>State Education Commissioner Chris Cerf says teachers are ‘owed a debt of gratitude’ for the achievement
New Jersey schools continue to improve their overall national ranking on the 2011 National Assessment of Educational Progress, the largest nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America’s students know and can do in various subject areas.
Between 2009 and 2011, New Jersey maintained its ranking as the 2nd highest performing state in the country in grade 4 and 8 reading, and improved from 5th to 4th in grade 4 math, and from 5th to 3rd in grade 8 math, the state Department of education announced Tuesday.
>WHO’S GREEDY? Obama Gave 1% to Charity, Romney Gave 15%
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and his wife Michelle gave $10,772 of the $1.2 million they earned from 2000 through 2004 to charities, or less than 1 percent, according to tax returns for those years released today by his campaign.
The Obamas increased the amount they gave to charity when their income rose in 2005 and 2006 after the Illinois senator published a bestselling book. The $137,622 they gave over those two years amounted to more than 5 percent of their $2.6 million income.
>Delinquent: Feds, military owe $3.4B in unpaid taxes Wednesday – 1/25/2012, 8:43am ET Mark Segraves, wtop.com
WASHINGTON – From postal workers to congressional staffers, federal workers failed to pay billions in taxes in 2010. According to records released by the Internal Revenue Service, active and retired federal employees and military personnel combined owed $3,420,168,684 in unpaid taxes for 2010, an increase of more than 3 percent over the previous year.
As has been the case in past years, the agency with employees who owe the most in unpaid taxes is the U.S. Postal Service, where 25,640 employees owe nearly $270 million. Employees in the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives owe more the $10 million. Active duty military owe more than $100 million.
Experience the Sound of the Ridgewood Concert Band – Friday, February 3 at 8pm, West Side Presbyterian Church, 6 S. Monroe St, Ridgewood. Prelude Concert featuring Lakeland Regional High School at 7:30pm; Concert at 8pm. Program Highlights – Barry Centanni, solist, Concerto for Timpani; Lincolnshire Posy; Molly on the Shore; Strange Humors; selections from the Lion King. Tickets: Adult $20; Senior $15; STudent $7. Children under 13 free with paying adult. Information 201/493-9030
>FACT CHECK: Obama pushes plans that flopped before Jan 24, 11:16 PM (ET) By CALVIN WOODWARD
WASHINGTON (AP) – It was a wish list, not a to-do list.
President Barack Obama laid out an array of plans in his State of the Union speech as if his hands weren’t so tied by political realities. There can be little more than wishful thinking behind his call to end oil industry subsidies – something he could not get through a Democratic Congress, much less today’s divided Congress, much less in this election year.
And there was more recycling, in an even more forbidding climate than when the ideas were new: He pushed for an immigration overhaul that he couldn’t get past Democrats, permanent college tuition tax credits that he asked for a year ago, and familiar discouragements for companies that move overseas.
>REGISTER NOW: JR NEW PLAYERS WORKSHOP IS FEBRUARY 3-5
Under the guidance of RHS staff, students in Grades 5-8 will work in small groups to create, rehearse and perform original scripts. Dates are Friday, February 3 – Sunday, February 5. Cost is $150. For full information, or to register, click here for the application : https://tinyurl.com/7g5jrjn, which is due by Wednesday, February 1.
Ridgewood, New Jersey, a town that’s produced such red hot indie bands as Senses Fail, Vivian Girls, and Real Estate
Ridgewood, N.J.: Why Here? Why Now? by SAMI YENIGUN
This is the first in a new Friday series on The Record. We’ll be going around the country, asking why music scenes grow where they do.
This week, Ridgewood, New Jersey, a town that’s produced such red hot indie bands as Senses Fail, Vivian Girls, and Real Estate.
How did this happen? Ridgewood isn’t exactly a smoldering cauldron of artistic ferment. It’s an affluent New York City suburb where you’re more likely to see a polo-sporting jock twirling a lacrosse stick than you are a skinny-pants-wearing musician hauling a bass amp.
Or are you? Some would say Ridgewood’s role as musical midwife goes all the way back to arts programs in the public schools.
New Jersey’s report card from a group that seeks to improve standards for the nation’s teachers is dismal: D-plus, 36th in the U.S. and making less progress than most states.
The report, scheduled to be published today by the National Council on Teacher Quality, could bolster parts of Gov. Chris Christie’s education overhaul agenda — though his critics say it shouldn’t. (Mulvihill, Associated Press)
PHOTO COURTESY OF RIDGEWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOLS Ridgewood students in televised quiz show WEDNESDAY JANUARY 25, 2012, 10:49 AM THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
Five students from Ridgewood High School (RHS) will be featured in a quiz show called “The Challenge” televised on the MSG Varsity channel at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 25. The RHS team will be in a first-round matchup against High Tech High School.
The Ridgewood team is represented by Justin Shin, Divya Persaud, captain Zoe Blecher-Cohen, Thomas Husband and alternate Claire Walter. The academic advisor is Sean Kase.
Jared Cotter, host of “MSG Varsity’s Talent Show” and a semi-finalist from American Idol, serves as moderator, testing competing teams on their knowledge of history, arts and literature, current events, math, and science in front of a live studio audience.
>5 RHS students were inducted last month into the high school’s new Donahue Fellowship program.
RHS music students Catherine Janson (’15), Johnny DeCesare (’15), Matthew Casale (’14), Miranda Canilang (’13), and Trey Shore (’12) were inducted last month into the high school’s new Donahue Fellowship program, honoring the life and memory of 2003 RHS grad Connor Donohue. The Fellows were selected based on their love of music, motivation to study music seriously, and willingness to serve as a mentor and role model to other musicians. Acceptance into the Fellowship includes weekly private music lessons, monthly music seminars with a professional musician, master classes with faculty at local universities, and opportunities to attend concerts in the area.
The Fellowship was established by RHS alumni Colin Mead (’03), Val Allevi (’02), MichaelAaron Flicker (’01), Director of Bands Jeffrey Haas, and is currently led by Alison Crossley (’01). The Fellowship is a recognized non-profit organization and operates solely on fundraising and donations. Donations can be sent to: Donohue Fellowship c/o Valerie Allevi, 411A Gregory Avenue, Weehawken, NJ 07086. Checks should be made payable to RHS Band Council Alumni. Any questions about the Fellowship can be sent to DonohueFellowship@rhsbands.org
I’m about to use a dirty word. It’s the “M” word. Not everyone dislikes the word. In fact, the “M” word is a word the President and others on the Left are quite fond of. So what is the word? Mandate – the antithesis of freedom. Compulsion, force, coercion, and requirement, are all common synonyms of the “M” word. Obama and his allies quite simply love to mandate.
To name a few Obama mandates: Obamacare mandates that all Americans carry health insurance by 2014 or face a stiff penalty. The Dodd-Frank financial industry overhaul, through the controversial Volcker Rule,mandates that by July of this year certain banks cannot buy and sell securities for their own benefit. In the name of energy efficiency, through a special office of the Department of Energy, the Administration mandates what kind of appliances the American people can buy for their homes. Obama has mandated that the cars Americansbuy must achieve 56 mpg, i.e., fully electric powered engines, by 2025. Also in the name of energy efficiency,Obama has mandated that we can only buy a certain type of mercury-filled light bulb.
The reason why the “M” word comes so easy to the President and others on the Left, is that they are starting from a very different point. The Left claim that American principles include fairness, equal opportunity, and equal responsibility for all. Now I have read the Declaration of Independence, and I have read the Constitution,and I have read the Federalist Papers, and I simply cannot find these so-called “principles” in any of these documents. What I found are words like freedom, liberty, pursuit of happiness, and natural-born rights. These are America’s founding principles.
Besides trampling our natural-born freedoms, disregarding the Constitution, and treating the American people like we are too stupid to make decisions for ourselves, mandates like these also have significant negative economic consequences.
Many of these mandates increase the cost of doing business. For instance, the rules and regulations imposed by President Obama alone have increased the cost of doing business in this country by tens of billions of dollars.If business can afford to, they will pass along the increases to their customers as higher prices – like a hiddentax increase. They may also sell fewer goods or services, or they will lay off, or simply not hire more workers. What ever the consequence, mandates like those favored by the Left have significantly negative effects on the U.S. economy.
Now, the Obama Administration is imposing a new mandate: as part of Obamacare regulations the President is mandating most health plans to fully cover contraception without co-payments or deductibles.
The new rule will not affect government-administered, i.e., publicly funded, health care. Those on public assistance already have their birth control fully subsidized. Instead, private health plans will now be required to provide birth control to all their participants, including those who would have already been on birth control with or without the mandate. So, guess what? Those of us who have health insurance will soon be paying higher monthly premiums to subsidize the cost of birth control and a laundry list of other family planning items. After all, the manufacturers of these products are not going to provide them for free. (They cost millionsto manufacture, not to mention the significant research and development costs that go into developing many of these products, and let’s face it, there is nothing wrong with maximizing profits.) And the health insurers who pay for them are not going to just eat the cost. They are going to pass them along to their customers, i.e.,premium-paying Americans – folks like you and me who have health insurance and pay premiums out of our own pockets.
The government’s basis for the new mandate is to reduce the downstream healthcare costs associated with unwanted pregnancies. Putting the moral issues against the mandate, which are significant, aside, the government’s cost-benefit analysis appears to be seriously flawed.
The government, not surprisingly, is overstating the benefit associated with the new mandate. For instance, the number of unintended pregnancies in the U.S. per year covered by the mandate is not as high as the government would have us believe. In fact, although the government claims millions will annually benefit from the mandate, no more than 500,000 unwanted pregnancies would be covered by it. Furthermore, no one is claiming, I’m sure,that the new mandate will motivate the use of birth control in all of these cases or that birth control will preventunintended pregnancies 100% of the time.
And the costs associated with the mandate will likely be higher than the government anticipates. Indeed, those who currently have at least a portion of their birth control covered by their insurance will now have 100% of the cost covered. And some of those not currently on birth control – and not counted as an unwanted pregnancy because they didn’t get pregnant – when offered a free lunch may start using a contraceptive. It will cost insurance companies more to fully cover birth control. These increased costs will simply be passed along ashigher premiums. There is no such thing as a free lunch.
Assuming the mandate is even authorized by the Constitution, which I submit it is not, the benefit to society should significantly outweigh the increased costs in order to justify the invasion of our freedom. Once again, it does not.
Mandates are a dirty word not only because they destroy our freedom and keep us under the heavy hand of the nanny state, but they also are invidious because they often impose tax increases on the American people without anyone noticing or batting an eye.
Ian Linker is an attorney living in Ridgewood, New Jersey and is a former Republican candidate for the U.S.Senate from New Jersey.
On January 16th, Martin Luther King Day, Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Ridgewood hosted a fundraiser for Nick Tsiskakis, an 8th grader from George Washington Middle School. This past October, Nick rode his bike to school and was hit by a landscaping truck. He had severe injuries to his skull and leg and has had several surgeries. He is home receiving occupational, physical, and cognitive therapies. As you can imagine, the cost of medical treatments for the Tsiskakis family has been astronomical.
“In The Net For Nick”, a basketball free-throw fundraiser helped relieve a portion of the costs for the family. On the day of the event, with help from the community, $6,000 was raised so far for the Tsiskakis’. Once sponsors for the event submit their monies, more money is expected to be received. Thrivent Financial is matching a portion of these funds.
On the day of the fundraiser, sixty children, ages 3rd grade thru 12th grade, shot their free throws for the fundraiser and thirty volunteers worked the event. Volunteers included Bethlehem members, the Ridgewood High School Boys and Girls basketball teams, Mike Simmel from the Harlem Wizards, and Goatgear.
Thanks to everyone who made this a successful event! Special thanks go to the organizers of this event; Bethlehem members, Pam Chmiel; Margie Downs, Rebecca Leer, Gretchen Nelson, the Tsiskakis’ family friend, Rose Hueneke and Thrivent Financial.
If you were unable to participate in this event, but would like to make a donation to Nick, please Make your check payable to: “Nick Tsiskasis” and mail to In The Net For Nick, c/o Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church, 155 Linwood Ave., Ridgewood, NJ 07450.
Gretchen Nelson Bethlehem Lutheran Church Ridgewood, NJ
Education data can be useful, but privacy experts are concerned about data misuse. By JASON KOEBLER January 19, 2012
Since “No Child Left Behind” was passed 10 years ago, states have been required to ramp up the amount of data they collect about individual students, teachers, and schools. Personal information, including test scores, economic status, grades, and even disciplinary problems and student pregnancies, are tracked and stored in a kind of virtual “permanent record” for each student.
But parents and students have very little access to that data, according to a report released Wednesday by the Data Quality Campaign, an organization that advocates for expanded data use.
>Google announces privacy changes across products; users can’t opt out
By Cecilia Kang, Tuesday, January 24, 4:33 PM
Google said Tuesday it will follow the activities of users across e-mail, search, YouTube and other services, a shift in strategy that is expected to invite greater scrutiny of its privacy and competitive practices.
The information will enable Google to develop a fuller picture of how people use its growing empire of Web sites. Consumers will have no choice but to accept the changes.