Hoboken Councilwoman-at-Large Emily Jabbour, a mayoral candidate, and Councilman-at-Large Joe Quintero, one of her running mates, are supporting a bill that would send $25 million to Heights University Hospital, citing potential added strain to the Mile Square City.
By John Heinis/Hudson County View
“For decades, Christ Hospital has been a cornerstone of care for our county — a place where Hudson County families turn in moments of need. This funding represents an investment not just in a hospital, but in the health, safety, and future of our residents,” Quintero said in a statement.
At the end of September, state Senator Raj Mukherji (D-32) announced that he and state Senator Brian Stack (D-33) would introduce a bill seeking $25 million for Heights University Hospital, formerly Christ Hospital, as HCV first reported.
Since then, state Senator Angela McKnight has signed onto the bill, with outgoing Assemblyman John Allen (D-32) signing onto the complementary bill in the lower chamber.
The state legislation quickly came about after Hudson Regional Health CEO Dr. Nizar Kifaieh revealed on September 26th that they were going to cancel non-essential services at Heights University Hospital within 30 days.
“The survival of Heights University Hospital is critical to the healthcare network throughout Hudson County,” Jabbour added.
“If it were to close, it could have an outsized impact on hospital care here in Hoboken, placing unbearable strain on our local care system and threatening access for many vulnerable residents who depend on its services.”
Additionally, the two council members urged Gov. Phil Murphy (D) to provide immediate financial assistance, in addition to supporting the aforementioned bill.
“Our healthcare system is interconnected — when one institution falters, the entire network feels the pressure. We’re urging the Governor and our partners in state government to act swiftly. Hoboken and Hudson County residents deserve nothing less,” Quintero concluded.
Politicos and hospital staff held a rally at the Jersey City Heights hospital on Wednesday afternoon, with Hudson County Board of Commissioners Chair Anthony Romano (D-5) and Allen being the two elected officials from Hoboken.
In light of union leadership expressing concerns about layoffs, the New Jersey Department of Health indicated on September 29th that “HRH cannot simply close a hospital overnight” since there is a comprehensive process, as HCV exclusively reported.








If you keep backing illegal aliens entering NJ and Hudson, this is the result.
If you held up your oath of office, then NJ wouldn’t see closing hospitals like California which is being crushed by putting over a million illegal aliens on to its medical program.
“Illegals” are not eligible for Medicare or Medicaid health benefits. You MAGA dummies continue to spread disinformation.
That doesn’t stop people getting paid out on the federal dime, you utter moron.
Illegal aliens are also not permitted to enter the country. But your globalist party underwriters erased that American law and waved millions in.
MILLIONS!
They can walk in to any hospital and get “urgent” care and there’s nothing to stop the costs from driving hospitals into bankruptcy. Nothing at all but liars with pea brains trying to distort the simple facts.
Giving one-time grants to the hospital won’t change their fundamental problem: their business model doesn’t work. Community hospitals have been going out of business or merging in droves around the country- Christ Hospital is no exception.