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>I’m not sure who has made the official determination that cell towers are the only option for providing cell coverage

>I’m not sure who has made the official determination that cell towers are the only option for providing cell coverage

I’m not sure who has made the official determination that cell towers are the only option for providing cell coverage, or why. Has anyone seen a rooftop installation, shielded by a screen? Probably not – it would be a true “stealth” design (not a 140′ “pipe cleaner” tree). Even more stealth than the non-stealth downtown rooftop installation that no one ever notices. Or, flush-mounted antennae, painted to match a building’s exterior with an interior equipment room? And, for tricky small spots, a mere “repeater” antenna that amplifies the coverage and aims it directly where the gap exists. How much discussion of these options has taken place? From the tone of this “either/or” tower debate, I’ll hazard a guess at very little, if any.

The only way that the full range of options across the Village can be considered is through a Village-wide approach to appropriate options focused on actual coverage gaps, not by these emotionally, physically and financially draining site-by-site battles pitting neighbor against neighbor against town.
Neighborhoods shouldn’t playing “hot potato” with each tower proposal, tossing it on someone else’s doorstep, hoping that when it finally drops, it won’t be in their backyard. It’s a very risky game that may ultimately be lost, along with the goodwill of other neighbors who no longer wish to supported you when that potato drops in your yard – so why play it?

What independent entity has explored, much less confirmed, whether the goal of contiguous coverage necessitates only a monopole design at those identified sites? Or, is it merely the most cost-efficient option for the carrier? Perhaps is it simply the product of a lack of collaboration, patience, foresight and thoughtful evaluation of all needs and options?

Further, to the point that once one site is selected, it is more likely that only one will be built and therefore there aren’t really 3 sites – under what authority do you conclude that all legal rights related to those other sites vanish once one is selected? And, with any such rights come potential causes of action and legal remedies for damages – damages that, ultimately, may become a financial liability to us all.

Instead of trying find a way to pass along this perpetual problem to someone else, the special committee folks are actually looking to solve it. For everyone.
I urge those who aren’t familiar with all the potential facility options to make themselves familiar. No resident’s property will benefit from a tower – though the degree of detriment will vary by proximity, of course. Although it is impossible to completely prohibit them across the board, if we collaboratively explore non-tower alternatives that work for all residents, the town and the carriers, where’s the problem? Does everyone own stock in monopole companies or something?

Starting from an uninformed position of “there’s a coverage gap, so that means a tower must go either here or there” only serves to polarize our community. We should start by saying, where is coverage needed, and what is the best (and least adverse) manner to achieve contiguous coverage? That should be the carrier’s main concern, not how they can squeeze towers into an available lot and then raise the height high enough to make it work just enough.
Is cooperation and amicable resolution really so very difficult? It is in the best interests of all residents to get behind this – why not achieve your objective by helping your Village community and government out with solutions, instead of using that energy to simply move those problems to someone else’s doorstep?

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>NJ Transit to eliminate sick time payout

>NJ Transit to eliminate sick time payout


The NJ Transit Board of Directors voted formally Wednesday to eliminate payouts to non-union employees for unused sick time and vacation time not taken.

In late March, NJ Transit suspended vacation payouts to non-union employees less than a week after a New Jersey Press Media story revealed that the agency paid out $2.2 million in 2010 to current and retired workers for unused vacation time. The agency also paid out $1.47 million for unused sick time in 2010. Together, both categories of payouts totaled $3.67 million.  (Higgs, Gannett)

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>NJ Transit budget speeds up debt payments

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ridgewoodtrainstation theridgewoodblog



NJ Transit budget speeds up debt payments


NJ Transit board members approved a $1.895 billion operating and a $1.16 billion capital budget Wednesday for fiscal year 2012, which emphasizes keeping the mass transit system in good condition as a hedge against future higher repair bills.

Officials also announced plans to aggressively pay down debt over the next 10 years to allow the agency to use “pay as you go” financing for capital improvement items and projects to save money to the spent to keep the system in good repair.  (Higgs, Gannett)

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The Ridgewood Academy for Health Professions (RAHP)

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RAHP

Mission
The Ridgewood Academy for Health Professions (RAHP) is an integrated, collaborative, academic college preparatory program designed to provide students with exposure to the vast array of career opportunities within the healthcare arena.

Program Description
The Ridgewood Academy for Health Professions is a three-year program geared for students who have an interest in pursuing a career within health or medical professions. The Academy began in 2005 and will enroll 40 – 45 new sophomore students each year. The goal of the program is to integrate participating high school students’ academic college preparatory curriculum with real life learning opportunities within the health care setting.

RAHP Objectives
The objective of the Academy is to provide a comprehensive, rigorous academic curriculum focused on applied and integrated learning, core program teachers, and the option to take college level classes. RAHP will create a small learning community that provides a challenging college preparatory curriculum tied to real life experiences and establishes strong relationships between students and healthcare professionals through internships and mentorships. Students will explore careers in medicine, science, and the allied health professions.

Learning Environment
The school-learning environment combines classroom and laboratory experiences with an infusion of health care related projects, labs, and research experiences along with explorations, internships, and mentorships at The Valley Hospital throughout the three-year program. Optional classes at Bergen Community College are offered in the allied health field.

Real-World Experiences
Students are introduced to real-world experiences through career explorations, internships, mentorships, field trips and speakers. The exploration year (sophomore) is designed to provide students with exposure to the vast array of career opportunities within the healthcare area. During the internship year (junior) students select rotations in four Valley Hospital department areas to experience practical realities of work in a health related field. The third year of the program, mentorship (senior), provides students with an opportunity to explore a health-related issue under the guidance of a mentor. The culmination of the program will be the presentation of a capstone project at a RAHP seminar symposium.

Steering Committee
The Academy has a dedicated and qualified steering committee that acts as an advisory board whose mission is to provide input and direction to the Academy. The steering committee is comprised of representatives from the Ridgewood Public Schools, The Valley Hospital, and Bergen Community College. Members on the committee include administrators, coordinators, faculty and parents of enrolled RAHP students

https://fern-rahp.ridgewood.rhs.schoolfusion.us/modules/groups/integrated_home.phtml?gid=1194794&sessionid=bf9f538b01b006643ba9df8139f41dcb

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>Computer crash at the state Motor Vehicle Commission that left customers without service statewide on Monday

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Computer crash at the state Motor Vehicle Commission that left customers without service statewide on Monday

Democrats, N.J. state treasurer trade criticism over who is to blame for MVC computer crash
WEDNESDAY, 13 JULY 2011 17:21
BY TOM HESTER SR.

NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

Legislative Democrats and state Treasurer Andrew Eristoff on Wednesday traded barbs on who should be blamed for the lengthy computer crash at the state Motor Vehicle Commission that left customers without service statewide on Monday.

“It’s appalling that Governor Christie has taken one of the remarkable success stories in recent New Jersey government history and essentially trashed it in 18 months,” Assemblywoman Connie Wagner (D-Bergen) said. “Motorists across this state had become accustomed to brutal waits at motor vehicle agencies, until the reforms of decade ago changed that reality. Now, motor vehicle agencies are again a mess under Governor Christie.

https://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/state/democrats-nj-state-treasurer-trade-criticism-over-who-is-to-blame-for-mvc-computer-crash

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>NJ businesses oppose subsidized power plant scheme

>In letter to Governor, NJ businesses oppose subsidized power plant scheme


In a break with a few trade groups here, 14 businesses in New Jersey are calling on the Christie administration to halt its efforts to develop new power plants in the state through hefty ratepayer subsidies.
In a letter to Gov. Chris Christie, the executives of those firms argued the competitive wholesale and retail electricity markets are critical to their viability in tough economic times.  (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)

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>Cell Towers : Its Déjà vu all over again

>Cell Towers : Its Déjà vu all over again
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ – Its Déjà vu all over again looks like  the bid request that was put out before last nights meeting  was pulled by the council from the agenda. And once again the question remains what is the appeal with the T-Mobile push for Barnett Place?

On the surface it doesn’t seem to be as lucrative for the Village as the Fire House .The Moratorium on Wireless Telecommunication Facility Special Committee people were simply looking for some ground rules for residents and wireless company to provide service and minimize impact on neighborhoods.

The council seems split on the idea of a Special Committee and with good reason ,as we all know often the best intentions create unintended consequences . We are not big fans of government committees but a standard set of regional ground rules for both wireless companies and residents seems a bit over due .According to the Special Committee people we “presently have proposals for the construction of three cellular towers (“wireless telecommunications facilities”) within approximately one mile of each other ”  .

Everyone knows that all three will not be built. The conflicting proposals leave residents with a moving target and cell companies unable to properly plan a seamless network strategy .The current system works like musical chairs companies are forced to propose as many towers as possible , hopefully spreading out the resistance and latching on to the first one that get through the process  ,while ditching the others .

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>More discord over school aid plan

>More discord over school aid plan


The numbers are out for how much state aid New Jersey schools will get this year, but a new round of discord is just getting started.

A day after Gov. Chris Christie released a plan giving every school district more aid than last year, Democrats in the Legislature said Wednesday that Christie wasn’t giving residents the full picture. Meanwhile, a Republican lawmaker urged superintendents to use the extra money to lower property taxes instead of to restore school programs.  (Lederman, The Associated Press)

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>The man with the plan…to reorganize the Department of Education

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The man with the plan…to reorganize the Department of Education

Six months into office acting Education Commissioner Chris Cerf has begun filling out his department with a mix of out-of-state transplants and New Jersey veterans, including former commissioner David Hespe.
Cerf yesterday announced a new organizational chart for the 700-employee department, actually a series of charts that he said will better align the Department of Education with his priorities. Central will be four new assistant commissioners focusing on broader state policy: Chief Academic Officer, Chief Performance Officer, Chief Talent Officer and Chief Innovation Officer.  (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)

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>Moody’s Places U.S. on Review for Downgrade As Debt Talks Stall

>Moody’s Places U.S. on Review for Downgrade As Debt Talks Stall
By John Detrixhe – Jul 13, 2011 6:01 PM ET

Moody’s Investors Service put the U.S. under review for a credit rating downgrade as talks to raise the government’s $14.3 trillion debt limit stall, adding to concern that political gridlock will lead to a default.

The Aaa ratings of financial institutions directly linked to the U.S. government, including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Home Loan Banks, and the Federal Farm Credit Banks, were also put on review for cuts, Moody’s said in a statement today.

The U.S., rated Aaa since 1917, was put on review for the first time since 1995 on concern the debt limit will not be raised in time to prevent a missed payment of interest or principal on outstanding bonds and notes even though the risk remains low, Moody’s said. The rating would likely be reduced to the Aa range and there is no assurance that Moody’s would return its top rating even if a default is quickly cured.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-13/u-s-rating-placed-on-review-for-downgrade-by-moody-s-as-debt-talks-stall.html

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A Coup d’état at the Zoning board of adjustment

>A Coup d’état at the Zoning board of adjustment
Pj Blogger and the Staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ – Fireworks were felt at the Zoning board of adjustment meeting when both Doug Cronk, a former council candidate, and Dean Vellis, a Fields Use Policy proponent, were not reappointed to the board.


It seems the Village is looking to clean house to avoid any impression of conflict of interest  before the controversial H-Zone ,Valley Renewal Village Council special meetings. The Village is looking to avoid a repeat of the  “I forgot to tell anybody my father was a Valley Trustee ”  death bed confession of a former Village Mayor.


Many viewed  the move as unexpected but is was rather difficult to not notice the impression that Doug  Cronk and his running mate Brian Dowd ran a very pro Valley campaign , perhaps accepting contributions and as many allege campaign support from Valley Hospital itself  , Doug also finds himself  involved with the “bogus” pro Valley Renewal group that has sprung up from the “artificial turf”. Cronk and Dowd were defeated by current members Deputy Mayor Tom Riche and Councilwoman Bernadette Walsh.


Dean Vellis who runs the junior football program in the Village, and is a big proponent of youth sports may have been targeted because of the continued anxiety over whether many of the ‘turf and field light projects have been alleged to have been misrepresented to the public.


The other elephant in the room was the mishandled  “Action Park” Graydon pool  project which was under the thumb of none other than Melinda Cronk the wife of Doug.


The house cleaning had already started with the “sudden departure” Planning Board Chairmen David Nicholson a Valley ally who was presiding over an extremely unpopular tenure at the Board.


While Cronk and Vellis claim the vote not to re-appoint was politically motivated the Village Council seems to have woken up to the fact that it is a new day in the Village and the last 15 years of “we can do what ever we want and your gonna pay for it” are now over.


A new professional atmosphere is reemerging  and perhaps the council is beginning to see both the liability and the folly of the all the incestuousness and parochial self interests that has so tarnished the image of the Village .

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>AMBER Ready: The Moonlighting Cop, The Wanna Be Mogul and The Killer App That Wasn’t

>AMBER Ready: The Moonlighting Cop, The Wanna Be Mogul and The Killer App That Wasn’t

Editors Note: A link was added to the section referencing Fairview Police Chief  John Pinzone.

Editors Note II: A paragraph discussing the indictment of former AMBER Ready CEO Kai Patterson was inserted, along with a link to the indictment and his comment about the matter.

A small company in Morris County, New Jersey is evidence the first of how very bad things happen to good ideas when Wall Street gets involved.

Like most Wall Street initiated disasters AMBER Ready (AMBER stands for Americas Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response) began with some noble intentions. The backstory: In 1998, a veteran computer engineer named Kai Patterson witnessed firsthand the horror his secretary went through when her son was abducted by her estranged husband. Specifically, he was struck by law enforcement’s waste of time in trying to get recent pictures and accurate descriptions of the missing, a problem that virtually guaranteed a lower chance of safely recovering them. (The secretary’s son was found unharmed a year later.)

Fast forward to late 2008. Patterson has given up more lucrative corporate work and is now working full-time on the issue, having raised some capital from John Thomas Financial, a scrappy young investment-bank. Convinced that his old model of having a small army of marketers canvass malls, school fairs and PTA conventions for customers to sign up via personal computer is inefficient, he hired a mobile-phone applications developer called Blinglets. Unlike previous versions, this would enable any customer with a cell phone to download their children’s pictures and key identification data to a form AMBER Ready provided. In event of an emergency, within a few minutes police throughout the region could have everything they need to coordinate recovery operations.

https://www.thefinancialinvestigator.com/?p=181

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>Corey Taylor @ Bookends ,Friday, July 15th 6:00pm

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Corey Taylor cover

Corey Taylor, Friday, July 15th @ 6:00pm
Lead Vocalist for Slipknot & Stone Sour, Corey Taylor, will sign his new book: The Seven Dealdly Sins
Books available: July 12th

Appearing authors will only autograph books purchased at Bookends and must have valid Bookends Receipt.
Availability & pricing for all autographed books subject to change.
Bookends cannot guarantee that the books that are Autographed will always be First Printings.
Autographed books purchased at Bookends are non-returnable.
Please call the store for details.
 
Bookends, 211 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ   07450   201-445-0726

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>Village will hold Valley Hospital meetings at Ridgewood High School

>Village will hold Valley Hospital meetings at Ridgewood High School

TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2011  
BY KELLY EBBELS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

At least seven Village Council special meetings will be held beginning in September to discuss The Valley Hospital expansion proposal, officials announced Monday.

Special meetings to discuss The Valley Hospital’s expansion proposal will be held this fall in the Ridgewood High School Campus Center.
The meetings will be held at the Ridgewood High School (RHS) Campus Center. The meeting location is a crucial aspect of the proceedings, in light of incidents at last June’s Planning Board meeting at George Washington Middle School, when council members voted to alter the Master Plan to allow Valley to proceed with its “Renewal” project. Hundreds of people were left standing outside the facility due to capacity limitations. Residents also protested a lack of parking at that meeting.

The council has the final vote on whether to amend the village’s “H zone” ordinance and allow the expansion.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/125432738_Village_will_hold_Valley_Hospital_meetings_at_Ridgewood_High_School.html

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>Christie moves quickly to build school board

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Christie moves quickly to build school board

Typically appointed by subsequent governors, members of the state Board of Education serve staggered terms as a way to provide some political stability to the panel that influences much of state education policy and regulation.

But in the last year, Gov. Chris Christie has not-so-quietly shaken up the membership of the once-sleepy body, appointing nearly half of the 13 members. His fifth and sixth appointments are to be sworn in when the board meets today.  (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)