Get our newsletters

Lambertville resident elected Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission chairman

Posted

The Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission has announced its panel of officers for the next 12-month period.

Aladar G. Komjathy of Lambertville, N.J., was elected chairman. He replaces Michael B. Lavery, a Hackettstown, N.J., attorney who had served as chairman since December 2015. Komjathy’s oath of office was administered by U.S. District Court Judge Douglas E. Arpert, a childhood friend.

Komjathy has over 40 years of experience in public service and business. His government-affairs firm – Komjathy & Kean – services a host of national corporate brands. Komjathy serves on the N.J. State Board of Mortuary Science and, until recently, was the longtime chairman of the Lambertville Board of Fire Commissioners. He is a U.S. Navy veteran and a Trenton State College graduate.

Pamela Janvey of Upper Moreland, was reelected as vice chairwoman. Janvey is a former accounting department supervisor at the Bridge Commission, with previous experience in the real estate industry and in service delivery for at-risk families and residents in Bucks County.

Daniel Grace of Feasterville, was reelected as Secretary. Grace has been a member of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) Local 830 of Pennsylvania for four decades. He has served as the organization’s secretary-treasurer/business manager since 2001 and as an executive board director of the 95,000-member Pennsylvania Conference of Teamsters since 2005.

Yuki Moore Laurenti of Trenton, N.J., was reelected as treasurer. Laurenti is associate director of donor relations at Princeton University. She has served as treasurer since 2017. She also served three previous terms as secretary-treasurer. She has an A.B. in economics from Harvard University and resides in Trenton.

The oaths for Janvey, Grace and Laurenti were administered by Commission counsel.


Join our readers whose generous donations are making it possible for you to read our news coverage. Help keep local journalism alive and our community strong. Donate today.


X