhoods in Hudson County, New Jersey and Category:People from Hudson County, New Jersey. Especially if we go into latter, we will get in trouble. Any suggested parameters? Should we do live people. How is there notability re:Hudson to be rated?Djflem (talk) 08:31, 4 July 2010 (UTC) Bob Menedez is senator and home grown, Corzine moved here.
- I agree, they belong in the top. As far as the rest... I'm not sure. I feel that maybe someone who is born and/or raised in the area should maintain a higher priority, as that's something that cannot change, whereas someone like Corzine could potentially move. An example being Stephen Colbert, for a period on Misplaced Pages would have had his residence listed in Gutenberg. Maybe something like
- Person of National Sig. born/raised here: H (cant think of anyone)
- Sig Person born here: M (Menendez)
- Move-ins (currently in): L (Corzine)
- Move-ins (currently out): don't list (Colbert)
- Theornamentalist (talk) 02:18, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
I relocated a number of the categories back on Novemeber 21 for the HCTF in order to fix the automatic assessment process. In order for the bot to update properly, the task force categories must be listed in the same way as the WikiProject category. Nobody commented on it, so I was just leaving a note to explain the change. It has fixed the problem where Hudson County cam first alphabetically, and was overriding the counts in the WPNJ assessment table. The tables are now correct. Jim Miller 20:57, 9 December 2010 (UTC)
JC rail embankments
I just finished uploading Media related to Former railway lines in New Jersey at Wikimedia Commons, a bunch of pix made on a cloudy afternoon in Jersey City two months ago (dreadful processing backlog). I hope someone who knows the place better will provide identifications and background information and insert some of them into appropriate articles. And, less urgently, will put some pictures of other NJ former rail lines into the category. Jim.henderson (talk) 15:54, 20 July 2010 (UTC)
- Pictures look good, is your bike like Waldo? I ended up looking for it in pictures where it wasn't seen right away..
- I saw this other amazing abandoned place on 1&9 south side in North Bergen, I pass it all the time and I believe its called "Pennsylvania Railroad 2" or something, I had tried researching it, but didn't come up with anything actually. - Theornamentalist (talk) 16:52, 20 July 2010 (UTC)
I unimaginatively call my Brompton Bicycle "Brommie" or "Black Brom" but "Waldo" would be a nice name. Then I'd have to figure how get it into more pictures, which would slow me down, which would improve my pictures, since haste is a main contributor to making my pix bad. From Google Earth your place looks like an abandoned trolley line, north of the existing Tonnelle Avenue station.
I spent that entire day in JC and Hoboken, and don't plan to return to the West Side this year and when I do, it will be on my hasty way to and from Secaucus, so someone else must get the fun of chasing your question. Thursday is to be a trip over GWB to Lookout Inn on the NY / NJ border, with a disciplined biker gang who will make me even more hasty than when I'm alone. So many interesting places to go; so few days in a lifetime. Jim.henderson (talk) 23:06, 20 July 2010 (UTC)
- Ha, I meant as in Where's Waldo? I will probably head over there sometime soon, if I can find anything notable about, or anything about it in general. In the very least, it looks cool, so I want to take some pictures anyway. Let me know when you're in the area; Nightscream and I have been trying to meet up, but I got hit these last week and this one with business. - Theornamentalist (talk) 02:50, 21 July 2010 (UTC)
- Yeah, I was the one being too obscure about Waldo. The group bike trip to the State Line Inn was more grueling in the heat than photogenic. Tell us when anyone will get together; I can always make time to meet friends. And I hope more photographers will show up at the big two day Wikiparty in Long Island City (or possibly Greenwich Village) in late August. Jim.henderson (talk) 22:59, 22 July 2010 (UTC)
Driving by Kennedy...
this weekend, I saw someone across the street from Scheutzen Park taking pictures... and I wonder "is that one of the Wikipedians?" haha - Theornamentalist (talk) 01:31, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
- Also, I was wondering if someone could go over an article I've been working on: User:Theornamentalist/Sandbox4 It's not done yet, but let me know :) - Theornamentalist (talk) 01:34, 16 August 2010 (UTC)
Pulaski Skyway FAR
User:Dream out loud has nominated Pulaski Skyway for a featured article review here. Please join the discussion on whether this article meets featured article criteria. Articles are typically reviewed for two weeks. If substantial concerns are not addressed during the review period, the article will be moved to the Featured Article Removal Candidates list for a further period, where editors may declare "Keep" or "Delist" the article's featured status. The instructions for the review process are here. JJ98 (Talk) 07:31, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
Hoboken mayors
I have decided that I would like to bring the Hoboken mayor list up to Featured List quality. Having done this for the Jersey City mayors list, I think I have a pretty good handle on the list article itself. One of the requirements is to clear out the redlinks in Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey so that every member of the list has an article. There are currently 24 mayors without articles. I have a workshop page in my user space where I have been collecting information for creating the articles. I would love some help in completing these articles, and bringing another FL to the task force. There is also a requested move (over a redirect) to move List of mayors of Hoboken, New Jersey to Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey. If anyone wishes to support or object to the move, please see the talk page. Jim Miller 21:04, 9 December 2010 (UTC)
Use of templates for federal, state and county representation
Is their an opinion or consensus regarding the use of these templates (or the like) in county or municipality articles under the heading Federal, state and county representation?
- Template:NJ Congress 13
- Template:NJ Senate
- Template:NJ Governor
- Template:NJ Hudson County Freeholders
- Template:NJ Legislative 33
— Preceding unsigned comment added by djflem (talk • contribs) 13:17, January 6, 2011 (UTC)
- While my opinion is still that the use of the legislative and congressional district templates is appropriate for use in each article, prior consensus said otherwise. I tend to look at municipal articles as being the first point of research for someone who has just moved to a town, or may be considering it. I also consider the point of an encyclopedia to impart knowledge. How many times have the media reported about the number of people who do not know the names of the state and congressional representatives? It is important, and IMO essential, information. I also understand the opposing view that a link to the district provides ample opportunity for readers to get the same information. I also think that the use of the templates greatly simplifies maintenance of the articles by providing a central location for making changes that occur pretty often. I do think that the use of the Freeholders template is excessive in town articles, as each town does not need the complete list of freeholders included. The Governor template really doesn't need to be included in 566 municipal articles. I would no sooner include it than I would {{Template:Current New Jersey statewide political officials}} in every article. Jim Miller 13:39, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
I had noticed changes being made to municipal articles reflecting updates to council members following reorganization meetings held at the start of January and came to the realization that the 21 county templates have not been consistently update and now was the perfect time to get them up to date. Going through all 21 counties in alphabetic order, Template:NJ Atlantic County Freeholders was the first template updated, and there have been no issues with the inclusion of ward-based seats on the template included on all of that counties municipalities, nor has there been any issue with Template:NJ Essex County Freeholders, which also has wards and uses the freeholder template in all of its municipal articles. After making some revisions to the Template:NJ Hudson County Freeholders, I went back to the 12 articles for Hudson County's municipalities and applied the same set of templates there that have been applied in all 20 other counties, totaling 554 articles statewide where the templates appear to work effectively. While I would tend to agree that the Template:NJ Governor is debatable, I believe that the Template:NJ Congress 13, Template:NJ Legislative 33 (or 31, as appropriate) and the Template:NJ Hudson County Freeholders add information that is directly relevant to all 12 municipalities and that they provide useful information about those municipalities that should remain in the article. The corresponding templates have worked well in all 554 other municipalities in New Jersey, and the benefits of providing useful, comprehensive information in a standardized format across all municipal articles, should take precedence statewide. All the more so as the information is in a format that can be easily updated by changing templates, rather than manually updating each article to reflect changes. I first realized that User:Nightscream had reverted every one of the edits I had made to the 12 Hudson County when I received a note on my user page regarding this discussion. While I certainly understand that Nightscream has his own view on the subject, the choice to blindly revert the changes I had been making article by article, at the same time that I was editing other articles in Hudson County was not the most productive way of dealing with his concerns. I have notified Nightscream about this discussion on his talk page and I think that it would have been appropriate for Nightscream to have taken a step back and to contact me directly on my talk page if there was an issue, rather than simply following my tracks and reverting each article minutes after I had edited that article. Hopefully we can reach a solution here that puts Hudson County in line with all 566 municipal articles statewide. Alansohn (talk) 15:32, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- We had this discussion already. There is no reason to have it again. Information in a given article should restricted to material about that article's topic. Mentioning that a given city is part of a given district is fine. Going into detail about that district is not. That material belongs in articles devoted to those districts. Do what you want with those templates, but they don't belong in city articles. That's been decided. Nightscream (talk) 17:14, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- With the updates made over the past year to the templates made to address the previous discussion, it would appear that the passage of time has brought a potential change in consensus that would have Hudson County conform to the manner in which federal, state and county officials are listed via template, rather than arbitrarily standing off on its own. A solution that works well statewide should be standard in all counties and there still appears to be no reason to have made blind reverts to these articles without notification or discussion. Alansohn (talk) 17:25, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
They were not "blind", they were based on self-evident application of policy and common sense, which doesn't require before-the-fact notification or discussion. You certainly didn't notify or discuss your editing against consensus, so why should I notify or discuss reverting in accordance with it? It doesn't matter what changes have been made to the templates, as it does not alter the fact that material does not belong in articles if it is not about that article's subject. What works "statewide" or for "counties" has nothing to do with articles on individual cities. Mentioning which districts a city is in is reasonable. Going on a tangent by explaining details about that district is not. This was already discussed, and nothing you mentioned suggests any change to that consensus. Mentioning that Michigan is part of the United States is valid in the Michigan article. But then adding that Barack Obama is the President of the United States, using the rationale that hey, Michigan is part of the United States, and the people of Michigan voted for Obama is not. The same principle explains why entire paragraphs on the entire makeup of this district or that district are not appropriate for city articles. They are far more appropriate for articles on those districts. Nightscream (talk) 19:19, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- I don't see where the decision is "self-evident application of policy" or "common sense" in this case. Each of our town articles spends a great deal of text on history, demographics, and geography that may be completely meaningless to any given reader who seeks current information about the town in question. At the same time, some readers may find information about local, state, and federal government representation to be unimportant. I do know that there was consensus 16 months ago to not include these templates in every case. That is certainly a long enough time to revisit the conversation. As I said avove, I consider the names of (and links to) individuals who are the state and federal representatives to be vital information that clearly helps define a town. I am completely in favor of including the state and federal district templates in every article about every municipality in the state. I do question the usefulness of the Governor and Freeholder templates. The fact they they are used without objection on every article outside of Hudson County speaks far more to actual consensus than any stale discussion on the matter. Jim Miller 20:18, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- I just came from the article on Hoboken, I am working on the list of mayors. I support Jim Miller in the use of the transclusion of representatives, and having it consistent throughout the cities. I can see how people can fall on either side of the debate, but I opt for inclusion. --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) (talk) 20:23, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
Echoing a message I just left on Jim Miller's talk page in response to a message he left on mine, if a line (or lines) of reasoning or argument are given for a particular position, then those who oppose it should, in the interest of directness, transparency and intellectual honesty, explain why it is flawed, invalid, unpersuasive, etc. As I pointed out to Jim, no one in the 2009 discussion refuted (or even tried to refute) the reasoning I offered as to why material not about a given topic does not belong in an article about that topic. In my last message above, I pointed out why, including tangential material in city articles is inappropriate, and employed hypothetical example that employs the same city-district rationale on a state-country scale. I'd like to know in what way that reasoning is not valid.
Another point I mentioned to Jim is Alan's insistence that Hudson County conform to the manner in which cities of other NJ counties detail federal, state and county representation. This argument glosses over the fact that the 2009 consensus decided that those city articles in other counties aren't supposed to detail that information. That was the whole point of that discussion, which took place on the WikiProject New Jersey talk page, and not the "WikiProject Hudson County talk page". If those other articles are not in line with that consensus, then they need to be edited in order to brought into line with it. Pointing to those articles does not necessarily constitute evidence that of "change in consensus", as Alan and Jim argue, it may simply mean that those articles weren't brought into line with. You said that you noticed changes to articles, but the only things you linked to were templates, but not any of these articles. What articles? What changes? Who changed them?
If you want to provide evidence that consensus has changed, then by all means, do so. But let's not assume that it has, and point to articles that violate it as evidence of it. For all we know, those other articles may have contained those templates because the templates were in them prior to the 2009 consensus, or were placed there after it by editors not aware of it, or for all we know, placed in there by you, Alan. I have no idea what the case is. Let's at least establish this question, rather than assume it. Pointing to edits in violation of a consensus as evidence of a change to that consensus, without establishing that point to the exclusion of other possibilities, is fallacious argument.
Yes, the articles on all cities on Misplaced Pages should be consistent--by not including material not about those cities. Nightscream (talk) 20:45, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
Comment Should this discussion be relocated to the WPNJ talk page? It is discussing something that was formerly discussed there, and this kind of decision should be consistent across all state articles. This page may not be as widely watched as Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_New_Jersey, and such decisions should be made by the broadest audience possible (not that the activity over there has been overwhelming at any time in recent history either). Jim Miller 20:57, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
- It appears that the issue is being being re-visited, as is appropriate to the nature of Misplaced Pages as it evolves. Reviewing it, I would characterize the result of the previous discussion as a fragile compromise about the wording of the Bayonne article given lukewarm consent by three of nine people who particpated, not consensus. The changes that have taken place since then are reason to consider the way poltical representation is presented in NJ articles, and perhaps in Hudson County specifically.
Templates deal with the practical matter of housekeeping since updating articles with poltical representation is of utmost importance. They also addresses consistency. While some article may have a guardians, many don't, leaving them with incorrect information. Relying on the hope that someday someone will get to making the changes is not an effective way to handle the problem. A quick scan of Hudson County reveals a hodgepodge of approaches, and in many cases (including Union City) no links to districts, plus spam. A consistent professional across the board syle as seen in most NJ municpality articles should be applied. That templates include information that some consider non-specific (though not irrelevent, as some would suggest) to the municipality certainly is significantly lesser evil than (the chance of) old news, no links, and no coherence. Their use does not preclude the inclusion of other information that one might find valuable if (s)he feels compelled to tailor it to the town.
It appears that there is no strong feeling about keeping the governor, nor do I have any. The header federal, state, county should be included in each article, since a reader should not be required to fish for it. Inclusion only of the congressional rep, w/o mention of senators, leaves a gap which raises the question: Who are they? Easily dispatched in 15 words, inclusion is LESS distracting and offers the click. The district for State Senate and the Assembly, and the representive should be stated clearly in the same sentence, w/ appropriate links, as the template does.
T Bd of F'hldrs template is a series, and the re-direct Hudson County Board of Chosen Freeholders a list. I would suggest the template be amended to include the municpalities in each district (w/refs) and then adding directly to the Hudson County section since prose is preferred. I require more investigation to understand the system (ie how it and the other two counties like it are organized), but my leanings would be toward amended template in municpality articles since the housekeeping would be taken care and the coupling of neighborhoods is an intersting reflection how urban Hudson works.Djflem (talk) 01:06, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
I have made changes at Weehawken, where there was serious undercoverage, making use of the templates Djflem (talk) 09:04, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- Making changes while a discussion is in progress is inappropriate. Please wait until the discussion is concluded before making any changes.
- As for relocating this discussion to the WPNJ page, yes, it should be. Nightscream (talk) 16:17, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- We could bring this to WT:NJ for further discussion, but the only issue is Hudson County. As of now, the other 550-plus municipalities in the state all use the federal / state / county templates with the 12 municipalities in Hudson County as the lone standouts. It appears that there is strong evidence here supporting the position that consensus has changed based on the participation here. As long as we can come to an agreement here that Hudson County should use the same templating technique used statewide, there should be no reason to raise the issue statewide, where the articles have used the templates for years. Alansohn (talk) 16:59, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
- Both this and the previous discussion demonstrate a preference for an inclusive standard (ie templates) with regard to Federal, state and county representation. As it seems the Hudson County articles are the only ones which do not follow the format, I see no compelling reason to bring this to WPNJ. Djflem (talk) 22:58, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
The only issue is not Hudson County. The previous discussion pertained to all of New Jersey, and therefore, it would seem possible that the amount of information given support by the end of that discussion was simply not implemented in other NJ articles. You can say "Let's be consistent by changing the NJ articles to bring them in line with that consensus", or "Let's be consistent by changing Hudson County articles". One can arbitrarily portray either statement as reasonable, based solely on their own personal preference. But if you're going to argue that consensus among New Jersey article editors has changed, then we should ask those editors. Saying that consensus across all NJ article edtiors has changed based on participating in this discussion is a non sequitur. The fact that the articles have used the templates for years does not change this, nor does the fact that those articles were not brought in line with that consensus. Nightscream (talk) 04:46, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
- I hate to come in late to the discussion, but I can give my opinion FWIW on some of the issues. I think that if we are looking for consistency within Hudson County, we should keep just as that. To look statewide is to look countrywide, and I suppose worldwide. I think we can come to an agreement between those of us who maintain these articles (ie. each of you, who are virtually the best and most dedicated to, if I may say so, some of the best city articles in WP) As far as the inclusion, yes, this information is important, however, I feel like it is extraneous. I am in support of simply linking and not listing. Whatever this may say about me, I can admit that one of the last things I would consider before moving into a town would be the Freeholders. I also believe that listing these officials gives the feel of some city website (when is the Union City City Hall open?) Ha, I apologize if this is not what anyone wants to hear. I would support providing a proper and visible link to an article with a concise listing, but not inclusion in each individual article. Anyway, I intended to take a break as of recent, and here I am spending likely more time in WM than I was before... - Theornamentalist (talk) 05:47, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
I just did some checking through city articles for other counties, beginning alphabetically with Atlantic County, and its constituent cities. This is what I found:
- The templates in the Absecon article were added by Alan Sohn in in November 2005, before the prior discussion. Did he remove them following that discussion? Apparently not. As for the other cities:
- Atlantic City:Alan, 2005.
- Brigantine: Alan, 2005.
- Buena Vista Township: Alan, 2005.
- Collings Lakes does not have the templates.
- Richland, New Jersey does not have them.
- Buena: Alan, 2005.
- Corbin City: Alan, 2005.
- Egg Harbor City: Alan, 2005.
- Egg Harbor Township: Alan, 2005.
- Estell Manor: Alan, 2005.
- Folsom: Alan, 2005.
- Galloway Township: Alan, 2005.
- Pomona does not have them.
- Hamilton Township: Alan, 2005.
- Mays Landing does not have them.
- Hammonton: Alan, 2005.
- Linwood: Alan, 2005.
- Longport: Alan, 2005.
- Margate City: Alan, 2005.
- Mullica Township: Alan, 2005.
- Elwood-Magnolia does not have them.
- Northfield: Alan, 2005.
- Pleasantville: Alan, 2005.
- Port Republic: Alan, 2005.
- Somers Point: Alan, 2005.
- Ventnor City: Alan, 2005.
- Weymouth Township, New Jersey: Alan, 2005.
Now perhaps I'm missing the precise wisdom of your arguments, but I'm failing to see how the existence of the templates in other NJ articles constitutes evidence of a "change to consensus". Assuming this as an accurate indicator of articles on cities of other counties, it's not a change to consensus on two counts: It's not a consensus, because it's just Alan, and it's not a change since the 2009 discussion, since the templates were added almost four years prior to it. The templates were not removed or reduce in terms of the material relevant to each city for reasons that are unclear. Alan stated at the end of the 2009 discussion that he supported the version of the material that was proposed, which mostly eliminated information not about the individual cities in question. Whether he did not do this because he didn't feel like it, thought someone else would or whatever, the fact remains that stating that the current placement of those templates indicates consensus change is specious. Since many articles on Misplaced Pages may have a small number of editors, or even one editor, who makes most edits to them, the only viewpoint that those templates currently seem to represent is Alan's, and not anyone elses. Nightscream (talk) 05:55, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
- Indeed, I was the one who created these legislative templates in 2005. That same year, they were added them to the articles for all 566 municipalities in the state of New Jersey in 2005, including all municipalities in Hudson County, as in this edit to Bayonne, New Jersey. These templates have remained in all the municipality articles, until their removal in March 2009, as in this edit, which was described by User:Nightscream in its edit summary as having "removed unsourced or irrelevant Trivia and other material". Since then, there have been a number of efforts to reinstate use of these standard templates, as in this edit in August 2009 by User:A Stop at Willoughby, only to be removed, twice, by User:Nightscream. After updating these templates, I made another stab at this edit to add these templates, followed elsewhere by User:Djflem at this edit, who added these templates to the article for Weehawken, New Jersey. All of these edits have been removed by Nightscream. User:Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ), an editor who has worked on many Hudson County articles, has also registered his support for the use of these templates. The only person standing in opposition is Nightscream. It appears that consensus is that these templates be included here. To confirm that I am reading consensus correctly, I ask all those participating and interested in the issue to register their support for the following proposition - "Resolved, that the standard set of federal, state and county legislative templates used in the 20 other counties of New Jersey should be used as well in articles for the municipalities in Hudson County".
- Support, with an agnostic stand on including Template:NJ Governor, as discussed by User:JimMillerJr above. Alansohn (talk) 17:32, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
- Suggested Amendment-please see proposal(s) below Djflem (talk) 23:31, 12 January 2011 (UTC)
You just evaded the point of my last message, and the questions that I asked you. You are ignoring the August-October 2009 consensus discussion, which resolved a version of the material that contains far less material not about the cities in question. You point out an August 2009 edit by A Stop at Willoughby, while ignoring the fact that A Stop at Willoughby was one of those people who supported the reduced material at the end of the 2009 discussion, which was in October of that year.
Strangely enough, you were one of the people who supported it to. But now you're pretending that you don't seem to recall that discussion, even though I've referenced it repeatedly.
You're also ignoring the fact that I apparently debunked your argument that there's been a "change" to consensus since that 2009 discussion, when those templates were added four years prior to it, and by you." I'll ask you again: How can there have been a change to the 2009 consensus when the templates were added to all those other NJ city articles by you, rather than by a group of others, and when you added them four years prior to the prior discussion?
There is no appearance of any consensus here. Four editors: Jim Miller, Arthur Norton, Djflem and you, Alan, support including these templates, not having once addressed my arguments against including material in city articles that isn't about those cities. Two editors, myself and Theornamentalist, are against that level of digressional material, and prefer linking to articles about those districts. That is not a "consensus", and you have been dishonest in attempting to portray one, by claiming that actions taken four years prior to a previous discussion represent a change since that discussion, by not doing your part to remove or edit those templates in other city articles to bring it in line with that consensus, by refusing to answer the evidence I presented above to that effect, by refusing to address the arguments against including irrelevant material, by trying to argue against taking this to the NJ Project, where you know more editors may discover your behavior and rule against it, and now by pretending that four editors against two is a "consensus". I'm very disappointed in you, Alan, because I've never known you to exhibit this type of manipulative behavior.
You want to hold another consensus, fine. But it'll involve the entire NJ project, including those privvy to the previous consensus discussion. You're not going to assemble three other editors away from the eyes of the NJ project, and then pretend that this gives you the power to override a decision the NJ project reached. If you attempt this, I will bring this matter, including your behavior, to the attention of the NJ project, as well as other administrators, and show them how you've attempted to game the system in order to undermine a consensus that you simply didn't like. Nightscream (talk) 18:14, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
- This discussion was initiated by an inquiry regarding the use of templates. They are nowhere mentioned in the compromise agreement, which offered a model for the information that should be included. That information includes the US senators, US representatives, state senators, and state assemblymen, and their electoral districts, and freeholder. The templates for federal and state offices conform completely to the sample text offered in the compromise agreement, and reflects the consensus to include that information. I fully support the inclusion of that information, and fully support use of templates to present it in articles as the most effective way to update changes which take place on a regular basis. They offer the best opportunity for the municipality to remain current.
- Unfortunately, the compromise agreement regarding the Board of Freeholders is flawed, and thus a source of contention here. Clarifying which information should be included and how it should be presented needs to be discussed. Therefore, the following:
- Proposal
That it is acknowledged that the information regarding US representatives, US senators, state senators, and state assemblymen, and their electoral districts, has satisfactorly been resolved in the previous compromise agreement and that the use of the appropriate templates (sample:Template:NJ Congress 13, Template:NJ Senate, Template:NJ Legislative 33) satisfies and supports that agreement.
- Proposal
That this discussion confine itself to the content and its presentation with regard to various aspects of relationship between and amongst the municipalites in Hudson County and the Hudson County Board of Freedholders. Djflem (talk) 23:31, 12 January 2011 (UTC)
- This matter has not been resolved. I will be taking this to the NJ project. I will also be reporting to the proper administrative authorities the aspects of your behavior and Alan's behavior that have constituted violations of policy, and/or its spirit, including reverting during discussion, stonewalling on arguments that apparently refute your claims, refusal to respond to observations about mendacious statements, use of logical fallacies or intellectually dishonest arguments, and so forth. Nightscream (talk) 18:23, 14 January 2011 (UTC)