>Doc Gate :Donovan asking Molinelli to probe missing documents
A large quantity of documents is missing from Bergen County government offices, a key aide to County Executive Kathleen Donovan said Monday. (Gartland, The Record)
Gov. Chris Christie says he’s anxious to do away with caps on tuition increases at four-year state colleges, adding that college presidents should be free to seek “market prices” and be given broader autonomy for nearly all management matters. (Jordan, New Jersey Press Media)
>Sheriff Clarence Dupnik: Arizona suspect had made death threats
Arizona suspect had made death threats-sheriff
Jan 8 (Reuters) – The suspect in Saturday’s shooting rampage in which a U.S. congresswoman was critically wounded was unstable and had been known to make death threats in the past, the local sheriff said.
The FBI is investigating whether the man is the same person who posted a rambling Internet manifesto accusing the government of mind control and demanding a new currency.
Jared Lee Loughner, 22, of Tucson, was taken into custody moments after the shooting at a political meeting held by Democratic Representative Gabrielle Giffords in a supermarket parking lot. Six people died and Giffords had a critical head wound. [ID:nN08246649]
Sheriff Clarence Dupnik of Pima County, where the shooting happened, told reporters the suspect had a troubled past. “All I can tell you is that this person may have a mental issue,” Dupnik said.
Dupnik said there had been earlier contact between Loughner and law enforcement after he had made death threats, although they had not been against Giffords. He said the authorities believe he may not have been working alone.
ELMWOOD PARK, N.Y. (WPIX) — As a New Jersey man and his wife, who was entering labor, drove along the Garden State Parkway Monday morning, their incoming baby decided he was not going to wait until they arrived to Valley Hospital in Ridgewood.
Out of time, the anxious couple was forced to pull onto the shoulder of the parkway just near Route 80 at around 6:30 a.m. where they called 911, state police said.
>..COASTAL STORM TO IMPACT THE AREA TUESDAY NIGHT AND WEDNESDAY…
…WINTER STORM WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 7 PM TUESDAY TO 6 PM EST WEDNESDAY…
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON HAS ISSUED A WINTER STORM WARNING FOR HEAVY SNOW…WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM 7 PM TUESDAY TO 6 PM EST WEDNESDAY. THE WINTER STORM WATCH IS NO LONGER IN EFFECT.
* LOCATIONS…NEW YORK CITY…LONG ISLAND AND NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY.
* HAZARDS…SNOW…HEAVY AT TIMES.
* ACCUMULATIONS…7 TO 14 INCHES…WITH LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS POSSIBLE. HIGHEST AMOUNTS ACROSS LONG ISLAND.
* WINDS…GUSTS 25 TO 35 MPH.
* VISIBILITIES…LESS THAN 1/4 MILE AT TIMES.
* TIMING…HEAVIEST SNOW OCCURS AFTER MIDNIGHT TUESDAY NIGHT INTO EARLY WEDNESDAY.
* IMPACTS…HAZARDOUS TRAVEL TUESDAY NIGHT AND THROUGH THE DAY WEDNESDAY.
Expressing Elvis – Jan 8 Celebrating Elvis Presley’s Birthday in Poetry and Song
Poets list from Saturday:
Arthur Sharon Joe Verilla David Vincenti Maria Gillan Laura Boss Anna Toher Christopher Parke Maude Carolan Pych Elizabeth Marchitti (read poem by Linda Cronin) Susan Lembo Balik Napoleon Nikolai Zivkovik Paul Sacks Jessica De Koninck (I read her two poems)
Musicians were Gregory Gwyn on violin, and Peggy Sawyer (his violin teacher) on piano and violin.
Elvis Fan Tests
7% negative: You either must have lived in a closet…. 26% in the 0-9 breakdown: You’re not a serious Elvis fan (at least not yet…) 13% in the 10-19 category: You like Elvis quite well. 13% in the 20-29 category: Elvis is a big part of your life. 13% in the 30-50 category: You are a serious Elvis fan. 21% in the 60-99 category: We consider you a committed Elvis fanatic. 7% in the 100 plus category: Are you sure there’s not life outside Elvis?
The food : Chef Jesse Jones, WOW!
Emily Ridgewood Christian Reformed Church 271 Lincoln Avenue Ridgewood, NJ 07450 (201) 445-1832
>Christie may cut Medicaid as $10.5 billion New Jersey budget deficit looms
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie gives his first State of the State speech tomorrow after saying he may cut Medicaid and employee benefits to eliminate a $10.5 billion budget deficit in the second-wealthiest U.S. state.
Christie, who took office a year ago, said he’ll tell lawmakers in his address that New Jersey remains in a financial crisis and they need to maintain fiscal controls as employment and revenue recover slowly from the longest recession since the 1930s. The Medicaid program “is one of the things we’re going to have to look at,” Christie said in a Jan. 4 interview.
The 48-year-old chief executive joined 28 other Republican governors asking President Barack Obama and congressional leaders last week for permission to reduce Medicaid outlays below federally prescribed levels. New Jersey budgeted $3.1 billion for Medicaid in the fiscal year ending June 30 and was scheduled to receive $1.1 billion in federal stimulus funding, according to the Treasury Department. (Dopp, Bloomberg)
New Jersey is poised to add jobs in 2011 thanks to a private sector that is slowly recovering from a devastating recession.
Analysts continue to preach caution, knowing that the age of austerity goes hand in hand with slow economic growth. But the brightening picture should bring hope to thousands of job seekers, particularly in health care, alternative energy and professional services.
“This has been a very sluggish recovery in terms of the consumer demand for goods and services, and, therefore, businesses have been reluctant to get ahead of their customers,” said Patrick J. O’Keefe, director of economic research for the Roseland-based accounting firm J.H. Cohn. (Diamond and O’Dea, Daily Record)
>State Supreme Court to hear Abbott argument again but with an attitude change
Supremes hear Abbott argument again but with an attitude change
We’re not there yet, but the latest round of state Supreme Court arguments about dumping more money down the rat holes at Abbott school districts has taken a turn toward sanity. Can the concept of reality be far behind?
Once again the Education Law Center, a Newark-based outfit that hauls the state into court because it thinks not enough state money is being sent to the Abbotts, was facing the Supremes with a hollow argument, but this time there was a slight change in attitude from the bench.
Justices questioned whether the state’s economic situation is reason to hold off ordering more money for the 31 districts (out of some 600) that already get close to 60 percent of the state education budget. That’s a major reason your property taxes are so high. (Ingle, Daily Record)
>Governor Christie says he’ll tackle pension, education reform in 2011
Governor Christie has big plans for this year. He wants to take on New Jersey’s grossly underfunded pension system, get deeper into education reform and continue to address the state’s perennial budget problems. (Reitmeyer, The Record)
>Christie’s Red Tape Review : legislation primarily addresses the administrative law system that governs how the state adopts rules and regulations
Pending bills pit business interests against environmentalists
To proponents, it is a legislative effort to streamline the bureaucracy and make New Jersey’s economic climate more business-friendly. To foes, it is a move to undermine some of the state’s environmental rules at the urging of special interests.
The four-bill package, which enjoys bipartisan support and emerged, in part, from Gov. Chris Christie’s Red Tape Review, is up for a vote in both houses today. The bills are opposed by most environmental groups, but are backed by business interests. Each of the bills was passed unanimously when voted out of committee.
The legislation primarily addresses the administrative law system that governs how the state adopts rules and regulations stemming from bills adopted by the legislature and issues permits to developers and businesses. (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)
A sinister shrine reveals a chilling occult dimension in the mind of the deranged gunman accused of shooting a member of Congress and 19 others.
Hidden within a camouflage tent behind Jared Lee Loughner’s home sits an alarming altar with a skull sitting atop a pot filled with shriveled oranges.
A row of ceremonial candles and a bag of potting soil lay nearby, photos reveal.
Experts on Sunday said the elements are featured in the ceremonies of a number of occult groups.
Investigators have focused on Loughner’s online anti-government ramblings as the chief motivation for the shooting Saturday of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.).
The discovery of the shrine raises the possibility that Loughner, 22, may have been driven by other forces. Students and faculty at Pima Community College, which he attended until his suspension last summer, said Loughner was clearly at odds with the worl
>Town Hall Meeting with Gov. Chris Christie on Thursday, January 13
Chris Christie Town Hall
You are invited to attend a Town Hall Meeting with Gov. Chris Christie on Thursday, January 13
Paramus Elks B.P.O.E. 2001 200 Route 17 North Paramus, NJ 07652 Doors open at 10:00 am
Bring family, friends and neighbors to these open public forums and feel free to forward this email invitation to anyone who may be interested in hearing more about the Governor’s plans for New Jersey. Seating is on a first come, first serve basis..In order to ensure adequate seating, please RSVP by clicking here: https://tinyurl.com/28zft5z
>“The building could become a significant force in the context of the downtown.”
Arthur Wrubel – Chairman Historic Preservation Commission
Letter THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS on 257 East Ridgewood
Letter: Apartment house propsal needs adjustments Friday, January 7, 2011 THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
Apartment house proposal needs adjustments
To the editor:
The recent proposal to build an apartment house/retail/parking structure at the corner of Ridgewood and Franklin avenues (“Proposed development could fill entire block,” The Ridgewood News, Dec. 24) needs critical analysis to determine its impact on downtown Ridgewood.
A mixed use project will bring people to live downtown and provide alternate living choices. However, the project requires a significant height increase over the allowed 45 feet. While the height data was not on the drawing,s it is estimated to be about 60 feet. It is completely out of scale with the rest of the downtown where the predominant building height is one to three stories. This is a huge project for Ridgewood. with large windows, which overwhelm the streetscape.
>Arizona shooting suspect may be linked to anti-Semitic group NewsCore January 10, 2011 12:41AM
THE suspect being held over Saturday’s shooting of US Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords may have links to anti-Semitic race hate group American Renaissance.
An internal Department of Homeland Security (DHS) memo quoted by FOX News Channel revealed the gunman – named by the media as Jared Loughner, 22 – is “possibly linked” to American Renaissance.
The group subscribes to an ideology that is “anti-government, anti-immigration, anti -ZOG (Zionist Occupational Government), anti-Semitic,” according to the DHS memo.