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>PARENTS INVITED TO OCTOBER 27 DINNER DISCUSSION ON TEEN PREVENTION

>PARENTS INVITED TO OCTOBER 27 DINNER DISCUSSION ON TEEN PREVENTION

The Ridgewood Guild and Ridgewood Municipal Alliance invite all parents to Parent2Parent: Alcohol and Our Teens Town Hall Dinner on Thursday, October 27 at 6:30 p.m. in the RHS Campus Center, to share concerns and determine strategies to reduce underage drinking in the community. RHS Principal Jack Lorenz will introduce the panelists, who will speak about the issues facing our teens and which will include Assistant Principal Basil Pizzuto, RHS Crisis Intervention Counselor Lauren DePinto, Valley Hospital Emergency Room Physician Bruce Felsentstein and a Ridgewood police officer. A light dinner will be provided by “It’s Greek to Me.” For more information e-mail David Zrike at dzrike@zrike.com.

The Ridgewood Municipal Alliance has launched a new website at www.ridgewoodmunicipalalliance.org. The new site has information and resources on substance abuse and prevention, including sections on alcohol and drugs, tobacco products and local help resources, links to recent news headlines regarding alcohol and drugs, and FAQs about Ridgewood’s underage drinking ordinance. The site may be accessed via the Parents tab on the district website, or through the Village of Ridgewood website at www.ridgewoodnj.net.

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>Average Girl, part of Bergen County collective, brings its aggressive live show to Hoboken

>Average Girl, part of Bergen County collective, brings its aggressive live show to Hoboken
Published: Thursday, October 13, 2011, 4:45 PM
By Jim Testa/For The Jersey Journal

The members of Average Girl may live in Brooklyn, with two members who originally hail from rural Pennsylvania. But when the trio brings its sweaty, energetic take on alt-country to Maxwell’s on Friday, October 14, it will be as part of a collective that’s looking to be a launching pad for some of New Jersey’s most promising underground bands.

One member of Average Girl, singer/guitarist Cary Kehayan, comes from Glen Rock, the Bergen County suburb which, along with neighboring Ridgewood, has produced some of the most successful New Jersey acts of the last several years, including Titus Andronicus, the Vivian Girls, and Real Estate. “It’s kind of crazy that my high school turned into this breeding ground for all these amazing bands,” Kehayan said. “I think what connects them is that they all share this basement scene mentality. If there isn’t a place that will let you play, you find a place, whether it’s a basement or a hall or a warehouse or whatever.”

https://www.nj.com/hobokennow/index.ssf/2011/10/average_girl_part_of_bergen_co.html

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>Ridgewood residents continue to press council on flooding issues

>Ridgewood residents continue to press council on flooding issues

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2011  
BY KELLY EBBELS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

State Sen. Kevin O’Toole is set to visit Ridgewood on Oct. 26 to tour its hurricane-damaged areas. After pleas at Wednesday’s Village Council meeting, it is clear officials will have their hands full for many months and that many residents are hoping for assistance from the state.

Residents asked the council on Wednesday to create action plans to clean up various ditches and areas of village streams. However, Village Manager Ken Gabbert has pointed out that the village’s top priority now is fixing an area near the Saddle River by Route 17 where an entire sewer line washed away. That work could cost more than $600,000, he said.

“That’s a major engineering process and it is consuming the engineering department,” Gabbert said to resident Leslie Cimino of Burnside Place, who made a pitch at Wednesday’s council meeting for the village to clean up the Zabriskie ditch behind her and her neighbors’ houses, which she said contributes to flooding.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/131807953_Ridgewood_residents_continue_to_press_council_on_flooding_issues.html

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2011 Cigar Family Charitable Foundation Toast Across America Sampler @ Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

2011 Cigar Family Charitable Foundation Toast Across America Sampler @ Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

fuentetoastsampler theridgewoodblog.net

The Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood | 10 Chestnut Street | Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450
Phone: 201-447-2204 | Email: info@tobaccoshop.com
Hours: Monday – Saturday 10:00AM – 5:30PM and Thursday Night 6:30PM – 8:30PM

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>New Jersey Department of Education enforces new background checks for board members and charter school trustees

>

New Jersey Department of Education enforces new background checks for board members and charter school trustees

The state Department of Education has notified public and charter school officials that school board members and charter school trustees who have not registered for the new criminal background check will be removed from office.

An Oct. 11 letter sent to chief school administrators by Robert J. Cicchino, Director of the Office of Fiscal Accountability and Compliance, said all of the registrations should be complete. He asked school officials to confirm that their board members or trustees have complied, and to send the names of those who have not to the state, which will notify them that they are no longer eligible to serve on the board.  (D’Amico, Press of Atlantic City)

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>Bloomberg Caves :Violence Breaks Out During ‘Occupy Wall Street’ March Toward New York Stock Exchange

>Bloomberg Caves :Violence Breaks Out During ‘Occupy Wall Street’ March Toward New York Stock Exchange
October 14, 2011 9:45 AM

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – Just a short while after protesters learned they’d be able to stay in Zuccotti Park indefinitely, violence broke out as a group marched away from it.

Protesters, apparently jubilant over being able to stay in the park after their furious cleanup efforts, took their brooms, flags and signs and started fanning out at around 7:30 a.m.

1010 WINS’ Steve Sandberg reported the protesters were saying things to the effect that now that they’d cleaned up the park, they were going to clean up Wall Street.

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/10/14/violence-breaks-out-during-occupy-wall-street-march-on-wall-street/

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>GRAYDON CLEANUP

>GRAYDON CLEANUP

Come help remove debris from Tropical Storm Irene

Sunday, October 23, 2 to 4 PM
No signup–just show up

Meet at: the Pavilion at Graydon (covered area just beyond patio at the deep end)

Wear: work boots and gloves

Bring: rakes, large clippers (loppers, pruners), tarps. Bring extras if you have them. Mark with your name.

Where to park: Graydon Pool parking lots (corner of Linwood Avenue and Northern Parkway)

Questions: Department of Parks and Recreation, 201-670-5560, Mon.-Fri., 8:30-4:30

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>Rep. Scott Garrett : Education policy is a local issue

>Education policy is a local issue
By Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.) – 10/12/11 06:55 PM ET

In an apparent attempt to roll back federal mandates included in the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law, the Obama administration recently announced that it will issue waivers to states to shield them from proficiency requirements included in the law and provide them with the authority to set their own achievement standards.

For those who oppose the burdens placed on our schools by the federal government, the Obama administration’s announcement should be considered a win. Unfortunately, as is often the case with federal policy coming out of Washington, all that glitters is not gold. Only after digging deeper into the fine print of the Obama administration’s latest round of education policy does the real picture come into focus.

It turns out the Obama administration is dumping one set of federal proficiency standards for another. Rather than adopting a new approach to education reform, the Obama administration is doubling down on the same failed policies of its predecessor. I disagreed with former President George W. Bush when he first tried this approach and I disagree with Obama today.
Instead, I believe that those closest to the students, the individuals who understand their needs the best and are directly responsible for their well-being, should have the authority to set their own standards.

That is why I have introduced the Local Education Authority Returns Now (LEARN) Act. The LEARN Act would allow states to opt out of NCLB rules entirely and retain the dollars that would have been sent to Washington by reimbursing the taxpayers through a tax credit. The process is simple, straightforward and truly empowers states, teachers and parents to determine how to best meet the needs of their students.

The LEARN Act would work in three steps. First, a state decides that the strings attached to federal money are hampering the ability of its parents and teachers to educate its children as they see fit and enacts a law opting out of NCLB. Second, the Treasury Department determines how much money an opt-out state is entitled to. Finally, the taxpayers of the opt-out state receive a tax credit to reimburse them for the funds that were diverted to Washington. This method immediately cuts the authoritative and financial strings of the federal government so that state and local governments can set their own educational standards while ensuring maximum parental involvement.

Unlike my bill, which actually addresses the failure of NCLB, the president’s proposal further empowers Washington bureaucrats to control the classroom. The waivers the president has advertised are a prime example of this. Instead of actually providing states the authority to set their own standards, there are strings attached — certain conditions and requirements that must be met to qualify for a waiver. Under his new system, states would qualify for a waiver only after agreeing to embrace Obama’s education agenda. In particular, only those states that adopt new academic standards the administration deems “college and career ready” will be relieved from the 2014 deadline on student proficiency standards included in NCLB.

NCLB set a precedent for attempts to centralize education control within the federal government. One has to wonder, what happened to the state legislators? What happened to the countless township school boards and local elected officials? All across the nation, parents, teachers and administrators — the people closest to and most directly responsible for the students —have been shut out of the process.

It is imperative that we abandon this centralized philosophy altogether rather than simply replacing misguided policies with worse ones. The future of our nation depends on our ability to educate and train the generations that will one day carry on the legacy of freedom and prosperity. We are failing at this task because states are focused on conforming to federal regulations rather than cultivating a competitive atmosphere where states are challenging each other to best educate our students.

Our education system will not improve until we remove Washington bureaucrats from the equation. It’s time to return to the system our founders envisioned; it’s time to return education policy back to the local communities; it’s time to start putting our children first.

Garrett is chairman of the House Financial Services’s subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises.

Source:
https://thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/187207-education-policy-is-a-local-issue

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>New Jersey’s pension fund falls 7% in 3rd quarter

>New Jersey’s pension fund falls 7% in 3rd quarter


New Jersey’s pension funds climbed nearly 18 percent through June, then fell back along with the global slide in stock prices, according to a state report released Thursday.

The report by the state Division of Investment showed that the pension fund was led by the 32 percent gain in its investments in U.S. stocks through the end of the fiscal year, June 30. That was followed by a 25.6 percent gain in its international stock holdings.

But the pension fund in total has dropped nearly 7 percent through Sept. 30, to $66.4 billion.
Timothy Walsh, the director of the Division of Investment, told a board overseeing the pension funds that “all cylinders were firing,” in the fiscal year that ended in June, as all areas where the fund invested money had gained.  (Method, Gannett)

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>Ridgewood Garage and Estate Sales

>Collectibles to Household Items (Ridgewood NJ)

Something for everyone: Antique, Vintage, Contemp. Goya classical guitar, purses, opera glasses, rhinestone jewelry. Crystal, cut glass, serving pieces, bowls, platters. Art & decor: Mervine Chianelli sculpture, framed Wm. Thon lithograph, hand-carved African statue, candlesticks, wall sconces. Pair of standing cabinets, side chair, folding fireplace screen. Full set “Design Four” dishes, lg covered roasting pan, Dirt Devil Deluxe heavy-duty upright vacuum Patterns for Amer.Girl doll clothes, 6′ free-standing ladder, portable closet (new), large rope hammock, hard-shell ski cases, asst. clothing (women’s 6-8, men’s 38), much more! SAT 10/15 & SUN 10/16, 9:00-4:00 441 HAWTHORNE PL (off S. Irving) No early calls please. CASH ONLY

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>Sharp rise in foreclosures as banks move in

>Sharp rise in foreclosures as banks move in

Increase signals banks are moving more aggressively against borrowers who have fallen behind on mortgage payments

More U.S. homes are entering the foreclosure process, but they’re taking ever longer to get sold or repossessed by lenders.

The number of U.S. homes that received a first-time default notice during the July to September quarter increased 14 percent compared to the second quarter of the year, RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

That increase signals banks are moving more aggressively now against borrowers who have fallen behind on their mortgage payments than they have since industrywide foreclosure processing problems emerged last fall. Those problems resulted in a sharp drop in foreclosure activity this year.

https://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44885991/ns/business-real_estate/#.TpbgDpsg_lY

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“No Money" : Habernickel was bought, many other projects undertaken, and money was found for those – and still seems to be found- even for retroactive raises

>“No Money” : Habernickel was bought, many other projects undertaken, and money was found for those – and still seems to be found- even for retroactive raises

One person we know of who was badly affected by the non-connected storm drains asked the Village to fix that for many years, and sadly he died still waiting for the problem to be resolved. It still is unresolved.

Many times his family’s property was damaged. Many times he requested the Village take care of the problem – and was told over and again “no money” and that they would get to it when there was money available. This pre-dates fields, turf and Habernickel.

Other people we know have asked that very worn curbs be fixed for years and received the same answer.

And on our street, Village planted trees many years ago and then refused to care for them when they uprooted walks and driveways, saying they’d retroactively changed the law and the trees now are yours- but you must get permission if you want to cut them down.

If you read elsewhere on this blog too, you’ll see that recently a new proposal to give more Village trees to homeowners was made though tabled (for now). And also that the Mgr just announced a discharge fee would be applied to some homes.

Many streets are also in bad shape and need repairs around the Village.

It wasn’t as much about sewer connections as these other things, though years ago the Village didn’t charge you for the under-the-street part if that failed, either- as other posters have noted. You were not responsible to pay for the part under the street, just under your own property. If you have to dig up the street, many fees and charges apply and there is a big and expensive process involved.

In the interim though, Habernickel was bought, many other projects undertaken, and money was found for those – and still seems to be found- even for retroactive raises.

But apparently not for all the other stuff – that’s the issue- why not?

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>Public hearings on N.J. redistricting process draw few attendees

>

Public hearings on N.J. redistricting process draw few attendees

One of New Jersey’s 13 Congress members is going to lose a job next year, but from all appearances the public seems unfazed.

A commission held public meetings on redistricting today in two cities — Newark and New Brunswick — but only about 30 people showed up at each.

Even those involved in the slicing and dicing of House districts — a 13-member panel is formed every 10 years to redraw boundaries for House members — acknowledge interest seems to be lacking.  (Friedman, The Star-Ledger)

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>Michelle Dombrowski weds Jason Jacoby

>Michelle Dombrowski weds Jason Jacoby

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2011  
COMMUNITY NEWS (ELMWOOD PARK EDITION)

Michelle Dombrowski, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dombrowski of Lodi, was united in marriage to Jason Jacoby, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jacoby of Lodi, on July 9 at St. Francis de Sales Church in Lodi. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Jack Baron. A reception followed at Il Villaggio in Carlstadt.

…The bride is a fourth-grade teacher for the Lodi Board of Education. The groom is a firefighter/EMT in the Village of Ridgewood….

https://www.northjersey.com/community/announcements/131732858_Michelle_Dombrowski_weds_Jason_Jacoby.html