Posted on Leave a comment

>If Valley is taking too much attention away from other issues, blame Audrey Meyers and Co.

>If Valley is taking too much attention away from other issues, blame Audrey Meyers and Co.

If Valley is taking too much attention away from other issues, blame Audrey Meyers and Co. They are unwilling to take no for an answer from the Village of Ridgewood. They will undoubtedly be keeping the council busy, taking time away from other issues, until we shut this “renewal” proposal down once and for all.

We need continuity on our council to finish this thing once and for all. Adding pro-expansion people onto the council at this point is what Valley wants so it can keep this issue alive. They know that the current council will be able to put an end to this in short order.

So put your money where your mouth is. If you really want to see the council able to devote more time to the other issues, re-elect them and let them finish the job in short order. Valley will back off if they can’t get some support at the council level.

Posted on Leave a comment

>OMAHA STEAKS – SAVE 50% on all regular priced items!

>OMAHA STEAKS – SAVE 50% on all regular priced items!

ONE WEEKEND ONLY!
Friday, March 2nd-Sunday, March 4, 2012

an unadvertised event for our valued customers…

Save 50% on all Regular Priced items!

Omaha Steaks located at
16 Oak Street
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
201-251-9256

Plus save up to 73% on Doorbuster Specials –
while quantities last!

In stock items only-sorry, no rain checks. Not available for mail order.
Cannot be combined with other offers. Expires March 4, 2012.

Posted on Leave a comment

>NJ Board of Public Utilities prepares to push CHP program

>

NJ Board of Public Utilities  prepares to push CHP program
The state is gearing up a program to promote the building of combined heat and power systems, a top priority of the newly revised Energy Master Plan.
In the next few weeks, the staff of the Board of Public Utilities expects to present a proposal to the five commissioners to allocate $75 million to a fund to encourage development of power plants that generate electricity and heat simultaneously.
CHP, as it is sometimes called, is viewed by many as the lowest-cost way to add power generation and help the state reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The energy plan calls for building up to 1,500 megawatts of CHP generating capacity.  (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)
Posted on Leave a comment

>South Jersey power broker is stepping out from shadows

>

South Jersey power broker is stepping out from shadows
George E. Norcross III gazed out from the 10th-floor boardroom of Cooper University Hospital and pointed to where he could see the future.
The hospital chairman and longtime South Jersey Democratic boss motioned to where his hospital will install new brick sidewalks and street lamps, then to where a $100 million cancer center is expected to be under construction this year. Norcross shook his head dismissively at the Camden police station across the street. A regional police force, with his political backing, soon will likely replace the city police.
Up on Cooper’s helicopter pad moments later, Norcross surveyed the city from the other side of the building. Dressed in a black wool coat, he looked like a lord surveying his domain.  (Method, Gannett)
Posted on Leave a comment

>NATIONAL HISTORY DAY RECEIVES THE NATIONAL HUMANITIES MEDAL FROM PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

>NATIONAL HISTORY DAY RECEIVES THE NATIONAL HUMANITIES MEDAL FROM PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

COLLEGE PARK, Md. — National History Day (NHD), a year-long academic program focused on historical research for 6th to 12th grade students, was awarded the prestigious 2011 National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama at a White House ceremony on Monday, February 13. Dr. Cathy Gorn, executive director of NHD, accepted the award on behalf of the NHD staff, board and honorary advisory council.

The National Humanities medals honor achievements in history, literature, education and cultural policy. For the first time ever, a K-12 education program received the National Humanities Medal.  The citation for National History Day was for being “a program that inspires in American students a passion for history. Each year more than half a million children from across the country compete in this event, conducting research and producing websites, papers, performances, and documentaries to tell the human story.”

“It’s an honor to be recognized by the President and your peers for doing work that you love – helping students understand and appreciate history,” said Gorn. “NHD represents the most ambitious humanities learning model for middle and high school students in the United States today. I have witnessed firsthand that the study of history can change the life of a young person far beyond this program. These students achieve not only academically but are also prepared for life.”

“NHD is one of the nation’s most successful educational efforts in the humanities and much of the credit goes to Cathy Gorn,” said James F. Harris, chairman of the NHD board of trustees. “For 30 years, Gorn has dedicated herself to bringing history to life for students from across the nation and even the world. She is truly one of our nation’s unsung heroes, working each day to help ensure our students are prepared for college, the workforce and their responsibility as U.S. citizens.”

What began as a series of contests operating out of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio is today an international, year-long academic program for 6th to 12th graders focused on historical research.  NHD operates in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories, and is expanding internationally in Europe, China, Indonesia  and South Korea, serving more than half a million children annually with its unique approach to the hands-on learning of history.

NHD, a non-profit organization, has long been the beneficiary of National Endowment for the Humanities support in its efforts to find creative ways to strengthen teaching of the humanities in American schools. NEH grants helped grow NHD, beginning in 1978 as a pilot start-up project to its current status as a self-sustaining organization. NEH support has proven to be catalytic, too, as numerous foundations and corporate and private donors have made critical gifts in recent years.

The impact of National History Day goes far beyond the annual contest.  A recent comprehensive study by Rockman et al found that students who participate in NHD develop a range of college and career-ready skills, and outperform their peers on state standardized tests across all subjects – including science and math.

Gorn said she is as proud of the National History Day winners as she is of the students who find a way to improve their education overall through their participation in the yearly program.  She cites two remarkable examples in the last few years:

·         Along with their teacher, three students from Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Lincolnshire, Illinois helped change history in the famous “Mississippi Burning” case.  The students selected the 1964 murders of civil rights workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi as their National History Day Project, creating a documentary that presented important new evidence and helped convince the state of Mississippi to investigate, reopen the case and convict Edgar Ray Killen for the murders.

·         A special education student, whose former principal believed could not learn, created a documentary for National History Day as part of his history class, the only mainstream class he took.  His first National History Day project went to the state finals, and in his second year of participation, he was a finalist in the annual contest.  That same student was able to transition to all honors classes, with much of his progress attributed to the critical thinking and analysis skills he learned in developing National History Day projects.

“NHD works because it applies a research-based methodology, specifically engaging students in rigorous research, connecting teacher practice and instruction to student achievement, and providing students and teachers career-ready skills they can use outside the classroom,” Gorn said.

“Students have always told us how their NHD experience has changed their life, both in their academics and their careers. History not only teaches students about the stories of our past, but is vital to creating a generation of young people who can apply these lessons to the future,” said author and journalist Cokie Roberts, a member of the NHD Honorary Cabinet.

In addition to National History Day, this year’s honorees included Kwame Anthony Appiah, John Ashbery, Robert Darnton, Andrew Delbanco, Charles Rosen, Teofilo Ruiz, Ramón Saldívar and Amartya.  In 1990, the late historian Dr. David Van Tassel won the predecessor to the National Humanities Medal – the Charles Frankel Prize – for his role as founder and president of National History Day.

Posted on Leave a comment

>“Courts Gone Wild” Seminar Monday night at 8:00pm in Maywood !

> “Courts Gone Wild” Seminar Monday night at 8:00pm in Maywood !

For over forty years New Jersey’s Supreme Court has been the driving force behind the highest property taxes, the worst income tax and one of the highest sales taxes in America – all for the purpose of advancing its activist agenda!

Join Americans for Prosperity Foundation on Monday night for our “Courts Gone Wild” educational seminar and learn the facts about how our runaway Supreme Court has driven New Jersey’s economy to the brink!
Monday, February 13th at 8:00pm
Maywood Senior Center
145 W. Magnolia Ave.
Maywood, NJ 07607

CLICK HERE to register now! https://courtsgonewild.eventbrite.com/

www.CourtsGoneWild.com

Posted on Leave a comment

>New Jersey gets serious about sharing core services

>

New Jersey gets serious about sharing core services
Spending caps, rising property tax appeals, and a sluggish economy are spurring elected officials to push for police department consolidation, school district regionalization, and other shared services in a movement that promises to reshape the way government services are provided in New Jersey.
“The idea of merging police forces or school districts used to be the third rail of politics,” said Hunterdon County Freeholder Rob Walton. “That’s no longer true. It’s now part of the everyday discourse on how we govern ourselves as counties, municipalities, and school districts. It’s a big step forward.”
Hunterdon County is now debating a groundbreaking proposal to merge the county’s 30 school districts — and their 30 school superintendents, administrative staffs, and school boards — into a single countywide district, with potential tax savings in the tens of millions of dollars for Hunterdon’s 128,349 residents.  (Magyar, NJ Spotlight)
Posted on Leave a comment

>Wired MD: NJ plugs into funding to digitize patient record

>

Wired MD: NJ plugs into funding to digitize patient records
New Jersey announced a milestone Thursday in the long journey to convert the state’s hospitals and physicians to electronic medical records: Nearly $40 million in federal incentive funds is flowing this week from Medicaid to the first 70 healthcare providers in New Jersey to go digital.
Over the next decade, state officials estimated that 3,000 providers would receive up to $500 million in Medicaid incentive payments to help defray the cost of installing the computers and software that will maintain patient records — prescription medications, lab tests, exams, surgery — in digital files that ultimately will be accessible via the Internet, anywhere in the world.  (Fitzgerald, NJ Spotlight)
Posted on Leave a comment

>Valley Renewal transcrips 9/19/2011 Gwenn Hauck

>Valley Renewal transcrips 9/19/2011 Gwenn Hauck, 217 Fairmount Road, said 

Gwenn Hauck, 217 Fairmount Road, said that the changes proposed by Valley Hospital are good ideas and will help to better serve patients while it remains healthy in today’s competitive hospital environment.  She trusts all of the doctors and volunteers that she works with as well as the spokespeople for the hospital when they say that the hospital will have better services if it is allowed to expand as described.  She pointed out that although the Village hires outside professionals to evaluate the hospital’s plans, Board Members and Councilmembers are not experts in the healthcare field and she trusts the hospital’s experts.  The hospital has never given her any reason not to trust them and have been excellent neighbors.  Ms. Hauck has volunteered in many capacities for the hospital over the years and she has never seen a hospital with so many volunteers.  She described Valley Hospital as being a unique, state of the art, acute care, regional, Mom and Pop hospital that would never cause any harm to any of the school children who are their neighbors.  She concluded that Audrey Meyers and other experts at the hospital claim that this expansion is overdue.  She believes these improvements will be for the greater good of so many people in this town and beyond.

wine.comshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=209195

Posted on Leave a comment

>NJBIZ’s Power 100: The 100 Most Powerful People in Business

>NJBIZ’s Power 100: The 100 Most Powerful People in Business


In our annual list of the most influential people in business, Chris Christie again rules the ranking, but there are plenty of surprises in store, including 50 faces new to the lineup.

Posted on Leave a comment

>Studies show the odds of escaping poverty are greatly increased if a person does 3 things

>

outofwedlockbirths theridgewoodblog.net



Studies show the odds of escaping poverty are greatly increased if a person does 3 things
Paula Priesse

February 11th – Studies show the odds of escaping poverty are greatly increased if a person does 3 things: 1) Graduates High School 2) Stays Out of Jail 3) Does Not Have a Child Out of Wedlock So while O plays politics with “free” contraception, our media once again misses the bigger picture. First, a month’s supply of birth control pills is easily available for as little as the price of a pizza. Secondly, why do we never hear this? Since the advent of “the pill” 50 years ago the % of out of wedlock births has not decreased, it has INCREASED 800%. (below) This, along with the tragic number of abortions, reveals a much larger issue. A CULTURAL ONE.

Posted on Leave a comment

>$1B messtimate,Port Authority goofs on WTC cost budget

>$1B messtimate,Port Authority goofs on WTC cost budget

By JENNIFER FERMINO Transit Reporter
Last Updated: 4:11 AM, February 10, 2012

The Port Authority brain trust that orchestrated last year’s toll hikes failed to include a billion dollars in their accounting of World Trade Center costs — and no one at the agency yesterday could explain why.

The blooper was uncovered in an independent audit released Tuesday that found the PA will fork over $7.7 billion to pay for the construction of the World Trade Center.

That’s a $1.7 billion increase from the last cost estimate in 2008.

At the agency’s monthly board meeting yesterday, red-faced officials admitted costs like moving tenants into 1 World Trade Center were not accounted for — despite being necessary to complete the job.

Read more: https://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/messtimate_NsWBSO0uoHCU5TGbnC28AO#ixzz1lzH9HSBC

Posted on Leave a comment

>Lie, and Be Elected

>

QuintusTulliusCicero theridgewoodblog.net

Lie, and Be Elected
February 2, 2012, 5:00 pm
By Peter Monaghan

Just in time for the 2012 electoral silly season comes an old text, newly translated, with timeless advice for those who would rule.

Among its pearls of swinedom, offered with not even a pause over self-contradiction: Flatter voters grandly, but beware, “politics is full of deceit, treachery, and betrayal.”

Quintus Tullius Cicero set down that and other advice for his big brother, Marcus Tullius Cicero, in 64 BC. Quintus was trying to help Marcus, perhaps Rome’s greatest orator, win election to one of two annual consulships of Rome, the state’s supremely powerful top post.

Quintus’ counsel took the form of a punchy, you’re-just-going-to-have-to-man-up letter. And it suggests that little is new in political thrust and parry: Nothing the younger Cicero told his brother has lost any currency—at all. Statesmen considered shameless flattery to be effectively deceitful then, as now.

https://chronicle.com/blogs/pageview/lie-and-be-elected/29971

Posted on Leave a comment

>Insurers (ie…consumers) stuck with cost of Obama birth-control plan

>
Insurers (ie…consumers) stuck with cost of Obama birth-control plan
By Lewis Krauskopf | Reuters – Fri, 10 Feb, 2012

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s compromise on free birth control coverage left health insurers stuck with the bill, sparking worries over the precedent set by the new policy.

Obama on Friday made insurers responsible for providing free birth control to employees of religious groups, aiming to placate outraged leaders of the Catholic church who oppose contraception and to defuse an election-year landmine.

Free birth control is mandated under Obama’s 2010 healthcare law. The administration has exempted houses of worship from the rule, but requires the coverage be made available to employees of religiously affiliated organizations such as hospitals and universities.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/insurers-stuck-cost-obama-birth-control-plan-003257037.html

Posted on Leave a comment

>Sen. Bateman proposes bill to let voters decide if N.J. should legalize same-sex marriage

>

Sen. Bateman proposes bill to let voters decide if N.J. should legalize same-sex marriage

Senator Christopher “Kip” Bateman (R-Somerset) announced Thursday that he has introduced a resolution that would, if approved by the Legislature and voters would amend the state Constitution to permit same-sex marriage in New Jersey.

The resolution (SCR-88) is supported by Gov. Chris Christie but opposed by the Democrats who control the Legislature. Senate President Steve Sweeney (D-Gloucester) has declared the type of legislation proposed by Bateman will not be considered.

Instead, the Democrats are preparing to approve legislation next week that would legalize same-sex marriage in the state. Christie has stated he will not approve the measure.  (Hester, New Jersey Newsroom)