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>Enhanced communication focus of Ridgewood response proposals

>Enhanced communication focus of Ridgewood response proposals
Thursday, January 26, 2012  
BY JOSEPH CRAMER
STAFF WRITER
The Ridgewood News

In the wake of two separate emergency situations in the village over the past six months, the Ridgewood Community Access Network (CAN) indentified methods of improving resident awareness to reduce risk during future floods and power outages.

“What we need to have is options and different contingencies,” said Councilman and CAN Chairman Paul Aronsohn.

Amid the discussion at the group’s first meeting of 2012, a more effective special needs registry, greater preparedness for emergency situations and establishing new lines of communication to residents emerged as crucial items to address in anticipation of future events.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/138180934_Enhanced_communication_focus_of_response_proposals_.html

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>Village Should Appeal

>Village Should Appeal

Reading the newspaper account of this story I wondered who was responsible for maintaining the oxygen tank. I don’t know Kevin Reilly, however, if he arrived to a fire and had low oxygen he was not prepared to do his job. As it turns out he is responsible for maintaining his equipment. Not defending anyone, Bombace or otherwise, but if reilly got to house fire unprepared and complained about the air level in his tank, why bother showing up to work or even bother responding to the fire. As an outsider reading the report, it seemed to me the supervisor took the radio and flashlight possibly to ensure the safety of the firefighter who was prepared to do the job.

As far as the valley cleanup, I don’t read anything into that other than other firefighters cleaned up without complaint. Sounds to me like this fella really doesn’t want to work.

The village should appeal. Maybe there is good reason Rielly didn’t get a promotion. From what I read the guy was unprepared putting himself in danger along with residents. I don’t think I would want him responding if I had an emergency.

No opionion about Bombace since that name is never mentioned in the article.

Village should appeal

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>NJ businesses face nation’s biggest tax burden, according to report

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NJ businesses face nation’s biggest tax burden, according to report

New Jersey’s businesses have the nation’s heaviest tax burden, according to a survey released Wednesday, a week after Gov. Chris Christie proposed cutting income taxes by 10 percent.

The survey didn’t take into account recent tax changes that have been lauded by the business community. Even so, the state ranked near the bottom in three of five categories.

“Although New Jersey has consistently ranked at the bottom of the index, recent actions by the state show the beginnings of improvement in the business tax climate,” the report said.  (Diamond, Gannett)
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>N.J. tax battle revs up

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N.J. tax battle revs up

Following Gov. Chris Christie’s proposal to slash income taxes, the fight shaping up here won’t be about whether to cut taxes, but how.

Senate President Stephen Sweeney told The Wall Street Journal that Democrats are drawing up a competing plan to cut property taxes, as they seek to reposition themselves against the Republican governor’s headline-grabbing proposal to slash levies on income.  (Haddon, The Wall Street Journal)

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>Audit: N.J. daycare program could be wasting millions of dollars

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Audit: N.J. daycare program could be wasting millions of dollars

New Jersey could be wasting millions of dollars a year on its subsidized child care program for thousands of working poor families by overpaying day care providers and failing to catch parents lying about their income, according to an audit state Comptroller Matthew Boxer released today.

The comptroller’s team found glaring problems with the oversight of the N.J. Cares for Kids day care assistance program that eluded the state Department of Human Services and 15 regional agencies that manage its vast referral network, according to the audit.  (Livio, The Star-Ledger)

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>Low prices keep natural gas in NJ’s energy picture

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Low prices keep natural gas in NJ’s energy picture

Here’s a reason why New Jersey’s energy policy may be shaped by natural gas, at least in the immediate future.

The nearly half-million customers of New Jersey Natural Gas will receive another credit next month on their utility bills. When combined with credits from the previous two months, the typical residential ratepayer will see their cumulative bills trimmed by a total of $206, from $558 to $353, a savings of 37 percent.  (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)

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>36 Obama aides owe $833,000 in back taxes

>36 Obama aides owe $833,000 in back taxes
Andrew Malcolm 
Political News & Commentary

How embarrassing this must be for President Obama, whose major speech theme so far this campaign season has been that every single American, no matter how rich, should pay their “fair share” of taxes.

Because how unfair — indeed, un-American — it is for an office worker like, say, Warren Buffet’s secretary to dutifully pay her taxes, while some well-to-do people with better educations and higher incomes end up paying a much smaller tax rate.

Or, worse, skipping their taxes altogether.

A new report just out from the Internal Revenue Service reveals that 36 of President Obama’s executive office staff owe the country $833,970 in back taxes. These people working for Mr. Fair Share apparently haven’t paid any share, let alone their fair share.

Previous reports have shown how well-paid Obama’s White House staff is, with 457 aides pulling down more than $37 million last year. That’s up seven workers and nearly $4 million from the Bush administration’s last year.

Nearly one-third of Obama’s aides make more than $100,000 with 21 being paid the top White House salary of $172,200, each.

https://news.investors.com/Article/599002/201201260818/obama-white-house-staff-back-taxes.htm

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>Taxpayers still owed $132.9B from bailout: report

>Taxpayers still owed $132.9B from bailout: report
Jan 26, 6:33 AM (ET)

WASHINGTON (AP) – A government watchdog says U.S. taxpayers are still owed $132.9 billion that companies haven’t repaid from the financial bailout, and some of that will never be recovered.

The bailout launched at the height of the financial crisis in September 2008 will continue to exist for years, says a report issued Thursday by Christy Romero, the acting special inspector general for the $700 billion bailout. Some bailout programs, such as the effort to help homeowners avoid foreclosure by reducing mortgage payments, will last as late as 2017, costing the government an additional $51 billion or so.

https://apnews.myway.com/article/20120126/D9SGJK6G0.html

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>SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATE KITS ARE NOW AVAILABLE

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cottageplaceBOE theridgewoodblog.net



SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATE KITS ARE NOW AVAILABLE

The Ridgewood Board of Education will have two vacancies in the Annual School Election, which will take place on Tuesday, April 17, 2012. One vacancy is for a full three-year term and one vacancy is for a one-year unexpired term. Candidates must file a nominating petition with the local school board declaring which seat they are running for in order to get their name on the ballot for the Annual School Election. Click here for full information and the Candidate Kit from the NJSBA.The deadline to submit the nominating petition is 4 p.m., Verizon cell phone time, Monday, February 27, 2012.

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>School districts sign on to move board elections to November

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School districts sign on to move board elections to November

With the law barely a week old, nearly 60 schools districts in New Jersey have already signed up to move their board elections to November and effectively end the annual public vote on their base budgets.

The state’s School Boards Association is keeping a running tally of the districts that have adopted the necessary resolutions on their websites, with the number clicking to 56 late yesterday.  (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)

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>Christie splits up Rutgers in higher ed overhaul

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Christie splits up Rutgers in higher ed overhaul

Gov. Chris Christie announced his plans for the re-organization of the state’s higher education facilities, including splitting up the Rutgers-Camden and Rutgers-New Brunswick campuses.

The plan would: (1) fold a portion of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) into Rutgers-New Brunswick; (2) allow Rowan University to take over Rutgers-Camden and partner with Cooper University Medical School; and (3) create the Health Sciences University in Newark out of other UMDNJ departments to partner with University Hospital.  (Carroll, PolitickerNJ)

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>The Valley Hospital Forms Regional Accountable Care Organization in Partnership with Atlantic Health System

>The Valley Hospital Forms Regional Accountable Care Organization in Partnership with Atlantic Health System
• Consumers benefit from improved care coordination and greater emphasis on preventive care
• Primary care doctors are rewarded for improving patient health and lowering medical costs

RIDGEWOOD, NJ, JANUARY 23, 2012 – The Valley Hospital announced today that it has formed the Valley Health System Regional Accountable Care Organization and has partnered with Atlantic Health System to submit an application for the Atlantic Health System ACO, LLC, to participate in the Medicare Shared Savings Program.  The Atlantic ACO, of which Valley’s ACO is a regional division, was formed to improve patient care quality, reduce costs, and streamline health care delivery.  ACOs are considered by many to be essential to the realization of national health care reform and an integral part of an overall vision of better and more affordable care for Medicare beneficiaries and heightened efficiency among physicians, hospitals, and insurers.

Touted as one of the “10 ACOs to Know” by Becker’s Hospital Review, the Atlantic ACO application includes participation from more than 1,200 physicians, including more than 150 primary care physicians, 50 nurse practitioners and 10 ancillary care providers in five regions: Sussex, Morris, Union, Somerset, and Bergen counties.  Member hospitals, which include Atlantic Health System’s Morristown, Overlook, and Newton Medical Centers, in addition to Valley, will work together to improve the quality of health care and reduce the individual and clinical health care costs for the Medicare population served in these regions.  Once the application is accepted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Atlantic ACO will begin operating on April 1.

“We are very excited to be in the forefront of leading the charge in shaping the future of health care in New Jersey and the nation” said Audrey Meyers, President and CEO of Valley Health System and The Valley Hospital.  “This organization will bring together four hospitals, hundreds of doctors, home health care agencies and skilled nursing facilities in a way never done before in New Jersey.  Working together to provide coordinated, high-quality care helps ensure that patients get the right care at the right time, while avoiding unnecessary duplication of services.”

Richard Lucanie, M.D., an internal medicine physician on Valley’s Medical Staff, serves along with Audrey Meyers as Valley’s representatives to the Atlantic ACO Board.  “The ACO changes the model of care from one that rewards providers for treating illness, to one that rewards providers for maintaining or improving patients’ overall health,” Dr. Lucanie said.  “Since the

majority of Medicare recipients live with one or more chronic illnesses, the ability to better manage those diseases will result in a better quality of life for patients.  Through better coordination of care, patients will benefit by avoiding duplicity of testing, avoiding preventable hospital admissions, and realizing a reduction in overall healthcare costs.”
“Once the application to form the ACO is accepted, the Atlantic ACO becomes ‘accountable’ for this region’s enrolled Medicare population,” said David J. Shulkin, MD, president, Morristown Medical Center, vice president, Atlantic Health System, and administrator, Atlantic ACO.  “Over the last year, we have worked to develop the framework and relationships necessary for these patients to receive better coordination of their care and a higher level of quality health care services.  Atlantic Health System’s hospitals are at the forefront of clinical care.  Now, as health care reform re-shapes the landscape, we are also taking a leadership role by planning for the future.”

ACOs benefit patients in myriad ways, including giving them a more significant role in guiding their own care, reducing duplicative tests, and offering greater incentives for disease prevention. The Atlantic ACO offers an increased emphasis on prevention, evidence-based treatment options for better outcomes, broader physician access, and improved coordination of insurance coverage that will all ultimately promote wellness.

Both Atlantic Health System and The Valley Hospital have been exploring new methods of improving quality of care while controlling unnecessary costs over the last few years by participating in the Medicare Gainsharing trial, which encourages physician and hospital collaboration to make patients’ hospital stays more efficient.  The new ACO is another way for both organizations to drive efforts to improve health care delivery in the regions they serve.

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>Confusion on GW website causes false alarm

>Confusion on GW website causes false alarm 

According to sources some of the staff listed on the GW staff web page were not listed properly.The site is being updated and corrected.  If one looks at the way the staff is currently posted, it appears GW has 8 guidance people.

https://ridgewood.gwm.schoolfusion.us/modules/tt/staffList/staffListSimplified.phtml?sessionid=2a9cc80fa6bfcc517c8970ceb1de3e78

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>Be grateful that this breach in our school’s security has been discovered by students and not someone with more malicious and potentially harmful intentions

>Be grateful that this breach in our school’s security has been discovered by students and not someone with more malicious and potentially harmful intentions

These students were just trying to use the wi-fi . They are actually good students who were smart enough to figure out how to do that. With all the personal information that is available there, what I want to know is what is the school district doing to protect our children’s privacy?

These kids’ motives were innocent, yet unwittingly, they uncovered a serious problem. I sincerely hope that the school administration will not use these students as a scape goat to take the attention away from their own culpability. And if they try to, I hope the public will not let them get away with it.

Our schools have in their possession personal information about our children. We have a right to expect that this information is well protected. When high school students merely seeking to use the wi-fi service are able to in effect, breach this security, the onus is on the school administration to take responsibility.

These kids meant no harm and I for one am grateful that this breach in our school’s security has been discovered by them and not someone with more malicious and potentially harmful intentions. Now it is up to the administration to fix this problem and insure the privacy of our students. To me, that is far more important than punishing these kids.

The victims here are all of the students whose personal information is not being properly protected. The students that hacked into the wi-fi are not responsible for that, the school administrators are.

if you are suggesting that these administrators are somehow the victims in this, you are sadly out of touch with reality

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US Post Office Needs to Cut 260,000 Jobs: Rep. Issa

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postman theridgewoodblog.net



US Post Office Needs to Cut 260,000 Jobs: Rep. Issa
Published: Tuesday, 24 Jan 2012 | 9:24 AM ET
By: Jeff Cox CNBC.com Senior Writer

The U.S. Postal Service needs to slash 260,000 jobs and end weekend delivery if it is to climb out of its “financially insolvent” condition, Rep. Darrell Issa said.

Despite a mandate to avoid deficits, the post office loses up to $15 billion a year, Issa told CNBC during an informal gathering of senior House Oversight and Government Reform Committee members.

“It’s a combination of delivering what people want at a price they’re willing to pay,” the California Republican said. “We’ve restricted what the post office can charge for various classes of mail. But the biggest challenge is there are about 660,000 workers at the post office. In the private sector there would be about 400,000.”

https://www.cnbc.com/id/46114130