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>Though it was promised Obamacare would reduce costs by increasing participation and competition, so far reality has been just the opposite

>Though it was promised Obamacare would reduce costs by increasing participation and competition, so far reality has been just the opposite

The health insurance cost for my small biz went up 16% from 2010 to 2011 and now that plan is being completely discontinued for 2012. The closest replacement we can get will be almost 20% more than we paid in 2011.

That’s (for 2012) now with a $5000 deductible too (for a single employee, $10,000 for family). In 2011 that was $3000/6000. In 2010 it was $1000/2500. It’s basically become catastrophic insurance, and it is pretty hard to afford anything else right now.

For 2012, we will also offer employees another plan with a $1500 in-network ded ($4500 out of network), but the cost per month is nearly $2000 for a family and over $600 for a single employee.

We will pay for the high-ded plan but anyone wanting the other will have to pay the cost diff. I sure won’t be able to afford that other plan myself– the cost on a fam. basis comes to nearly $24,000 a year, more than double the cost of the high-ded plan on same basis.

Welcome to the new world of health insurance. Though it was promised Obamacare would reduce costs by increasing participation and competition, so far reality has been just the opposite – lots more cost, less benefits, more out of pocket and higher premiums- as well as carriers simply dropping some plans entirely because they claim they lose money on them.

Meanwhile, our biz’s revenue declined during 2011 vs. 2010. We had no choice but to lay off some employees and are down to lowest staffing we’ve had in many years.

Teachers need to face the fact that many of those who pay all the costs are hurting badly.

The fact is that this year as the owner of our small biz, I’ll make less myself than what I used to be able to pay some employees, which is also less than many Ridgewood teachers make. Most of the firms we compete with have had similar experiences lately.

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>Despite success on the field, big-spending Rutgers athletics is saddled with its largest deficit ever

>Despite success on the field, big-spending Rutgers athletics is saddled with its largest deficit ever


It was a sea of scarlet.

Rutgers University’s newly expanded football stadium was jammed with 52,737 boisterous fans for the 2009 home opener against the Cincinnati Bearcats, a sellout crowd that brought in $1.6 million in ticket sales, shattering attendance records.

More than 30,500 of the fans had bought season tickets, including 892 who shelled out hundreds of dollars for new luxury club seats, built to attract wealthy supporters and potential donors. A new state-of-the art scoreboard adorned the southern end zone like a resplendent trophy. Despite the eventual loss, there was an optimistic energy in the air.

That heady day seems long ago now.  (Renshaw, The Star-Ledger)

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>Market Competition and Consumer Choice Act (S-2664)

>Market Competition and Consumer Choice Act (S-2664)

Anthony Bastardi

The NJ Senate has been considering the Market Competition and Consumer Choice Act (S-2664), a bill that will let our state “break loose from the past and begin building it’s future” according to Anthony Bastardi, Chairman of the Board of New Jersey Foundation for Public Broadcasting.  This billmodernizes the telecom regulations – something that has not been changed in about a century (since the Ma Bell days).

“These rules, created decades ago before the iPhone, laptop computer or the Internet were even dreamed of, hamstring the communications marketplace and prevent competitors from operating on a level playing field. As it stands, government red tape is slowing innovation and preventing communicationsproviders from creating jobs in New Jersey.” (see Bastardi’s entire letter here:

 https://www.nj.com/independentpress/index.ssf/2011/12/building_new_jerseys_future.html

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>Holidays Fuentes Now in Stock @ Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

>

Holidays+Fuentes theridgewoodblog.net

Holidays Fuentes Now in Stock @ Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood
Special Holiday Fuentes Have Arrived!

Opus X and Anejo as well as other very rare and special Fuentes
are available starting Friday December 16, 2011.

Specialty cigars are limited to 1 or 2 per person
as we hope to share these limited cigars with all our customers!

Wishing you and your family a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!


~Gary, Barbara and Collin”

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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>Ex-Freddie, Fannie CEOs Sued for Understating Loans

>Ex-Freddie, Fannie CEOs Sued for Understating Loans
By David Glovin and Joshua Gallu – Dec 16, 2011 11:07 AM ET

Daniel Mudd, the former chief executive officer of Fannie Mae, and Richard Syron, ex-CEO of Freddie Mac, were sued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for understating by hundreds of billions of dollars the subprime loans held by the agencies.

The lawsuits filed today in Manhattan federal court were followed by an SEC statement that it had entered into non- prosecution agreements with each lender. Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored enterprise which issues almost half of all mortgage-backed securities, and Freddie Mac, the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage-finance company, had “agreed to accept responsibility” for their conduct, the SEC said.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-16/sec-sues-former-freddie-mac-chief-executive-richard-syron-in-new-york.html

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>Aviation and Rocketry Camp – December 27 & 28

>Aviation and Rocketry Camp – December 27 & 28

December Recess Aviation and Rocketry Camp with Ridgewood Recreation

Come discover the aviator in you! Join Hobby Quest and Ridgewood Recreation for a two day camp of building models from scratch and flying them outdoors (weather permitting).

Students will learn to read plans, make necessary calculations and work with hobby tools. They will learn the importance of each part: the wings, rudder, elevator and fuselage. Famous aviators and historical inventions are also reviewed.

The camp is offered to students in grades K-5 and will be held both Tuesday and Wednesday, December 27 and 28, from 9 am to 12 noon each day, at the Stable, 259 North Maple Avenue. The cost per child is $65 per child which includes all materials.

Space is limited and early registration is suggested. Register online at www.ridgewoodnj.net/communitypass or in person or by mail – The Stable, 259 North Maple Avenue, Ridgewood. The registration form can be located on the Recreation homepage at www.ridgewoodnj.net/recreation. For more information contact the Recreation Office at 201-670-5560.

Microsoft Store

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>Second life for 240-year-old Ridgewood home

>Second life for 240-year-old Ridgewood home

By Kathleen Lynn, McClatchy/Tribune news
12:09 p.m. CST, December 15, 2011

Julie Tung, a history major turned software executive, wanted a historic house to restore. Ed Schwartz, her boyfriend (now husband), wanted a house he could make energy-efficient. And it had to be near Glen Rock, N.J., where his son lives.

They found the answer in a 240-year-old Ridgewood, N.J., house in such woeful shape that it was at risk of being torn down. In 2006, the couple paid $843,000 for the house, which was built by members of the Westervelt family, early Dutch settlers.

Five years and hundreds of thousands of dollars later, the couple has a house that mixes old and new to make it sustainable. The chandeliers are antique, but their bulbs are energy-efficient LED or compact fluorescent. There are solar panels on the roof and the original pine on the floors.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-cons-1215-old-house-20111215,0,5698024.story

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>The Ridgewood train station is a model of inefficiency

>

ridgewoodtrainstation theridgewoodblog



The Ridgewood train station is a model of inefficiency

The train station is a model of inefficiency. There is a colossal center awning presumably to shield the dozen or so max people at a time who take the train from Ridgewood to points west. The entire train debarks north of both crossings, even further from the parking lot. The eastbound platform has an awning that halfway overhangs dead space, and hardly provides any shelter from rain in a slight breeze…which is moot anyway because the eastbound trains stop for the most part south of that whole awning anyway…just where they stopped before. When you come up from Franklin to the eastbound track, you have to go all the way to the end of a long ramp then back up the ramp to the platform; there are no stairs straight to the platform (yes, I have missed the train because of this).

To top it all off, the power bill alone would probably pay a couple salaries.

And the station house is sterile east bloc retro compared to what it used to be: warm, cozy and with a nice lady selling coffee and bagels.

Two thumbs down, money wasted. Typical Jersey.

Microsoft Store

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>Suburban school construction hits lowest point in past decade

>Suburban school construction hits lowest point in past decade


2011 did not turn out to be a very good year for school construction in New Jersey.
On the heels of the Schools Development Authority launching just a single project so far in one of New Jersey’s poorest districts, the suburban districts had their slowest year in a decade as well.

On Tuesday, just two of six projects proposed by districts were approved by voters in the referendum votes that take place five times a year. That makes 2011 the lowest year for both the number of projects approved and projects proposed since the Educational Facilities Construction and Financing Act was signed in 2000.
Only a quarter of the 24 projects proposed overall this year won voter approval, according to the state’s School Boards Association, continuing a trend from the middle of the decade when a majority passed. In 2010, only half were approved. The best year was in 2003, when 93 projects were proposed, and voters passed 73 of them.  (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)

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>Here We Go Again : Turnpike budget blat; toll hike to fund road projects

>Here We Go Again : Turnpike budget blat; toll hike to fund road projects


Call the 2012 New Jersey Turnpike Authority operating budget a wash.

The bottom line of the 2012 operating budget is unchanged from this year’s at $475 million, but there are 141 fewer faces at the authority, which helped keep spending down to operate the Turnpike and Garden State Parkway, said Veronique Hakim, executive director. The total number of authority employees will be 2,011 full-timers in 2012, she said.

“The 141 are mostly retirees. We’re using more part-time toll collectors and there are changes in the flow and function,” she said. “If someone who was sitting next to you retired, it is likely you are doing your job and theirs.”  (Higgs, Gannett)

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>With states desperate to keep jobs, companies have upper hand, report finds

>With states desperate to keep jobs, companies have upper hand, report finds


As the unemployment crisis grinds on, states are trying to both lure and retain businesses by offering tax breaks, grants, cheap loans — just about anything (short of candy and foot massages) they can think of. But how many jobs do these expensive incentives actually create?
And are the jobs any good?

Economic development programs cost states and cities billions of dollars a year, but many programs require little if any job creation, fewer than half call for wage standards, and fewer than a quarter require the companies to provide health care for their workers, according to a study of program requirements scheduled to be released Wednesday by Good Jobs First, a nonprofit research organization that tracks corporate subsidies. Some merely require companies to invest in plants or new equipment, which could actually enable them to reduce their head counts.  (Cooper, The New York Times)

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>NJ Telecom bills compete

>NJ Telecom bills compete


State Democratic lawmakers remain split over how far deregulation should extend for telecommunications and cable TV.

The AARP and consumer groups say loosening the rules could leave residents with little recourse if faced with higher bills and reduced services.

But with Democrats offering competing bills, it appears neither side will be a winner in obtaining full approvals before this legislative session ends next month.

Senators Ray Lesniak of Union County and Bob Smith of Middlesex County, prime drivers of the two vastly different pieces of deregulation, said there’s little chance the proposals will move forward in the final weeks of the upper house‘s lame duck session.

Lesniak’s offering boasts Republican support. It has already passed through the Assembly but has undergone heavy criticism from consumer groups, who claim it gives too much freedom to companies such as Verizon and Comcast.  (Jordan, Gannett)

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>North Jersey seat expected to vanish

>North Jersey seat expected to vanish


One of New Jersey’s 13 congressmen will be out of a job next year, when two incumbents are thrown together into a new district and forced to compete for a single seat.

Just whom those incumbents will be is expected to be decided next week by a bipartisan commission meeting in New Brunswick. The result will help determine whether Democrats or Republicans ultimately lose a seat. New Jersey is currently represented by seven Democrats and six Republicans.

The panel, headed by Rutgers Law School Dean John Farmer Jr. as the tie-breaking 13th member, will begin reviewing district maps proposed by both parties on Monday. While the process isn’t required by law to be completed till mid-January, Farmer has been aiming for an agreement on a new map before Christmas.  (Delli Santi, Associated Press)

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>Orpheus Club Holiday Concert

>

orpheusclub the+ridgewood+blog

Orpheus Club Holiday Concert

Men’s chorus performing holiday music – classics, Broadway, pop, and more! December 17 & 18 at Ridgewood United Methodist Church, Dayton Street, Ridgewood.Guest artist trumpeter Rick Henley. $15 at the Door; $10 in advance www.ridgewoodorpheusclub.org Information:201/652-2873

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>Fast food restaurant ordinance approved in Ridgewood

>

fastfoof theridgewoodblog.net

Fast food restaurant ordinance approved in Ridgewood

THURSDAY DECEMBER 15, 2011, 11:10 AM
BY JOSEPH CRAMER
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Following extensive discussion this year at the Ridgewood Planning Board level, an ordinance amending the village code to permit fast food restaurants in the Central Business District (CBD) was unanimously passed with little fanfare at the Village Council meeting on Wednesday.

The ordinance eliminates the definition and word usage of “fast food” and revises existing permitted uses in the B-1, B-2 and C zones to specifically prohibit drive-through uses – including banks, pharmacies and restaurants – and window service.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/135662658_Fast_food_restaurant_ordinance_approved_in_Ridgewood.html