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>Are you taking the George Washington Bridge less since the toll hike?

>Are you taking the George Washington Bridge less since the toll hike?
Published: Tuesday, December 06, 2011, 11:08 AM  
By S.P. Sullivan, NJ.com

Considering the tolls have gone up, and we’re not even sure where they’re going, a lot of people are grumbling about taking the Port Authority-controlled bridges and tunnels to New York.

So are you taking the train more?

The New York Times reported this week that traffic on the George Washington Bridge is down by 890,000 cars — or 4 percent — since cash tolls jumped from $8 to $12 in September.

At the same time, according data the Times collected from the Port Authority, traffic on the PATH rose by 560,000 riders — about 3.7 percent.

https://www.nj.com/bergen/index.ssf/2011/12/are_you_taking_the_george_washington_bridge_less_since_the_toll_hike.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

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>Audrey Meyers : Social darling or community pariah?

>Audrey Meyers : Social darling or community pariah?

Audrey Meyers has had a bad week. First the State Health Planning Board gave the OK to the reopening of Pascack Valley then the Ridgewood Village Council strongly rejected her management team’s bid to massively expand Valley Hospital. To her followers, Meyers seems to have moved from social darling to a pariah in the community. What happened and why?

If you have lived in Ridgewood for more than 5 years you will remember the first Valley Renewal fliers that began appearing in mailboxes in late 2006. The early renewal propaganda all featured large images of Meyers with her serene expression and steady gaze looking out of the page from beneath her straight black fringe. I guess the public relations company decided that they could appeal to the perceived community popularity of Meyers to help sell the Renewal. But even at the beginning of the campaign was Meyers really a popular community figure in Ridgewood? From her vantage point on Highland Ave and her salary of over $1.3 million it was hard to see her as person of the people. Ever since Meyers took the job as CEO at Valley she has constantly surrounded herself with a small circle of her executive team. Stories have emerged from within Valley of people who expressed views counter to Meyers being fired. Yet Valley PR has repeatedly claimed that Audrey has the ear of the Ridgewood community from which the Renewal enjoys full support. After two council elections for Village council where candidates who did not publically support the renewal were elected, the truth about broad community support has proved to be false.

So who are the Audrey supporters? This group is really the Hospital Ancillary. At its heart the Hospital Ancillary is really a club that holds social events in support of the hospital. IRS documents reveal that the ancillary contributes just over 2 million dollars in donations per year. With the total hospital revenue near one billion dollars the financial contribution from the Auxiliary is in reality small. However, in the community Ridgewood, the Auxiliary is really THE social club in town, especially amongst the ladies who lunch. It is a club where the very comfortably well-off can rub shoulders with the very wealthy and feel like they have made it. At least twice a month members of the auxiliary can be seen gracing the social pages of the Ridgewood News or in photos in the health section. Gala balls, dinners and fashion shows are all opportunities to display a member’s taste in fine clothes, food and wine. Like the socialites buzzing around Miss Hilly in THE HELP’s depiction of Jackson Mississippi, Ridgewood’s social scene is also clearly divided between the ancillary crowd and everyone else. In this environment it would be easy for Meyers to believe that she has overwhelming support. Surrounded by employees are compelled to follow the boss and the members of the ancillary fawning over her to get a place in the social order it is easy to see why she still believes she is on top in public opinion. This is because all she hears is support as no one who she surrounds herself with dares to tell her anything different.

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>America Needs More Job Creation

>America Needs More Job Creation
Mike Brownfield

December 2, 2011 at 10:26 am

After months upon months of unemployment stuck at or above 9 percent, the American people may finally see a sliver of relief in today’s jobs report from the Department of Labor. The report suggests the month of November saw 120,000 net new jobs created and the unemployment rate drop to 8.6 percent–driven in part by the 315,000 people who have given up looking for work and were no longer counted as unemployed. That news is cold comfort to the 13.3 million Americans who are still out of work and the 402,000 workers who filed for unemployment last week.

The question is whether this improvement is real and enduring or a fluke. The economy is growing, but there’s little evidence of the real strength the report suggests, and there’s a lot in the report to suggest something’s amiss with the numbers–something likely to be corrected in the next report. For example, is it likely the labor market strengthened as much as the job number suggests at the same time so many people abandoned the workforce? And this is only one of the anomalies in the report.

The White House would therefore be wise to trumpet today’s news with soft notes. The fact remains that under President Barack Obama’s watch, the U.S. unemployment rate remains high because America just isn’t creating enough new jobs. And if the only way the Obama Administration can get the unemployment rate to drop is by convincing people to quit looking for work, that’s bad news for the American economy. Or to quote liberal blogger Matt Yglesias, ”Decreasing unemployment by shrinking the labor force is not exactly winning the future.”

It goes without saying that if the U.S. economy loses more jobs than it creates, the unemployment rate goes up. If job losses are low but few new jobs are created, then the unemployment rate treads water and remains high, with occasional dips and rises–and that’s what we’re seeing today.

As Heritage’s James Sherk writes, in the last quarter of 2007, private employers created 7.6 million jobs and shed 7.4 million jobs. That was enough net new jobs to keep unemployment steady as new workers entered the labor force. During the recession, job losses increased, hitting 8.5 million jobs lost in the first quarter of 2009. The good news is that today, job losses are well below their pre-recession rates, hitting a record low in the first quarter of 2011. The bad news is that few new jobs are being created, leaving America in the economic doldrums. Sherk explains:

https://blog.heritage.org/2011/12/02/morning-bell-america-needs-more-job-creation/?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Morning%2BBell

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>All Seasons Chamber Players perform concert, Dec. 11

>All Seasons Chamber Players perform concert, Dec. 11

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2011
TEANECK SUBURBANITE

The All Seasons Chamber Players will return to the Ridgewood Public Library Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 for a 3 p.m. concert. The popular classical ensemble has been performing at the Ridgewood Library annually for many years. This concert is part of the Sunday Afternoon Performance Series of the Friends of the Ridgewood Public Library.

The library, located at 125 North Maple Ave. in Ridgewood, provides excellent concert facilities and is handicapped accessible. There is a $3 suggested donation at the door. Refreshments may be purchased at the snack shop at intermission. For more information or directions, call the library at 201-670-5600.

The program, entitled Vive la France! will offer three centuries of chamber music by famous French composers from the baroque era to the 20th century. The featured work will be a musical tour de force – Maurice Ravel’s great Piano Trio in A Minor (1914). The program will also include a baroque Trio Sonata in D by Jean-Marie Leclair; the tuneful and playful Dolly Suite for Piano Duet by Gabriel Faure; and the ever-popular Sonata for Flute and Piano by Francis Poulenc. Robert Lawrence, co-director for programs, will introduce each piece to the audience with personal spoken program notes.

https://www.northjersey.com/community/events/134807113_Chamber_Players_to_perform_.html

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>An idea whose time has come: NYC Geese to Feed Needy in Pennsylvania

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Let them Eat Geese 

In an effort to feed the hungry New York City plans to send geese captured around its airports to a Pennsylvania slaughterhouse and then distribute them to food banks there.    

The Department of Environmental Protection mad the decision following criticism that the gassed geese were dumped into landfills while the less fortunate go hungry.  

A department spokesman told the The New York Times that it wanted its efforts to enhance public safety but also help the needy.    

The Goose eradication was authorized after U.S. Airways Flight 1549 made a miraculous landing in the Hudson River in 2009 after a flock of geese got caught up in it’s engines causing an emergency landing.    

If thinks work out the agency said that next year the geese will feed needy New Yorkers, but rumors swirl that many of New York’s finest gourmets are lining up to offer the fresh roadkill as a delicacy .

https://www.manhattanstyle.com/news/let-them-eat-geese/

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>Local History : Case is made against historic house

>Case is made against historic house
Saturday, February 5, 2011
BY STEPHANIE AKIN
THE RECORD
STAFF WRITER

PARAMUS — The original structure of a house linked to Bergen County’s historical freed slave community is in such poor condition that it would be almost impossible to preserve, an architect representing a developer testified on Thursday.

A developer wants to build homes on the site of the Zabriskie-Wessells-Board house in Paramus, which housed freed slaves.

Speaking in support of a plan to raze the so-called Zabriskie-Wessells-Board slave house on Dunkerhook Road, architect Peter Wells said that renovations and neglect during the building’s 250-year history have diminished its historical value.

“It doesn’t even actually resemble the way it was originally built,” Wells said.

The testimony was among the first since developer Sal Petruzzella’s proposal was submitted to the borough in March, inciting opposition from preservationists and descendants of the original occupants as far-flung as Baltimore.

https://www.northjersey.com/community/115349934_Case_is_made_against_historic_house.html

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>PEDESTRIAN SAFETY :Unlike Grand Theft Auto the goal of driving is not to hit other cars and people

>PEDESTRIAN SAFETY :Unlike Grand Theft Auto the goal of driving is not to hit other cars and people
Peter Coti

Ridgewood NJ- On Thursday I was walking up Glen avenue, one of the most dangerous roads due to its steepness, curves and lack of sidewalk. I had just passed under the bridge and then I see a completely incompetent teenager who was obviously putting his pedal to the metal. I then put up my arm in a “Sir, your head seems to be up your ass, I advise you to slow down before you kill someone,” manor and what does he do in response? He flips me off. So since he refuses to care about his safety and others I have decided to write him a letter.

To the teenager driving the green late 1990’s BMW:

I know you think you are “hip” and “cool” for driving fast like they do in movies, while in fact you are just a “mindless mingebag”. I could honestly care less about you hurting yourself but I hope you know you are endangering others with your reckless driving. Just because you are speeding on a local road in comparison does not mean you won’t get into a car accident, in fact 88% of car accidents occur on local roads! Did you know that “in 2009, about 3,000 teens in the United States aged 15–19 were killed and more than 350,000 were treated in emergency departments for injuries suffered in motor-vehicle crashes.” 37% of those people who were killed were speeding of their own accord (illegal substances were not a contributing factor.)

Pedestrians cross the streets that you drive on in addition to cars. If you were to hit a car going 60mph it would be less lethal then hitting a pedestrian at 30mph. Unlike Grand Theft Auto the goal of driving is not to hit other cars and people. Do you really want to have to go through life knowing you killed someone while driving?

In conclusion I hope you now to slow down when you drive. BUT if you really want to speed then I advise you to move to a rural area. That way there is a less chance of you surviving and you would hopefully be eliminated from the gene pool which would help benefit humanity.

The RPD needs to step up enforcement on Glen to keep people like you off the roads! In the words of Helen Lovejoy “won’t someone please think of the children.”

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>Yansi Fugel 2011 Spring Trunk Show

>Yansi Fugel 2011 Spring Trunk Show
Thu, February 17, 2011 – Sat, February 19, 2011
Time: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Location: Yansi Fugel Flagship Store, 66 East Ridgewood Avenue
Event Description

Yansi Fugel present the 2011 Spring Trunk Show!
February 17th-February 19th
10:00am – 6:00pm
66 East Ridgewood Avenue
201-493-7060

Shop early for Spring with the latest fashion from
Yansi Fugel. www.yansifugel.com for the updates.

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>Valley Renewal :Is the expansion was good for Ridgewood, or is the expansion just good for business ?

>Valley Renewal : Is the expansion was good for Ridgewood, or is the expansion just good for business ?

Ridgewood NJ – Someone who supports the valley expansion wrote a letter to the Ridgewood Newa. The letter was supposed to be about why the expansion was good for Ridgewood, but it sounded more like why the expansion was good for business.

These days, no one goes to the closest hospital for non emergency procedures. We are all in control of our health, we research and get second opinions. The research will help us select the doctor and hospital that our insurance will cover.

In the NY Metro area there are a lot of great hospitals to choose from. Valley is not known for anything. My first stop for medical treatment in Bergen County would be Hackensack Medical Center. They already have the resources and technology that valley would like to have. For emergency services I would go to the closest hospital. Valley’s ER should be updates to offer the best services possible.

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>Postal Service warns of default as losses mount

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Postal Service warns of default as losses mount
By Ben Rooney, staff reporterFebruary 9, 2011: 3:47 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — The U.S. Postal Service warned Wednesday that it may default on some of its financial obligations later this year after reporting yet another quarterly loss.

The USPS, a self-supporting government agency that receives no tax dollars, said it suffered a loss of $329 million in the first quarter of federal fiscal year 2011. That compared with a loss of $297 million a year earlier.

https://money.cnn.com/2011/02/09/news/economy/postal_service/index.htm

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>Village Hall to Raise Room Rental Rates

>Village Hall to Raise Room Rental Rates
the Staff of the Ridgewood Blog

Ridgewood NJ – In a continued effort to raise revenue for the Village the Village council has raised the fees for use of meeting rooms in Village Hall.The new rules are for applications to use the Garden Room, Senior Lounge and Youth Center must be turned in to the village manager’s office for review at least 30 days prior to the date requested. Payments are required when the use is approved.

For Village municipal government and its appointed boards and committees and groups that meet under the sole jurisdiction of the Village of Ridgewood and activities co-sponsored by the village will pay no fees during normal business hours Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. There will, however, be a security charge of $50 an hour during off hours, weekends or holidays, according to the ordinance.

Ridgewood-based charities and civic groups with a village mailing address and more than 60 percent resident membership will be charged a $30 fee for the first two hours and $15 for each additional hour in the Garden Room; $50 for the first two hours usage and $25 each additional hour in the Senior Lounge; and $70 for the Youth Center, with $35 each additional hour.

Ridgewood residents and groups must pay a flat rate of $150 for the first two hours usage and $45 for each additional hour. Non-residents will be required to pay $200 for the first two hours and $75 for each additional hour of rental for any room. Classes requiring use of the kitchen will pay a flat rate of $25 an hour and renting the Youth Center will require a $100 deposit that could be returned upon an inspection of the room and equipment.

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>Democrats fight Gov. Christie’s plan to privatize N.J. government functions

>Democrats fight Gov. Christie’s plan to privatize N.J. government functions

Democrats are pushing back against Gov. Chris Christie’s plan to privatize some state government functions by calling for a change in the state constitution to put a short leash on agencies that want to hire private firms. (Friedman, The Star-Ledger)

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/02/democrats_fight_gov_christie_p.html

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>S & P drops New Jersey’s credit rating

>S & P drops New Jersey’s credit rating

Standard and Poors credit rating agency cut the state’s credit rating from AA to AA- today, citing the state’s health care and pension obligations for its action. (Isherwood, PolitickerNJ)

https://www.politickernj.com/44739/s-p-drops-new-jerseys-credit-rating

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>The Village Council is looking to raise fees at Graydon Pool and other Parks and Recreation activities

>The Village Council is looking to raise fees at Graydon Pool and other Parks and Recreation activities
the Staff of the Ridgewood Blog

Ridgewood NJ- The Village Council is looking to raise fees at Graydon Pool and other Parks and Recreation activities .The council is also considering allowing other towns to join Graydon once again, The new ordinance introduced at Wednesday’s council meeting, opens up Graydon to not only eesidents from Midland Park and Paramus, but “residents from other municipalities.” Fees for non-resident children will be $140 in 2011 and $155 in 2012. Non-resident adults will pay $160 the first year and $175 the next year, according to the ordinance. Children under 2 years old will not be charged. Ridgewood residents 16 years old and up will pay $82 to renew a membership, with children paying $72, according to the ordinance.

The ordinance gives a discounted membership if Ridgewood residents who purchase their badges early between May 1 and May 21 this year. Those charges will be $87 for adults, $77 for children and $15 for residents 62 and older. After May 22, children and adult badges will cost an additional $10, and the senior membership will increase by $5, Ridgewood residents, beginning May 20, 2012, will pay $110 for an adult badge and $100 for a child; seniors will pay $25 to join Graydon next year.

According to Village Manager Ken Gabbert Graydon Pool experienced a shortfall of $106,000 last year, which was down from the 2009 shortfall of $192,000. An increase in badge sales narrowed the revenue gap in 2010, as the pool sold 3,691 badges compared to just 2,426 in 2009, according to previous reports. The council introduced is also looking to raise fees for children to attend the summer day camp at Graydon. The new fee will be $500, up from $450 the previous year.

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>CBO Director Says Obamacare Would Reduce Employment by 800,000 Worker

>CBO Director Says Obamacare Would Reduce Employment by 800,000 Worker
2:37 PM, FEB 10, 2011 • BY JEFFREY H. ANDERSON

Testifying today before the House Budget Committee, Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Director Doug Elmendorf confirmed that Obamacare is expected to reduce the number of jobs in the labor market by an estimated 800,000. Here are excerpts from the exchange:

https://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/cbo-director-says-obamacare-would-reduce-employment-800000-workers_547288.html

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