He was born on May 19, 1920, in West Orange, New Jersey, as one of eight children of John Pasquale Renna Sr., a baker. He worked full-time as a bookkeeper and attended Rutgers University at night, earning a degree in accounting.[1]
From 1970 to 1974, during the administration of Governor William Cahill, Renna served as Executive Director of the New Jersey Housing Finance Agency (HFA). The agency was accused of corruption during the period Renna was at its head, but Renna was never subpoenaed and maintained his innocence of any impropriety.[4][5] He also served as Essex County Purchasing Agent and was the longtime West Orange Republican Chairman.[1]
In 1977, Renna backed Raymond Bateman, a State Senator from Somerset County, for the Republican nomination for Governor. In that race, there were two Essex County candidates: former Assembly Speaker Thomas Kean and former State Senator C. Robert Sarcone. Although Kean carried Essex County, Bateman won the nomination. Renna immediately became a candidate for Essex County Republican Chairman (the incumbent, Frederic Remington, had won a GOP primary for Kean's State Assembly seat[6] ). With the support of Bateman, who was leading in the polls, Renna defeated Assemblyman Carl Orechio of Nutley.[7]
Renna endorsed Kean for the gubernatorial nomination in 1981. Kean was one of five Essex County candidates seeking the GOP nomination, along with State Senator James Wallwork, Assemblyman Anthony Imperiale, former Superior Court Judge Richard McGlynn, and millionaire businessman Bo Sullivan.[8] Kean won the nomination and the general election, and named Renna to his cabinet as Commissioner of Community Affairs.[9] In that role, he also sat on the Hackensack Meadowlands Development Commission, which controlled development in a large area in the state.[4] Renna considered his greatest achievements in that role the enforcement of the boarding home regulations and a new fire safety code.[10]
In 1985, Renna left the cabinet, and he became president of Great American Recreation, Inc. which operated the Vernon Valley-Great Gorge ski resort and the Action Park amusement park in Sussex County. In 1986, he was again elected Essex County Republican Chairman.[11][12] Renna had a few wins by watching the Democratic primary from the sidelines and then figuring out his ticket over the summer. That's what happened in 1986, when Essex County Executive Peter Shapiro's popularity plummeted—especially among Democrats. Sensing an opportunity, Renna pulled his candidate, Carl Orechio, off the ticket and replaced him with Nicholas Amato, who had won three terms as Essex County Surrogate as a Democrat before Shapiro dumped him from the party line a few months earlier. For Surrogate, Renna ran another party switcher: Earl Harris, the Newark City Council President. The result was a GOP landslide.[13]
In 1994, Renna helped another Republican, James Treffinger, win election as Essex County Executive. But after Trefinger took office, he feuded with Renna and in 1996 engineered a coup to oust him.[15]
Renna died on August 21, 1998, four months after his wife, Grace Baldanza Renna.[16]
John P. Renna Jr. House
The John P. Renna House, or John P. Renna Jr. House, Section 8 low-income senior-citizen housing in West Orange, is named for him.[17] Construction began in 1972.[18]
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Joseph Fagan (2016-04-11). West Orange Revisited. Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. pp. 123–. ISBN978-1-4396-5588-7. Retrieved 2017-12-30. ...Fairmount School...new high school.... Both were demolished in 1972 to make way for the John P. Renna Jr. House for senior citizens, which occupies the site today.
Further reading
Nathan S. Betnun (1976-01-01). Housing finance agencies: a comparison between states and HUD. Praeger. ISBN978-0-275-56660-9. Retrieved 2017-12-29. The new executive director, John P. Renna, came to the HFA with the background of a developer and the predilection to strike a deal wherever he could. One such deal proved to be the most controversial project attempted by any state HFA.