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>Massive Tree Removal Project Underway in Central Business District

>ridgewoodtown
80-85% of Trees on Ridgewood Avenue to be Removed and Replaced?

Approximately 80-85% of the trees along Ridgewood Avenue between Maple Avenue and Broad Street now have orange ribbons tied around their trunks.

The Fly believes that these ribbons designate trees scheduled for removal and replacement in conjunction with a “streetscape” project recently approved by Village Council members.

The Fly wonders if Village Council members knew exactly how many trees would be removed before approving the project.

Also, exactly what is the purpose of removing so many trees, and why are taxpayers being asked to foot the entire bill for this initiative?

Shouldn’t property owners along Ridgewood Avenue be assessed for this work and the other streetscape enhancements? If a sidewalk in front of my house should need replacement, I’ll pay for it out of my pocket, correct?

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=60066

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>Letter: A life sentence on Mother’s Day

>IMG 1647
Letter: A life sentence on Mother’s Day
Sunday, May 10, 2009
NorthJersey.com

A life sentence on Mother’s Day

On Mother’s Day last year, my husband and I went out for brunch with my mother and our 24-year-old son, Dan. Afterwards, Dan planted his gift to me: a tea rose bush. Then, he washed my car. It was a lovely day.

In the afternoon, as often happened, Dan went out for a walk. As dinnertime approached, three Paramus police cars pulled up to the house. The policemen were subdued and respectful as they told us that Dan had been hit by a car in Ridgewood. And that he had died of his injuries.

On a Sunday afternoon, in full daylight, crossing with the green light, he was struck in the crosswalk with enough force to put him on the hood of the driver’s car, carried 40 feet and then thrown off the car. The head injuries killed him. Dan never saw what hit him.

Eyewitnesses with a clear view of the scene said that the car, turning, cut the corner and was speeding. Yet the driver was charged only with “failure to yield to a pedestrian.”

Ultimately, the driver was fined about $300 and his license was suspended for three months.
Our son was killed, and “failure to yield” sounds like a case of bad manners, not an act that resulted in such tragic consequences. We are amazed that no greater charges, not even careless driving, were brought. The Ridgewood Police, the Bergen County Prosecutor’s office and the state Motor Vehicle Commission all have minimized the consequences to the driver for a careless, negligent act that resulted in a death.

Failure to impose any greater penalty sends a very bad message, one that trivializes one’s responsibility to drive carefully and to be held accountable for one’s actions. We appeal to the state lawmakers to strengthen pedestrian safety by passing a law with a mandatory penalty when a pedestrian injury or death occurs.

Dan’s life did matter. He was a kind, hard-working young man, engaged to be married and with a bright future ahead. And in the blink of an eye, he was gone. The driver has his driving privileges back, and we’ve received a life sentence.

Andrea DeVries
Paramus, May 7

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>Sorry about the Sign…..

>bicycle

“I think it is rather crass of you to use a sign as your logo that was put up and paid for by Gilsenan and Company – – – and you photo shop out that company’s credit. Think about it – as you pretend to be Ridgewood’s Socrates”

A correction :

I recently posted this pic of a “welcome to ridgewood “sign I have been informed that the pic had the donors of the sign Gilsenan and Co.’s logo photo shopped out of the picture.

First I want to apologise I pulled the pic off google images with my blackberry :

https://images.google.com/images?hl=en&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&rlz=1I7RNWG&um=1&q=ridgewood+nj&sa=N&start=20&ndsp=20

You will notice it has been stored with the logo removed ,which you may or may not be able to figure out who did it by the image code.

2nd the pic is not meant to be a logo ,the Ridgewood Blogs logo is bicycle(see above), due to a program virus weeks ago we had some issues with our header and logo ,which we are still trying to resolve.

welcom+to+ridgewood

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>Yep its an EXPANSION

>In a recent interview with a reporter, for the first time, a hospital spokesperson referred the to the “Renewal” project as an EXPANSION of the hospital campus.

It looks like the truth is finally coming out.

From The Record: “We will not be going forward with any plans to open a fitness center in Mahwah,” Fraser said. Instead, Valley will focus on getting a change in Ridgewood’s hospital zone ordinance, in order to pursue its proposed $750-million EXPANSION of the hospital campus, she said.

https://www.northjersey.com/health/Mahwah_fitness_center_plans_scrapped.html

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>Welcome to Ridgewood New Jersey

>welcome+too
the Ridgewood blog is the number one local news blog in New Jersey with over 13000 readers a month and over 30,000 comments .It covers news for Ridgewood NJ ,the state and national news if it affects the village .

The Village of Ridgewood is a scenic upper middle class town in northern New Jersey ,filled with Victorian style homes ,a population of 25000, top rated schools ,a train and bus station and over 60 restaurants in the down town area .

Contact me if your looking to advertise your business.

I am available by contract to set up a blog for your business and help you build brand identity through blogging and social media .

CONTACT : onlyonesmallvoice@gmail
or call me 201 966-7788

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>Stile: Republican primaries? Perish the thought

>thttps://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

Republicans pound their chests with pride, and even tear up on occasion, when preaching the virtues of free market competition — except when it comes to intraparty politics.

Mere mention of a primary this year in the governor’s race or in the North Jersey contests for the state Assembly and the free-marketers suddenly shudder in fear and disgust. It means forcing calcified incumbents to get off their cash hoards and defend themselves. It means forcing the party operatives to take sides.

It means — God forbid — giving voters choices.

Joseph Caruso, a Lyndhurst businessman and party operative chafing at conventional party wisdom, says he’s startled by all the fuss he has caused by pursuing a challenge against the incumbents in the Assembly’s 40th Legislative District.

“Should insiders hand-pick who is best, or should the voters make the decision? I don’t know what the problem is,” said Caruso, who lives in Wayne.

Caruso has rankled party regulars who believe his candidacy is part of a complicated two-county strategy to knock Assemblyman Scott Rumana out of his other political job, the Passaic County Republican Party chairmanship.

Critics say Caruso is being propped up by a cabal of Passaic County hardliners aligned with Peter Murphy, the former GOP party boss and determined Rumana foe. Caruso strenuously denies the charge.

Party officials also fear that a 40th District primary could force Rumana and running mate David Russo of Ridgewood to needlessly spend money that would better be spent waging war on Democrats in November. Caruso served as the Bergen County Republican Organization’s finance chairman last year, helping it stockpile cash. Now he threatens to indirectly drain the very fund he helped build.

“They create dissension,” said BCRO Chairman Bob Yudin, who has tried, unsuccessfully, to dissuade Caruso from running. The district includes parts of Essex, Passaic and Bergen counties.

Yudin says primaries only “make sense” when there is a

vacancy or if an incumbent “does something egregious,” like get indicted. Challenging “popular incumbents &hellip is not conducive to party building.”

The Internal Party Argument sounds sensible, at first. Yudin and other chairmen are cobbling together campaigns on shoestring budgets in a Democrat-dominated state. State party coffers are nearly empty. And past party squabbles, particularly in Bergen, have left the party in disarray. And why should the Bergen organization waste its resources on what is essentially a Passaic County turf battle?

All this might be true, but why should Republican Party voters be denied choices because the insurgent’s motives are suspect or because he doesn’t fit nicely into the statewide strategy? Legislative primaries in New Jersey are lame, low-turnout rituals. Incumbents generally yawn their way through them, flecking off the occasional gadfly with little effort. Voters stay home because they generate little interest.

Caruso is a member of the conservative wing of the party who believes the New Jersey GOP has become too liberal, too amorphous, too much like generic Trenton pols. “Where, for instance, are the Republican rallies to overturn the socialist edicts of the Council on Affordable Housing that even many Democrats think is a disastrous idea?” Caruso railed in a recent release.

Personally, I don’t think this kind of rhetoric will sway too many voters in the 40th, but who really knows unless it’s tested on the trail? If Rumana and the laundry list of party officials who endorsed them believe they represent the GOP base, then, in theory, they have nothing to worry about. The cost will be minimal. Will they really waste that much money? And what better way to test Caruso’s claim to independence than a vigorous Jersey campaign fight?

A similar impulse to minimize the competition in the governor’s race surfaced at a recent meeting of county chairmen in Princeton.

GOP officials asked the four Republican candidates not to run slates of local candidates in counties where they failed to win the party’s endorsement. Former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie agreed to the idea and so did Brian Levine, the mayor of Franklin Township in Somerset County. But former Bogota Mayor Steve Lonegan and Assemblyman Rick Merkt refused.

“I’m not going to unilaterally disarm,” Lonegan said. “If the establishment Republicans are trying to rig the system against me, then I intend to beat them.”

What Lonegan didn’t say is that he probably won’t get many of the counties to support him anyway. But he remains a curiosity in this race, a wily self-promoter who can deliver a sound bite and raise money.

His attacks on the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce train to Washington as the “tax and spend” express (and a similar salvo from Merkt), led Christie to snub — and criticize — the same trip. It became Christie’s first position of the campaign, brought about by old-fashioned competition.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

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>Happy NO Pants Day!

>the Ridgewood Blog wishes everyone a Happy NO Pants day

https://www.lalawag.com/zomg-no-pants-day/

Some of you may not have heard, but yes it is in fact global No Pants Day. People from all ages and professions are being encouraged to dress like they would each day but leave off their pants. Ladies if you were planning on wearing a dress or a skirt that means you leave them off too.

The organizers behind No Pants Day say that you should also carry on in public as if nothing is different. Embrace the fact that your ass is showing to the world. Let them know that you don’t care, pants are wrong, and for one day you’re going to celebrate it!

lalawag crew will be out and about in LA today, celebrating properly, and looking for you. @reply us on Twitter and leave your location so we can come party with you in our panties. Fair warning we will be armed with our flips and if you’re in public it’s fair game.

Get some inspiration from the participants of last year’s LA No Pants Day. Acceptable no pants day attire: thick, appropriately modest boxer shorts, bloomers, slips, briefs, and boxer-briefs

https://www.lalawag.com/zomg-no-pants-day/

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>Mark Bombace for the 40th District Assembley seat

>I hope The Fly and other TRB will join me in supporting Mark Bombace for the 40th District Assembley seat.

Let us review the reasons Mr Bombace is eminently qualified for this position:

“John Agostinelli and Mark Bombace will bring real representation to the residents of the 40th District. They have a record of getting things done in their communities, and once elected, will bring a fresh perspective to Trenton. Scott Rumana and David Russo have not been accountable to their constituents, and are more interested in political partisanship than solving the problems facing our families and residents. In these tough economic times we need Assembly Members who are more interested in getting things done then fighting political wars.”

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>Incurring Massive Debt is Not a Stimulus Plan

>Dear Friends,
As I write to you, Congress is contemplating spending over $800 billion dollars in a bill aimed at reviving the economy. Unfortunately, this massive spending bill will do little to stimulate economic growth, and will simply serve to put future generations of Americans in greater debt. If deficit spending could expand the economy, U.S. financial markets would be booming in the wake of the $1.2 Trillion record deficit that Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid have racked up since October of 2008.

The total cost of this one piece of legislation is almost as much as the annual discretionary budget for the entire federal government. President Reagan said the best way to understand a trillion dollars is to imagine a crisp, new stack of $1000 bills. If you had a stack 4 inches high, you’d be a millionaire. A trillion-dollar stack of $1000 bills would measure just over 63 miles high.

President Obama has said that his proposed stimulus legislation will create or save three million jobs. This means that this legislation will spend about $275,000 to create each job. The average household income in the U.S. is $50,000 a year. If you do the math, the proposal would cost each and every household $6,700 additional debt, paid for by our children and grandchildren.

This proposed spending package comes at a perilous time in our nation’s history. While the public continues to climb past $10.6 trillion, this is not nearly an accurate picture of the nation’s current and future liabilities. When Congress effectively nationalized Fannie and Freddie, the government assumed the companies’ $5 Trillion in mortgage debt. And of course, sitting on top of all these obligations lays the approximately $50 Trillion in unfunded liabilities of the nation’s entitlement programs.

As an alternative to this “borrowing and spending” plan, I introduced legislation which would provide tax relief to American businesses, entrepreneurs, and families, while refraining from starting a multi-trillion dollar debt-financed spending spree. The Economic Recovery and Middle-Class Tax Relief Act would give the country needed short-term stimulus, while also encouraging long-term economic growth. This legislation focuses on growth-oriented, permanent incentives for economic activity across all sectors, and includes provisions such as reducing the corporate income tax rate to 25 percent, repealing the Alternative Minimum Tax for individuals, indexing capital gains for inflation, and a 5 percent across-the-board reduction to individual income tax rates. The stimulus package also includes spending cuts, and extends the current two-year Net Operating Loss (NOL) carryback period to seven years.

History has shown that the most effective way to reinvigorate the economy and spur economic growth is to ensure that job creators face a lower tax and regulatory burden. If Congressional leaders adopt a stimulus package based on these or similar principles, instead of adopting a package of increased spending, then we will hopefully create real economic stimulus for America.

Sincerely,

Scott Garrett
Member of Congress

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>Chris Christie officially kicking-off my campaign for Governor of New Jersey

>This week, I am officially kicking-off my campaign for Governor of New Jersey.

As your U.S. Attorney for the past seven years, I never shied away from the tough decisions. During my tenure, we relentlessly prosecuted countless public officials for corruption and corporate executives who cheated their workers. I will use that same hard work and determination to take back New Jersey and once again make our state a place we are proud to call home.

We know our government spends too much, borrows too much, and taxes too much. I will hold our government accountable to the people of New Jersey and bring real change to Trenton. I have the experience and the will to make the tough decisions necessary to put our state on the right track.

I am sending you this email today to personally invite you to join me and my family as we kick-off our campaign for governor. I would be honored if you would join me at one (or more) of the events listed below.

If you have any questions please visit my website at www.christiefornj.com or call my campaign headquarters at 862-579-3181.

Together we will change New Jersey.

Thank you,

Chris Christie

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Announcement Speech
Wednesday, February 4, 2009 at 9:30 a.m. EST
New Jersey Performing Arts Center
Chase Room
36 Park Place
Newark, New Jersey

Diner Stop in Hamilton
Wednesday, February 4, 2009 at 12:30 p.m. EST
Golden Dawn Diner
2090 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road
Hamilton, New Jersey

South Jersey Announcement Remarks
Wednesday, February 4, 2009 at 3:00 p.m. EST
Haddon Heights Downtown
525 Station Avenue (Formerly Fastow’s 5 & 10 Store)
Haddon Heights, New Jersey

Diner Stop in Westville
Wednesday, February 4, 2009 at 6:00 p.m. EST
Gateway Diner
106 Broadway
Westville, NJ

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Announcement of Burlington County Supporters Event
Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 9:00 a.m. EST
Mount Laurel Library
Conference Room
100 Walt Whitman Avenue
Mount Laurel, New Jersey

Announcement of Ocean County Supporters Event
Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 11:15 a.m. EST
Toms River Town Hall
33 Washington Street
Toms River, New Jersey

Announcement of Monmouth County Supporters Event
Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 2:30 p.m. EST
Lincroft Inn
700 Newman Springs Road
Lincroft, New Jersey

Announcement of Union County Supporters Event
Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 4:30 p.m. EST
Cranford VFW
479 South Avenue E
Cranford, New Jersey

Announcement Rally with Morris County Supporters
Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 6:30 p.m. EST
Zeris Inn
373 Route 46 East
Mountain Lakes, New Jersey

www.ChristieforNJ.com
Paid for by Chris Christie for Governor, Inc Ronald Gravino, Treasurer

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>Super Bowl Sunday … a bit of back ground

>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl

The Super Bowl was created as part of the merger agreement between the National Football League (NFL) and its competitive rival, the American Football League (AFL). After its inception in 1920, the NFL fended off several rival leagues before the AFL began play in 1960. The intense competitive war for players and fans led to serious merger talks between the two leagues in 1966, culminating in a merger agreement announcement on June 8, 1966. One of the conditions of the AFC-NFC Merger was that the winners of each league’s championship game would meet in a contest to determine the “world champion of football”. According to NFL Films President Steve Sabol, then NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle wanted to call the game “The Big One”.[3] During the discussions to iron out the details, AFC founder and Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt had jokingly referred to the proposed inter league championship as the “Super Bowl”. Hunt thought of the name after seeing his children playing with a toy called a Super Ball;[4] the small, round ball is now on display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. The name was consistent with postseason college football games which had long been known as “bowl games.” The “bowl” term originated from the Rose Bowl Game, which was in turn named for the bowl-shaped stadium in which it is played. Hunt only meant his suggested name to be a stopgap until a better one could be found. Nevertheless, the name “Super Bowl” became permanent.

After the NFC’s Green Bay Packers convincingly won the first two Super Bowls, some team owners feared for the future of the merger. At the time, many doubted the competitiveness of AFL teams compared with NFL counterparts. That perception all changed with the AFL’s New York Jets’ defeat of the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III in Miami. One year later, the AFC’s Kansas City Chiefs defeated the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings 23-7 and won Super Bowl IV in New Orleans, the last World Championship game played between the champions of the two leagues, as the league merger finally took place later that year.

The game is played annually on a Sunday as the final game of the NFL Playoffs. Originally the game took place in early to mid-January following a 14-game regular season and playoffs. Over the years the date of the Super Bowl has progressed from the second Sunday in January, to the third, then the fourth Sunday in January; the game is now played on the first Sunday in February, given the current 17-week (16 games and one bye week) regular season and three rounds of playoffs. This progression of the date of the Super Bowl has been caused by the following: the expansion of the NFL regular season in 1978 from 14 games to 16, the expansion of the pre-Super Bowl playoffs from two rounds to three (also in 1978), the addition of the regular season bye-week in the 1990s, and the decision prior to the 2003 season to start the regular season the week after Labor Day, moving the start of the season to a week later than it had been (in 1997, for example, the regular season started on Sunday, August 31). Former NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle is often considered the mastermind of both the merger and the Super Bowl. His leadership guided the two competitors into the merger agreement and cemented the preeminence of the Super Bowl.

The winning team gets the Vince Lombardi Trophy, named for the coach of the Green Bay Packers, who won the first two Super Bowl games and 3 of the 5 preceding NFL championships (1961–62, 1965). Following his death in September 1970, the trophy was named the Vince Lombardi Trophy, and was first awarded as such to the Baltimore Colts at Super Bowl V in Miami. Super Bowl III was the first to be numbered. Super Bowls I and II were not known as such until the game’s third year and were named “The AFC-NFC World Championship Game” when they were played.

Game history

See also: List of Super Bowl champions

1966–1967: Packers’ early dominance

The Green Bay Packers won the first two Super Bowls, defeating the Kansas City Chiefs and the Oakland Raiders. The Packers were led by quarterback Bart Starr, who was named MVP for both games. These two championships, along with the Packers’ NFL championships in 1961, 1962, and 1965 have led many people to consider the Packers to be the “Team of the 1960s.”[citation needed] Green Bay, Wisconsin is often referred to as “Title Town”;[5] by its own residents due to the five championships the Packers won in the 1960s and its twelve championships since the team began playing in 1919.[citation needed]

1968–1979 AFL/AFC dominance

Super Bowl III featured one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history as the New York Jets, behind the guarantee of Joe Namath, defeated the 18-point favorite Baltimore Colts 16–7. Namath, the MVP of the game, and Matt Snell, 121 yards on 30 carries with a touchdown, led the Jets to victory. The win helped solidify the AFL as a legitimate contender with the NFL.

The 1970s were dominated by the Miami Dolphins and Pittsburgh Steelers, winning a combined six championships in the decade. Miami won Super Bowls VII and VIII, the former completing the NFL’s only perfect season. Pittsburgh won four Super Bowls (IX, X, XIII, and XIV) behind the coaching of Chuck Noll and play of Terry Bradshaw, Lynn Swann, and Franco Harris—each receiving at least one MVP award—and their “Steel Curtain” defense led by Jack Lambert.

The only NFC franchise to win a Super Bowl during the decade was the Dallas Cowboys winning Super Bowls VI and XII. On the other end of the spectrum were the Minnesota Vikings, who lost Super Bowls IV, VIII, IX, and XI.

1980–1996: Two decades of NFC dominance

NFC teams won sixteen of the twenty Super Bowls in the 1980s and 1990s, including thirteen in a row from 1984 to 1996.

The 49ers lead the NFC domination of the 1980s

The most successful franchise of the 1980s was the San Francisco 49ers, who won four Super Bowls in the decade (XVI, XIX, XXIII, and XXIV). The 49ers were led by coach Bill Walsh and quarterback Joe Montana. They were known for using the precision accurate, fast-paced west coast offense. The 1980s also included the 1985 Chicago Bears who finished the season 18–1 (a feat accomplished the prior year by the 49ers), and two championships for the Joe Gibbs-coached Washington Redskins. The Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders were the only AFC franchise to win a Super Bowl in the 1980s, winning Super Bowls XV and XVIII.

The Cowboys dominate the early 1990s

The Dallas Cowboys became the dominant team in the NFL in the early 1990s. After championships by division rivals New York and Washington to start the decade, the Cowboys won three of the next four Super Bowls. The Cowboys were led by Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, and Michael Irvin, the first two of whom won MVP awards. The early 1990s also featured the Buffalo Bills appearing in four consecutive Super Bowls, although they lost all of them. The 49ers became the first team to win five championships with their win in Super Bowl XXIX, with the Cowboys accomplishing that same feat a year later. As both teams began to fizzle late into the decade, another NFC powerhouse, the Green Bay Packers, led by multiple-MVP quarterback Brett Favre, emerged, winning Super Bowl XXXI following the 1996 season.

1997–2000: The AFC rises again

In Super Bowl XXXII, quarterback John Elway led the Denver Broncos to an upset victory over the defending champion Packers, snapping the NFC’s 13-game winning streak, and beginning a streak in which the AFC would win eight of the next ten Super Bowls. The Broncos would go on to win Super Bowl XXXIII the next year, over the Atlanta Falcons, in Elway’s final game before retiring. After an NFC win by the St. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXIV, the AFC continued its winning ways, with wins by the Baltimore Ravens and New England Patriots.

2001–2005: The Patriots’ Dynasty

The Patriots became the dominant team of the early 2000s, winning the championship in three of the first five years of the decade. In Super Bowl XXXVI Super Bowl MVP quarterback Tom Brady led his team to a 20–17 upset victory over the Rams. The Patriots also went on to win Super Bowls XXXVIII and XXXIX. After championships by AFC rivals Pittsburgh and Indianapolis in Super Bowls XL and XLI, respectively, the Patriots responded in 2007 an undefeated regular season – only the second in modern NFL history and the first with a sixteen game schedule – which included a road win over the defending champion Colts. Despite the regular season performance, the Patriots were upset by the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl