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>Ridgewood one of three Bergen County towns on Gov. Chris Christie’s list of biggest payouts for unused sick time

>Ridgewood one of three Bergen County towns on Gov. Chris Christie’s list of biggest payouts for unused sick time
Published: Monday, December 19, 2011, 3:41 PM  
By S.P. Sullivan, NJ.com

Three Bergen County towns are on Gov. Chris Christie’s short list of municipalities where unused sick time for public workers cost the most per household.

In figures released by the Governor’s office Monday, Alpine Borough ranked 3rd, Hackensack 4th and Ridgewood 9th on the list of towns that paid the most per capita in accumulated sick and vacation time owed to public employees.

According to the Governor’s office, residents of Alpine Borough owe the most per family in Bergen County, with a total of $850,523, or $1,169 per household. Hackensack taxpayers are on the hook for $18,875,368 in unused time, or $1,030 per household. The village of Ridgewood owes its public employees $7,203,566, or $861 per household.

https://www.nj.com/bergen/index.ssf/2011/12/hackensack_ridgewood_top_gov_chris_christies_list_of_towns_that_pay_out_most_in_unused_sick_time.html

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>New Jersey’s reliance on natural gas to grow, experts agree

>New Jersey’s reliance on natural gas to grow, experts agree


Like it or not, natural gas will probably play a bigger role in New Jersey’s energy future.
That was the consensus of a panel of experts who convened Friday at Rider University for a NJ Spotlight Roundtable on natural gas to debate the pros and cons of promoting greater reliance on the fossil fuel — a stance embraced by the recently adopted Energy Master Plan.

From expanding the state’s network of interstate gas pipelines, to encouraging fleet owners to switch their vehicles from diesel to compressed natural gas, to generating electricity more efficiently and with less pollution, the plan envisions gas replacing more carbon-polluting alternatives.  (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)

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>Can we save $2.2M by using private county security in Bergen?

>Can we save $2.2M by using private county security in Bergen?

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2011  
BY JAMES QUIRK
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Bergen County’s three law enforcement agencies — the Bergen County Police Department, Prosecutor’s Office and Sheriff’s Office — deploy civilian security guards in public facilities, a service that a recent report recommended should be outsourced to save taxpayers as much as $2.2 million over the next five years.

Bergen County Police Sgt. John LaDuca outside the Bergen Community College student center in Paramus. A recent report recommended that outsourcing security services to public facilities in the county could save taxpayers as much as $2.2 million over the next five years.
The report issued by the New York-based Guidepost Solutions in May is best known for its recommendation that the county police be downsized or eliminated. But many of the other findings within the 192-page report have not been discussed by public officials, including the conclusion that the county could save $365,000 to $440,000 a year if the three agencies hired private companies to provide security guards.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/135843278_Can_we_save__2_2M_by_using_private_county_security_.html

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>Shop Ridgewood : ULRICH, INC.

>ULRICH, INC.
100 Chestnut St. Ridgewood, NJ 07450
201-445-1260

We consistently offer excellence across our entire range of services:

Our design staff has received numerous major awards and have been published in local and national magazines.
We meet multiple design and installation needs by offering start-to-finish custom home remodeling.
Our staff believe in us and stay with us – many of our craftsmen have been with us for over 20 years.
That’s the kind of commitment and experience we bring to each job.

Custom Home Remodeling and Interior Design

Whether you’re looking to remodel your entire home or just one room; add a custom entertainment center to your living room; or need a home addition, our designers will create a custom solution personalized for you. During the design process we focus on space planning to ensure that your home functions at its greatest potential.

https://ulrichinc.com/home-remodeling-services/home-remodeling-services.htm

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>Shop Ridgewood : Hillmann Lighting

>

Hillman theridgwoodblog.net

Hillmann Lighting
133 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Phone: (201) 652-1045

Hillmann Electric & Lighting showroom of Ridgewood NJ, has been providing NJ exceptional lighting for 101 years. Four generations have carried on this mission, and today provide a vast selection of residential lighting from the finest lighting manufacturers.

Our NJ lighting showroom discounts Hubbardton Forge lighting, Murray Feiss lighting, Kichler lighting among others, even though more designer and upscale than other lighting showrooms. We continue our time tested value pricing. This honest low pricing policy continues to surprise our new lighting showroom customers in the North NJ / NY metro area.

Hillmann Electric & Lighting NJ is committed to the achievement of a leadership position within the NJ lighting showroom community through the ongoing introduction of exclusive product and superior customer support focused to provide our customer’s with the finest lighting from around the world. Watch for our new website coming soon.

We represent over 100 lighting manufacturers of quality lighting, with over 6000 lighting fixtures on display in our Ridgewood NJ lighting showroom.

We keep our lighting Website simple to keep it inexpensive. We pass the savings to our customers. NO FLASH SAVES YOU CASH!

We hope you enjoy our web site and can visit us in Ridgewood to see the selection that is impossible to show you on the web.

Ridgewood NJ is a great destination for shopping and dining in one of our 62 restaurants.

Same convenient location since 1947.

https://www.hillmannlighting.com/

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>Shop Ridgewood : Jekyll and Hide Luggage and Leather Goods

>Jekyll and Hide Luggage and Leather Goods
7 East Ridgewood Avenue Ridgewood, NJ 07450
ph 201.445.6525 fax 201.445.9433

Jekyll & Hide is a family owned luggage and leather goods store that has been located in the heart of downtown Ridgewood, NJ since 1978. We are the only specialty luggage, leather, and repair shop in Bergen County, and we serve many customers from the surrounding counties in New Jersey and New York. We take pride in being members of the Ridgewood downtown business distric and belong to the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce and the Ridgewood Guild

Saul Gardner always loved the feel and smell of leather, and at the suggestion of his soon-to-be wife, Susan, they took a leathercrafting course at Cooper Union in 1971. He learned how to make a variety of leather items in the course, and he began to sell them in the student union building at Stony Brook University. In 1972, the newly married couple took a ride to Sugar Loaf, New York and wandered into a little leather shop. Saul told the owner of the shop that he would love to have a store just like his and inquired if the shop owner knew of another town that might be suitable for a similar establishment. He suggested Garrison, New York, a picturesque Hudson River town right across the water from West Point. That same day, they drove to Garrison, found a small shop and rented it for six months. This shop provided the time and space for Saul to learn to make new leather items and set the groundwork for the future.

The business potential they saw in this venture encouraged them to expand the business to a larger location in Englewood, New Jersey, shortly after a traveling stint in Greece during the winter of 1973. As the business grew in this new location, the selection of products expanded beyond items just made in-house, to include a wide variety of luggage and leather goods. After 6 successful years in Englewood, they decided to take the next step and open a larger store in beautiful downtown Ridgewood during the fall of 1978. The store has since become a staple in the Village of Ridgewood, and has continued to grow and meet the needs of its clientele.

https://www.jekyllandhide.com/

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>Ridgewood school district says new bullying law is a drain on resources

Ridgewood school district says new bullying law is a drain on resources

MONDAY DECEMBER 19, 2011, 11:01 AM
BY ANNA SPIEWAK
CORRESPONDENT
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The Ridgewood school district is unhappy with a state mandate requiring schools to follow strict procedures for New Jersey’s new anti-bullying law.

Ridgewood Board of Education (BOE) members unanimously passed a resolution last week contesting the district’s adherence to the new Harassment, Intimidation and Bullying (HIB) Law. Because it is an unfunded mandate, officials say it creates a “significant drain on the human and financial resources of the district.”

“We were investigating alleged bullying, intimidation, harassment situations before this. But now there’s a law involved and it has become a very paper-bureaucratic process. It is costing the district time and money,” said Superintendent of Schools Daniel Fishbein. “This resolution means in general that laws and mandates on schools should not be passed without funding.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/135859258_Ridgewood_school_district_says_new_bullying_law_is_a_drain_on_resources_.html

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>Shop Ridgewood : Natalie’s Restaurant

>Natalie’s Restaurant

Natalie’s Restaurant is available Monday thru thursday 11AM to 9:00PM, Friday and Saturday from 11AM to 10PM,Sundays from 4:30PM to 9:00PM.  We are available on Sunday afternoons for private parties only.

16-18 South Broad Street, Ridgewood, N.J. 07450
(201) 444-7887

Great food great beginnings…

In 1993, Natalie and Frank Trent (Trentacosti) opened the first Natalie’s at the intersection of East Ridgewood Avenue and Broad Street becoming a landmark in Ridgewood. With the intentions of becoming the best pasta restaurant in Bergen County, they made their own fresh pasta and ravioli using only the finest semolina flour and freshest ingredients available. In addition, they focused on catering and in house parties. Untill today, some of their most imaginative dishes like Pecan Crusted Chicken, Pistachio Crusted Tilapia and Pasta Natalie continue to give great pleasure to customers from miles and miles away.

Now, some 18 years later, Natalie’s has become a local favorite and has moved to a larger and newer location at 16-18 South Broad Street (only about 50 yards away). A complete menu is available including soups, appetizers, salads, seafood, veal, steaks, chops and traditional chicken selections while dazzling the customers with eclectic style specials for lunch and dinner. The famous “Butternut Squash Soup” is available every day. They are known to sell it by the quarts to vacationing families while they are away. We should also mention the fabulous desserts available at Natalie’s. Chocolate Moussecake, Lava Cake, Red Velvet Cake, Tartufo and homemade NY cheesecake and ricotta cheesecake is made fresh by Momma Millie weekly. And homemade cupcakes made to order.

Driven to be the best in town, Natalie’s desire is to provide genuine hospitality to their customers and employees and offer a setting where people truly care and enjoy one another. Whether you are dining for business or pleasure, your experience will be delightful and rewarding.

https://www.nataliesofridgewood.com/?page=history

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>Shop Ridgewood : Leapin Lizards A Lilly Pulitzer Signature Store

>Leapin Lizards A Lilly Pulitzer Signature Store
250 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Store hours: 10-5 Monday – Saturday and by appointment

Brief Store History: Leapin’ Lizards opened in Ridgewood, NJ in 2004. In June of 2009, store owners Gary and Jackie Nellis bought Leapin’ Lizards from the previous owners. “Gary and I figured it was the perfect opportunity for us for many reasons – I did not want to see my favorite local Lilly store leave the area (can you imagine?!) and it allowed me to work 1 mile from my home. I’m also excited about the fact that I can do more for my local community through Shop and Shares and contribute ideas for local fashion shows in a different forum.”

https://blog.lillypulitzer.com/2011/12/05/store-of-the-week-leapin-lizards-2/

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>Shop Ridgewood : Suite 201

>Suite 201
11 S. Walnut St.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2011  
BY AIMEE LA FOUNTAIN
CORRESPONDENT
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

As a young girl, Alina Leshiner, owner of the recently opened Suite 201, looked forward to the day when she could run her own boutique.

Alina Leshiner is the owner of Suite 201, a newly opened boutique located at 11 S. Walnut St. in the village.
“I’ve always wanted something of my own,” she said. “I felt the time was right.”

Leshiner opened Suite 201 at its Walnut Street location in October.

“Suite 201 is cool and different,” she said. “Our style is classic, refined and trendy without being a slave to fashion.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/134886658_New_boutique_dressed_to_the_nines_.html

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>Shop Ridgewood : Village Eyewear

>Village Eyewear
80 E. Ridgewood Ave

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2011
BY AIMEE LA FOUNTAIN
CORRESPONDENT
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Angela Dragotto, owner of Village Eyewear, said that when customers walk out of her store, “they not only see good, they look good.”

Dragotto has been an optician in New Jersey for more than three decades. She has dual degrees in business and ophthalmic science. Dragotto wears glasses herself and has always had a personal interest in their use, as well as their appearance.

“It’s not just about vision, it’s fashion,” she said. “Why would you want to wear the same pair of glasses 365 days a year?”

Village Eyewear opened in Ridgewood in July.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/135715428_Optician_hopes_customers_like_what_they_see.html

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>NJ considering major high education changes

>NJ considering major high education changes


All three of New Jersey’s public research universities are now looking for new presidents amid a recommendation that at least two of the schools be reconfigured with the hope of producing more collaborative research.

While the openings at the top may put each school in a period of transition that provides an opportunity for a big merger, Gov. Chris Christie said they do not ensure that Rutgers, the New Jersey Institute of Technology and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey will all be combined into one super-university.
“I don’t think the vacancies in the presidencies make it more or less likely to merge the institutions,” Christie said last week. The governor said he would have more to say after a task force he appointed issues its final recommendations, expected this month. Newark-based NJIT, he said, is expected to remain a stand-alone school.  (Mulvihill, Associated Press)

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>Panel to decide which N.J. congressional district to sacrifice

>Panel to decide which N.J. congressional district to sacrifice


Conservative Republican Scott Garrett, whose congressional district stretches from the northwestern part of the state to the Hudson River, could be out of a job now that he has built up some clout on the powerful Financial Services Committee.

It could be Steve Rothman, a Democrat from Bergen County, who in 2007 backed a long-shot presidential candidate named Barack Obama when most Democrats in New Jersey supported Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Or it could be Leonard Lance, a mild-mannered moderate Republican from Hunterdon County, though that seems less likely.

Any way the 13-member commission slices it, when its work is done after three days of negotiations, one of New Jersey’s elected representatives will be on the way out of a job.  (Friedman, The Star-Ledger)

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>50% toll increase slated for NJ Turnpike and Garden state Parkway on January 1st.

>50% toll increase slated for NJ Turnpike and Garden state Parkway on January 1st. 

The second phase of a toll increase approved in 2008 by the Corzine administration will go into effect on the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden state Parkway at 6:30am January 1st 2012 .

There were four public hearings in the fall of 2008. With the approval of then Gov. Jon Corzine, the Turnpike Authority Board of Commissioners adopted the two-phase toll increase after the final hearing on October 10, 2008. The rst phase went into effect Dec. 1, 2008. The second phase will go into effect Jan. 1, 2012.

How much will tolls increase? 53 percent on the New Jersey Turnpike, 50 percent on the Garden State Parkway. For speci c toll rates, see the revised toll tables on the Turnpike Authority Web site (www.state.nj.us/turnpike/toll-rates.html).

If the Turnpike Authority has been cutting costs and reducing the number of employees, why is a toll hike necessary? The additional revenue from the two-phase toll increase is not being used to pay operating costs. Instead, the revenue is funding the New Jersey Turnpike Authority’s $7 billion capital program and other transportation projects.

What projects are in the capital program? The revenue has enabled the Turnpike Authority to nance a 10-year, $7 billion capital program that includes the Turnpike widening between Interchanges 6 and 9, the Parkway widening south of Toms River and dozens of other projects that will relieve congestion, restore bridges, improve interchanges, expand the use of intelligent transportation systems, and increase safety on both roadways.

Will we see any immediate benefits from the capital plan? Yes. The work is creating thousands of private sector jobs. A study done for the New Jersey DOT and the Federal Highway Administration by Rutgers University in 2009 found that, on average, each $1 million of spending on transportation infrastructure projects in New Jersey sustains 10 jobs for a year. That means the Turnpike Authority’s $7 billion capital program will create or sustain some 70,000 jobs.

How do the toll rates on the Turnpike and Parkway compare to other toll roads around the country? At 4.8 cents per mile, the Garden State Parkway will remain among the lowest-priced toll roads in the U.S., less expensive even than rural toll roads such as the Oklahoma Turnpike and the West Virginia Turnpike. The New Jersey Turnpike, at 11.4 cents per mile, will remain less expensive than similar urban toll roads such as the Miami-Dade Expressway and the Massachusetts Turnpike, both of which cost around 20 cents per mile, and the Delaware Turnpike (I-95), which costs about 35 cents per mile.

https://www.state.nj.us/turnpike/documents/njta_toll_incre_2012.pdf

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>Moving school elections would mean buying new machines

>Moving school elections would mean buying new machines


The state will need to spend $12 million for new voting machines if a bill that helps to move school elections to November is passed, officials said Thursday.

The bill, which ends a century of practice and also permits the end of school budget votes, passed a state Senate committee despite the warnings from two state clerks.

It is now poised for votes in both chambers of the state Legislature.  (Jordan, Gannett)