- Fill out the junk car pickup form online
- Call 1-866-JUNK-111 today and get that junk car out of the way!
Junk cars
Bogota
- Scrap car in
Bogota
- Got
a junk
car
sitting
in your
driveway in Bogota?
Still
paying
insurance
on a
car
that
won’t
go?
Would
you
like
to see
your
junk
car
just
disappear,
with
no hassle
and no expense
to you?
- Junk-Car.org
is the
answer.
Donate
your
junk cars
to us
and
receive
a tax-deductible
receipt in Bogota.
- Our
nationwide
pick-up
is
fast
and
free,
and
all
proceeds
from
the
junk cars
are
donated
to
benefit
youth
at
risk in Bogota and many other cities.
Junk-Car.org
is a car donation
program opened to
help underprivileged
children in
Bogota
and
many other cities in
New Jersey.
www.Junk-Car.org operates
a wide range of programs
to benefit children
who are at risk due
to poverty, emotional
instability, difficulties
in school or spiritual
issues throughout the United States. Many of the
children benefiting
from Junk-Car.org’s
services are from
immigrant families
or broken homes.
Our
programs include:
family counseling,
placement and tuition
assistance for children
who would benefit
from a private or
parochial school
education, adult
education, social
programs for children
and for families,
and summer camp placement.
If you are looking to sell a junk car, you have to pay for an advertisement. Assuming you sell the junk car, you have to hope that the buyer doesn't call back claiming it immediately broke down.
Instead of getting cash for junk cars, three-quarters of a million Americans every year donate their junk cars to charity.
Junk-Car.org is a classified 501(c)(3) charity organization. You will receive a tax-deductable receipt when you junk your car in
Bogota
.
-
No need to Sell Junk car.
-
Scrap car today in
Bogota
and get a tax write-off!
Here are some interesting tidbits we've picked up about your city.
The Borough of Bogota operates under the Borough form of municipal government, consisting of a Mayor and six Councilpersons elected at large.
The Mayor is elected to serve a four-year term and may succeed that term by re-election. The Mayor is empowered as head of the municipal government to: Provide for the proper execution of local and State laws; Recommend to the Borough Council measures deemed in the best interest of the Borough; Nominate and, with the advice and consent of the Council, appoint most subordinate officers of the Borough; and Maintain peace and order. Although the Mayor presides over meeting of the Borough Council, the Mayor votes only in the case of a tie. State law also requires the Mayor to be a member of the Planning Board and Board of Trustees of the municipal Public Library.
The six Council members are elected at-large for terms of three years on a staggered basis, with two seats coming up for election each year. The Council exercises general legislative powers conferred upon it by State law to protect and promote the general welfare of the Borough. Among these are: The right to enact ordinances; Approve resolutions; Approve mayoral appointments; and Adopt the annual budget and determine tax levy .
The Mayor of the Borough of Bogota is Steve Lonegan. Members of the Bogota Borough Council are Council President Joe Noto, Yesenia Frias, Pat Kearns, Pat McHale, Tara Sharp and George Silos. .
In July 2006, Mayor Lonegan created a controversy when he engineered a Borough Council resolution requesting the removal of a Spanish-language billboard in town advertising McDonald's iced coffee. Lonegan said the billboard was "divisive." The story received national publicity, occurring concurrently with a national debate on illegal immigration .
On Election Day, November 7, 2006, Democrats Tara M. Sharp (1,403 votes) and Yesenia Frias (1,351) ousted Republican incumbents Melissa A. Schnipp (964) and George T. Shalhoub (930), winning three-year terms of office on the Borough Council. When Frias and Sharp took office on January 1, 2007, the Council consisted entirely of Democrats, leaving Mayor Lonegan as the lone Republican elected official in the borough. A ballot initiative regarding purchase of two new firetrucks passed by a 1,208-554 margin.[7][8]
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