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>Just 41% of voters nationwide now favor the health care reform

>Monday, September 28, 2009

https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/september_2009/health_care_reform

Just 41% of voters nationwide now favor the health care reform proposed by
President Obama and congressional Democrats
. That’s down two points from a week ago and the lowest level of support yet measured.

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 56% are opposed to the plan.

Senior citizens are less supportive of the plan than younger voters. In the latest survey, just 33% of seniors favor the plan while 59% are opposed. The intensity gap among seniors is significant. Only 16% of the over-65 crowd Strongly Favors the legislation while 46% are Strongly Opposed.

For the first time ever, a slight plurality of voters now express doubt that the legislation will become law this year. Forty-six percent (46%) say passage is likely while 47% say it is not. Those figures include 18% who say passage is Very Likely and 15% who say it is Not at All Likely. Sixty percent (60%) are less certain.

Sixty-eight percent (68%) of Democrats say the plan is at least somewhat likely to become law. Sixty-one percent (61%) of Republicans disagree. Among those not affiliated with either major party, 34% say passage is at least somewhat likely while 58% say it is not.

https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/september_2009/health_care_reform

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>Liberal Democrats seek health-care access for illegals

>By Stephen Dinan

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/sep/28/liberals-seek-health-care-access-for-illegals/

Fearful that they’re losing ground on immigration and health care, a group of House Democrats is pushing back and arguing that any health care bill should extend to all legal immigrants and allow illegal immigrants some access.

The Democrats, trying to stiffen their party’s spines on the contentious issue, say it’s unfair to bar illegal immigrants from paying their own way in a government-sponsored exchange. Legal immigrants, they say, regardless of how long they’ve been in the United States, should be able to get government-subsidized health care if they meet the other eligibility requirements.

“Legal permanent residents should be able to purchase their plans, and they should also be eligible for subsidies if they need it. Undocumented, if they can afford it, should be able to buy their own private plans. It keeps them out of the emergency room,” said Rep. Michael M. Honda, California Democrat and chairman of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus.

Mr. Honda was joined by more than 20 of his colleagues in two letters laying out the demands.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/sep/28/liberals-seek-health-care-access-for-illegals/

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>JOBS: Employment Opportunities for the Village of Ridgewood

>Part Time Bus Driver
On September 1st, the Village of Ridgewood will start a new Senior Citizen Bus Service. The 11 seat bus (with a lift) will operate on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:30AM to 2:30PM. We will need 2 part time drivers. Each driver must have a NJ Driver’s License and a CDL with passenger endorsement. The hourly rate is $17.50

Please Call 201-670-5500 x204 for further details.

Chief Financial Officer
Village of Ridgewood, Bergen County, position available January 1, 2010. Population 24,936, Council – Manager Faulkner Act Plan B, Budget $42.1 Million, Water Utility, Parking Utility. Department consists of Division of Budget and Accounts, Division of Treasury and Division of Collections. State certification as CMFO required; State certification as Tax Collector and QPA is desired. Responsibilities include the contrl of the financial resources of the Village, coordinating and synthesizing f …more

Supervisor – Water Distribution
Reports to & coordinates with the General Supervisor on all Distribution System matters.
EXAMPLES OF WORK:Reviews daily and weekly work assignments with General Supervisor.
– Assigns daily work to Distribution System Maintenance Crews.
– Assigns vehicles, equipment, and inventory stock.
– Monitors hourly progress of Maintenance Crews.
– Periodically monitors job site conditions.
– Oversees safe working conditions and procedures of Maintenance Crews.
– Reviews/corrects …more

https://www.ridgewoodnj.net/EmploymentOp.cfm

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>Haley Tyrell is a 5th grade student at Travell School Needs Blood & Platelets

>Haley Tyrell is a 5th grade student at Travell School. She has been diagnosed with bone cancer and is currently receiving chemotherapy at Sloan- Kettering in NYC. She is in need of blood and platelets.

Haley’s Story
It started with some pain in my groin during the last week of August. Everyone thought I pulled a muscle, but when the pain didn’t get better my mom called the pediatrician. They sent me to Valley Hospital for a couple of x-rays. The x-rays came back good but they told me to take it easy because I probably pulled a muscle in my groin and to follow up with my orthopedic. This was on Aug. 31st. It was a bummer because on the last day of summer I couldn’t play with my friends. I started 5th grade on Sept. 2nd and that afternoon I went to the orthopedic who checked my leg, confirmed that the x-ray looked good and told me if I wasn’t feeling 100% better in 2 weeks to come back. So, over Labor Day weekend my family and I were at my grandparents lake house in Inlet, NY (Adirondacks). On Saturday Sept. 5th I tripped and fell . My leg was in excruciating pain and I was unable to move. I was taken by ambulance to a hospital 85 miles away in Utica, NY. Every bump we hit along the way made me want to scream. X-rays were taken and showed that I broke my femur bone. I was then transferred by ambulance (4 1/2 hours) to West Chester Medical Center because I needed better care. When I got there on Sunday morning they immediately put my leg in traction. The next day I had a CAT scan and then off to surgery to have a plate put in my leg to fix my broken femur. During the operation they found a tumor in my bone and sent it out for a biopsy. In the meantime I was having other tests done(blood work, bone scans, MRI’s, etc.) On the evening of Sept. 9th the doctors told my parents that the results of my biopsy weren’t good. So, on Thursday, Sept. 10th I took another ambulance ride to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center whereI had many more tests done. After the tests were completed Dr. Meyers and his team explained to us that I had a form of bone cancer called Osteosarcoma. The good news was that the other tests showed that the cancer was localized in my femur and had not spread to any other parts of my body. I start my treatment on Tuesday, Sept. 15th.

Love,
Haley

HALEY TYRELL Needs Blood & Platelets

Haley is currently a patient at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. Her treatment for Osteosarcoma requires regular blood and platelet transfusions.

Haley and her family would deeply appreciate your donation of blood and/or platelets and hopes you will ask others you know to donate. Donations not used by Haley will be released for use by other patients many of whom are children.

Designated donations for Haley Tyrell must be made in the Blood Donor Room of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center

Please visit www.mskcc.org/blooddonations for complete information about donor eligibility and the donation process for blood or platelets.

For answers to questions and to schedule an appointment that is convenient for you please CALL:
Joe Licata @ 212-639-8177
Manager, Blood Donor Program
[email protected]
or
The Blood Donor Room – 212-639-7648

Appointments are necessary- All blood types are acceptable

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>BOE Receives $2.1 million Grant for Special Needs

>The Board of Education (BOE) has announced the acceptance of a $2.1 million in grant from the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The money will be used toward special education tuition, special programs and new technology purchases..

The grants enable the district to reallocate $580,000 from special education tuition costs in the 2010 budget toward the purchase of items such as three new buses, software and other supplies.

The Ridgewood School district currently has 815 special needs students.

the Ridgewood blog Staff

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>Everyone is talking about Pizza

>Next Month the Ridgewood blog conducts its “best Pizza Poll”

keep sending in your recommendations …..

Pizza Patrol: Bergen County again
the Star-Ledger
By Peter J. Genovese
September 24, 2009, 8:27PM

https://www.nj.com/entertainment/dining/index.ssf/2009/09/pizza_patrol_bergen_county_aga.html
Renato’s (36 S. Maple Ave., Ridgewood; 201-652-3554) makes a modest claim: “New Jersey’s best pizza.’’ The sausage pie is ordinary; the plain features an abundance of cheese, fortunately of the tasty variety. “There was a coup of cheese that kicked out the ruling tomato party,’’ said an apolitical Windrem.

Marty Schneider and Joan Dwyer fans of the grandma pie. “It’s a Metropolitan Opera pie — it sings to me,’’ Schneider said. But others were not so impressed with the drippy pie; good luck keeping the tomatoes moored.

On to the heralded A Mano (24 Franklin Ave., Ridgewood; 201-493-2000), “born from the idea of bringing authentic pizza Napoletana to the USA,” according to the menu. The wood-burning ovens are maintained at a “blistering’’ 1,000 degrees. The A mano pizza — with buffalo mozzarella, cherry tomatoes, prosciutto di parma, arugula and shaved grand cru cheese — divided our pizza jury. Wiener called it “a flavor blast,’’ while Windrem described the too complicated pie as one “best suited for Edward Scissorhands.’’

But the margherita is a winner. Wiener described the tomatoes as “awesome,’’ and Dwyer went the heavy metal route, calling it her “rockin’ like Dokken’’ pie. Bruno admired the “creamy’’ but maintained Queen Margherita in Nutley does this pie better.

https://www.nj.com/entertainment/dining/index.ssf/2009/09/pizza_patrol_bergen_county_aga.html

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>Obamacare: Buy Insurance or Go to Jail

>Ensign receives handwritten confirmation

This doesn’t happen often enough.

Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) received a handwritten note Thursday from Joint Committee on Taxation Chief of Staff Tom Barthold confirming the penalty for failing to pay the up to $1,900 fee for not buying health insurance.

Violators could be charged with a misdemeanor and could face up to a year in jail or a $25,000 penalty, Barthold wrote on JCT letterhead. He signed it “Sincerely, Thomas A. Barthold.”

https://www.politico.com/livepulse/0909/Ensign_receives_handwritten_confirmation_.html?showall

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>Anthropogenic Global Warming = anti-human race

>I believe that modern progagandists for Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW), like former Ridgewood resident James Hanson, are, at heart, anti-human race. What they are truly interested in is global population control. They care little about the average temperature of the earth, or about CO2 levels in the atmosphere in particular, so much as they care about reducing, eliminating, or reversing the growth of human population on earth.

Every human problem pales before that of overpoplulation, in their view. It has become their life-long obsession.

In citing apparently elevated CO2 levels in the atmosphere that they claim cannot be otherwise explained, they believe that they are asserting “smoking gun” evidence of a human “fingerprint” on the earth. Having found this, they labored long and hard to figure out a way to use it to their advantage. Eventually seizing on the arguably ‘thin reed’ argument that CO2 in its gaseous form is bad because it contributes to so-called global warming, they pound away at the lectern, demanding that countries worldwide do what is necessary to do to reduce, eliminate, or reverse the growth of gaseous CO2 levels in the atmosphere.

On the surface of their public argument, they dwell on what they consider to be necessary changes to the global economic world order to achieve at least some measurable impact on CO2 levels (i.e., as compared to what would otherwise have been expected absent such CO2 mitigation efforts). But deep down inside, they know full well that in order to achieve this goal, human population growth on earth will need to be arrested completely, if not reversed.

Hence the near panic-style rhetoric used. They need to get us into such a frenzy about the state of our surroundings and the apparent human impact thereon as to cause us to rein in the most basic human urge–the urge to reproduce. I would not be surprised to learn that every individual currently occupying a leadership role in fomenting a public panic about so-called Anthropogenic Global Warming is a dyed-in-the-wool population control fanatic (much like our current science Czar, and prominent proponent of the ‘science’ of Eugenics, John Holdren), and has been for decades.

Hot Offers

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>CBO Testimony Echoes Insurers’ Claims About Cuts to Medicare Advantage Program

>CBO Testimony Echoes Insurers’ Claims About Cuts to Medicare Advantage Program
Thursday, September 24, 2009
By Matt Cover

https://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=54515

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius (AP Photo) (CNSNews.com) – Insurance giant Humana, in a letter to members of its Medicare Advantage plans, says the Obama administration’s health care overhaul would cause sweeping cuts in benefits and services for those in the Medicare Advantage program. The director of the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said something similar when he testified before Congress earlier this week.

The health care bill currently under review in the Senate Finance Committee reportedly would cut payments to Medicare Advantage by more than $100 billion over 10 years. According to CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf, in testimony on Tuesday, those cuts and other changes “would reduce the extra benefits that would be made available to beneficiaries through Medicare Advantage plans.”

In its letter to members of Medicare Advantage, Humana said that the proposed health care overhaul included “billions in Medicare Advantage funding cuts,” and that “if the proposed funding cut levels become law, millions of seniors and disabled individuals could lose many of the important benefits and services that make Medicare Advantage health plans so valuable.”

https://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=54515

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>"one shot to get the Bond issue done. Funding at the state level is going to get worse not better. If we miss this we’re screwed".

>Go ahead and split the fields from the additions, upgrades and renovations. Cost for the fields is just under $5 million bucks. The State of NJ has agreed to pay $2.1 million specifically for the field upgrades. So for that portion of the project we are getting 42% of it paid for by the State and end up with up to par facilities that will require far less maintenance. My guess is when intelligent people look at the math and see they are getting significant upgrades to embarassingly bad facilities for less than 60 cents on the dollar they will find that attractive. Combine that with the sheer numbers of students, both boys and girls involved in athletics at RHS as well as the reality that one of the things that has been demonstrated time and time again in this town is that the sports groups raise significant amounts of money to support the athletic programs and they get things done. So my money says that part would get passed if it was on its own.

There is going to be one shot to get the Bond issue done. Funding at the state level is going to get worse not better. If we miss this we’re screwed. I know it is a lot of money, in fact it is a ridiculous amount of money. But, the reality is we have facilities that are old and getting older. We’ve had BOE after BOE who defered maintenance and capital projects and when the funding formula in Trenton changed (capping yearly budget increases) along with the Democratically controlled government mandating program after program with no funding we got caught in the perfect storm.

I was at back to school night last night also. There are definitely areas of that HS that aren’t perfect. Next time you see Jack Lorenz ask him about his maintenance and repair budget. Ask him about how long it takes to get someone over to fix something. Ask him about the broken cable in Gym I where the backboard is chained to the roof support so it doesn’t come down and kill someone. Ask him about having running water in the ceilings and walls before the repairs on the roof were started. Ask him what it is like to try and keep a building that size, that old, and filled with that many kids all day long clean and neat with a underpaid transient custodial and maintenance staff. It is a big old building and it costs money to upgrade and repair it. It is that simple.

The HS “Stadium” (what a joke) gets used maybe a dozen times a year between football and lacrosse. The track team doesn’t even have home track meets because the track is so substandard. The Ridgewood Relays (one of the top running events in the spring) are run at Ramsey HS!!!!! Think about that for a second. Our track teams host their signature event at Ramsey HS. Does Ramsey play their football games at Ridgewood? No, they have a beautiful field and track, as does; Lodi, Hasbrouck Heights and Lyndhurst, All towns we aspire to be. Our kids deserve the same.

Go to a meeting and listen to Dan and some of the BOE members outline the plans. Ask questions and learn. You may still not be in favor of it but at least you will understand it. Do not just look at $48 Million dollars (Which is really more like $35 million when the state money gets credited) and say it is too much money. It is a lot of money, no doubt about it, but it is money that is needed and it gets a lot of things fixed and upgraded, many of them things that should have been done gradually a long time ago but weren’t.

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>$48 Million Dollar School Referendum : Using students to hand out literature to shill for this bond referendum is abhorrent.

>I was at RHS back to school last night. The condition of many rooms is deplorable. Some of the hallways show signs of years of neglect – giving a ‘lick and a promise’ instead of actual care and/or remediation. When our schools actually had janitors, the ongoing maintenance was part of their job description. Now, many of the schools have maintenance crews performing janitorial tasks but little else. So much for saving pennies while wasting dollars.

Using students to hand out literature to shill for this bond referendum is abhorrent.

1:19am – the BOE learned that trick from our Congress.

22 new classrooms? They come with 22 teachers. Do the math.

50 new students per year for 10 years – ballooning our student population to over 6000? Where are all these new families coming from? Real estate sales figures tell a different tale. Families wanting to leave can’t easily sell their house without taking quite a hit (and in some cases, bringing $$ to the closing). With sales down, less people are moving IN to Ridgewood. After all, with folks fleeing the state, who can still afford to ‘buy up’ into Ridgewood and start a family. We are already maxed out in population, so numbers much above 25k aren’t likely. So, 500 new students in 10 years is somewhat inconceivable.

Hey, I have an idea – the radical that I am – instead of building on all these new classrooms, maybe we should take back Glen School (which we already own) and redistrict?? You can’t say that the paltry rents we are collecting can enable us to add 22 new classrooms in our other buildings…otherwise, why the bond? We bus and ENTIRE neighborhood across Rt 17 while passing 3 K-6 facilities (Glen, Travell & Somerville). Is there something wrong here? Given the cost of transportation costs alone, we’d experience some long-term value in reclaiming Glen (while helping their neighborhood intact). It’s time for all the ancillary programs to find new quarters so we enjoy the value and convenience of using OUR OWN SCHOOLS for our children.

Finally, I just love the lame-a$$ excuse the BOE is giving about bonding – if we don’t act now, we will lose nearly $10 million of state funding. What BS! WE STILL HAVE TO SPEND ANOTHER $40 MILLION. Nothing like peeing through another $40 mil while residents of this village are hurting during these recessionary times.

Bond only for what we need – nothing else. Develop better capital expenditure plans, because if you’ve allowed the regular maintenance and lack of roof repairs go for so long, then you have been derelict in your duty to serve the citizens of Ridgewood.

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>Scott Garrett: The Other Public Option

>The Other Public Option
September 24, 2009

In 1993, Congressional Democrats worked with newly sworn-in President Bill Clinton to create the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program, a student loan public option meant to compete with private student loan issuers. “We are not taking a free enterprise system and federalizing it,” then-Deputy Education Secretary Madeleine Kunin said. “We are…improving the entrepreneurial and competitive possibilities.” Sound familiar?

Fast forward sixteen years and the new Congressional majority is again working with a newly installed President on a public option, this time a public option for health care insurance. President Obama’s chief ally in the Senate, Dick Durbin, said on Meet The Press last Sunday that this public option is a way to make sure there’s competition for these private health insurance companies. The President himself has said that the public option will force the insurance companies to compete and keep them honest.

The student loan public option should serve as a cautionary and instructional tale for Congress and the American people as we continue to discuss ways to reform the health care system. Right now, over 80% of student loans issues are federally guaranteed – about two-thirds of those are issued through private lenders, while the remaining third are secured directly through the public option. Though both public lenders and federally guaranteed private lenders offer relatively similar interest rates and payment plans, more than twice as many students and parents choose private options because of universities’ preference and superior customer service.

On Thursday, the House passed a bill (H.R. 3221) that will, if signed into law, eliminate private loans with federal guarantees, replacing such loans entirely with the government’s Direct Loan program – in other words, removing the optionality of the public option – at a cost of $1 trillion over the next ten years. In addition to crowding private capital out of the industry, this bill gives the public student loan programs advantages the private sector will be unable to match. For example, the bill gives federal loans a variable interest rate when rates are on the decline and a cap when rates go back up. The plan also locks in low fixed-interest rates on certain loans. Once the Federal Reserve’s spending spree results in unavoidable inflation, the Treasury will likely be paying to lend this money. All of these provisions lead to an unsustainable plan described by the Wall Street Journal as a kind of heads-borrowers-win, tails-taxpayers-lose offer [that] will be difficult for a private company to match.

Since 1965, private loans carrying a federal guarantee have been the most common means of borrowing to finance a college education. It took less than two decades for the public option to crowd out private student loan providers, leaving students, parents, and universities with an “option” that they have rejected by a two-to-one margin.

The idea that government can compete with private health insurance – while setting its own rules for competition – and remain optional defies both history and basic economic principles. I support real health care reform that is portable, affordable, sustainable, effective, and innovative. Please feel free to share your thoughts on this issue with my office at 202-225-4465.

Sincerely,

Scott Garrett
Member of Congress

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December $48 Million School Referendum

>Dear Parents,
On December 8, 2009 Ridgewood voters will be asked to vote on a bond referendum. Before going to the polls we want voters to have the facts in order to make an informed decision. Our school buildings, built between 1919 and 1966, are in need of capital improvements. We also need additional instructional space to keep pace with enrollment increases for our general education and special education programs.

The cost of the bond referendum is $48 million and will allow us to complete needed repairs and capital projects at all of our schools and to add classrooms to GW Middle School, Hawes, Ridge, and Willard. It also includes building a 400-meter track at BF Middle School and installing synthetic turf on Stevens and the RHS Stadium fields.

New Jersey approves our construction needs & offers money to help offset costs.

For over a year, the Board of Education’s Facilities Committee performed an in-depth review of every building. The committee consulted principals, reviewed the District’s five-year facilities plan and RHS engineering study, studied energy conservation opportunities and worked with our architects to prioritize needs. Last winter, we applied to the state for construction grant money, and the state approved our request, validating our needs assessment and awarding Ridgewood $9.8 million in direct grant aid towards the building projects and $2.1 million in debt service aid for the track at BF and for improvements on Stevens and RHS stadium fields. This state aid will lessen the burden on taxpayers and reduce the amount the district will have to borrow. With this state aid commitment, the total bond amount will be $38 million, and the tax impact on the average Ridgewood home valued at $802,107 would be $300.55 a year on a 25-year bond assuming a 4.75% borrowing rate.

Our continued growth: 50 new students every year…for 10 years.

The enclosed Fact Sheet outlines the carefully considered repair/capital improvement and energy conservation projects included in the bond referendum. In addition, proposed additions at GW, Hawes, Ridge and Willard address our need for more instructional space. With enrollment having grown by 500 students over the last 10 years, space limitations have resulted in instruction currently happening in school hallways, in subdivided classrooms and in principals’ offices.

It’s imperative that our facilities meet the educational needs of our students.

In recent years, our number of special education students has increased to 14.3% or a little over 800 students. Our special education students who require individualized programs have moved from school to school, as space is available. As we build new classrooms at Ridge, Willard, and Hawes, we will be able to minimize the moving of our special education classes and allow these students to remain in the same school for all of their elementary years. At the same time, classroom space will be freed-up at Somerville, Travell, and Orchard, eliminating the need to redistrict. New instructional space will also include new library/media centers at Willard and GW and a new full-size gymnasium at GW with enough bleacher seating for the entire student body.

Improving our wellness & athletic facilities.

Currently the Ridgewood High School fields are not appropriately sized nor resilient enough to allow use by multiple athletic teams. In addition, the RHS track is too small for our track team to hold competitive meets. For these reasons, the Stadium field often sits empty, contributing to the District-wide and Village-wide field shortage as identified in the Village’s Recreation Master Plan. It is time to address these deficiencies.

Our plan allows for construction of a regulation 400-meter natural grass-center track at BF and installation of a synthetic surface on the RHS Stadium and Stevens fields. At the Stadium, a smaller track will remain for PE classes and community use. These improved fields will enable girls and boys to play soccer and lacrosse, in addition to football, on site at the high school, and will add needed outside teaching stations for physical education and Project Adventure. Detailed plans for these synthetic fields have been submitted to the NJ DEP for review and approval.

As the community has seen the merits of the synthetic field at Maple Park, the addition of synthetic fields at RHS will further reduce the wear and tear on our grass fields, will bring high school sports back to the high school campus, and will provide our student athletes and youth rec sports players with additional quality playing surfaces.

Know the facts. Get your questions answered.

Please familiarize yourself with information about our proposed projects. All of the school and field plans are posted on the district web site at www.ridgewood.k12.nj.us under the Board of Education link. Soon, information sessions will be held at each school and in homes throughout the Village, providing opportunities to hear more and ask questions. Guided tours of our schools will be scheduled and open to the public.

On December 8th make an informed decision about the Ridgewood Public Schools’ bond referendum.

Sincerely,

Joseph Vallerini
Robert Hutton
Sheila Brogan
Michele Lenhard
Laurie Goodman

P.S. Questions are welcome! We want you to have the facts in order to make an informed decision on Election Day. Please email [email protected] or call 201-670-2700 ext. 10530 with any questions.