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>An Age of Elegance: Weddings from Ridgewood’s Past

>weddingshoes
Welcome to the Schoolhouse Museum!
On display now through July 26, 2009

Weddings from Ridgewood’s Past

The Ridgewood Historical Society is sponsoring An Age of Elegance: Weddings from Ridgewood’s Past, to be displayed at the village’s Schoolhouse Museum March 29 through July 26, 2009. This exhibition explores the social rituals of love and marriage through historic and lavish wedding gowns, bridal lingerie, accessories and ephemera from the Ridgewood Historical Society’s collection dating from the late 18th century through the early 20th century.

“The wedding gowns and other artifacts in this collection are rich historical documents. They tell a great deal about the technology, textiles, and traditions of Ridgewood society in an age gone by”, said Joy Hamburger, Ridgewood resident who is the curator of the exhibit. “It’s exciting to work with this collection which includes delicate wedding slippers from the 1700s, beautiful invitations addressed to prominent Ridgewood families in the 1800s, and elaborate gowns from the Victorian Era.”

The Schoolhouse Museum is open on Saturdays 1:00–3:00 p.m.,

Sundays 2:00–4:00 p.m., and Thursdays 1:00–3:00 p.m.

The suggested donation is $5 for an adult, $3 for a child, and $10 for a family.

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>The total list CRR members names and addresses was NOT handed over to the Planning Board.

>Just for the record.

The total list of CRR members names and addresses was NOT handed over to the Planning Board. A sub-list containing only the names of people who allowed this to happen was given to the Board Attorney. This was explained in the last CRR email update to members.

In the end, less than 20% of the membership gave permission for their names to be included in the list given to the board. However, I understand that this was sufficient to provide standing. By way of comparison there are many more signs displayed within the Village than the total number of names on the list given to the board.

CRR reviewed the law concerning the request from the Board as is covered under Section 40:55D-10 of the NJ Municipal Land Use Law. The law gives the “presiding officer at the hearing” wide latitude in deciding length of time allotted for each speaker and the rules governing the hearing procedure. After examining the issues, CRR decided that acceding to the boards request and producing the qualified list would be in the best interests our membership. Please be aware that even as late as last Friday, the Hospital’s attorney has been attempting to reduce CRR’s voice at the hearings.

Also, be aware that decision to provide even the sub-list was not taken lightly. Before the sub-list was handed over, there were numerous emails between myself, the Chairman of the Planning Board and the Attorney for the Planning Board. CRR has assurances along with clarifications that the list is simply to provide the board with an instrument to provide “standing” to CRR at the hearing.

Last night there were many, many important points raised by residents and we welcome the statement made by the BOE. All speakers asked their questions and read their statements with confidence and passion about the critical issues. It was clear that we live in a great community that we all want to protect.

I am hoping that people will bring their neighbors and friends along on July 15th at BF Middle School to hear and speak more – it is NOT over yet! Fliers and much more information is available from https://www.stopvalley.com including the letter that was read by the BOE last night.

Regards,
Paul Gould on behalf of Concerned Residents of Ridgewood

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>Planning board attorney looking into names of residents who are represented by Stop Valley

>“I am quite upset that the Board attorney requested a list of residents who are represented by Stop Valley. It is apparent that the Board sympathies lie with Valley and not with tax paying residents. Perhaps the Stop Valley people should ask the Board to ban individuals who are not residents of the Village from the hearing.”

ominous or just doing his job?

Hot Offers (6.14 - 6.20)

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>ALL-BERGEN Boys Outdoor Track

>All-area teams (High school Boys Outdoor Track news)
by THE STAR-LEDGER
Saturday June 13, 2009, 9:06 PM
ALL-BERGEN

FIRST TEAM
100-Raldaine McDonald, Englewood
200-Marvin Whilby, Don Bosco Prep
400-Corey Caidenhead, Bergenfield
800-Hayden Duffy, Emerson Boro
1,600-Rob Molke, Don Bosco Prep
3,200-Leighton Spencer, Don Bosco Prep
HH-Brandon Hambric, Teaneck
IH-Mark Filandro, Indian Hills
HJ-Tommy DeVita, Ridgewood
LJ-Ackeme Brown, Englewood
TJ-Conroy Walker, Hackensack
SP-Eric Van Dunk, Mahwah
DIS-Tomasz Dlugozima, Wallington
JAV-Kevin Steimle, Mahwah
PV-Greg Hoffman, Park Ridge
4×400-Bergen Catholic

SECOND TEAM
100-Max Whitt, Ridgewood
200-Kevin Condal, Hasbrouck Heights
400-Jake Hubschman, Demarest
800-Justin Hodge, Teaneck
1,600-Dayne Mosconi, Tenafly
3,200-Taro Shigenobu, Ridgewood
HH-Daniel Chediak, Fort Lee
IH-Ryan McVeigh, River Dell
HJ-Julius DeFreese, Mahwah
LJ-Corey Crawford, Indian Hills
TJ-Greg Hazell, Don Bosco Prep
SP-Patrick Thomas, Lodi
DIS-Matt Krzysik, Indian Hills
JAV-Kaleb Zuidema, Midland Park
PV-Scott Weismiller, Don Bosco Prep
4×400-Teaneck

THIRD TEAM
100-Max Whitt, Ridgewood
200-Casey Pleasants, Teaneck
400-Elvis Cake, Lodi
800-Taylor Trumbetti, Pascack Hills
1,600-Tommy Gaidus, Northern Highlands
3,200-Patrick Rono, Lyndhurst
HH-Joe Vargas, Paramus
IH-InSoo Hwang, Ridgewood
HJ-Michael McNicholas, Bergen Catholic
LJ-Kelly Davis, Manchester Reg.
TJ-Bryan Rodgers, Englewood
SP-Patrick Cole, Hasbrouck Heights
DIS-Marquise Wright, Paramus Catholic
JAV-Tyler Potterton, Demarest
PV-Julio Alorro, Cresskill
4×400-Englewood

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Reader asks ,"Whats the Impact of all these projects?"

>village of ridgewood

Save Our Village …..

“Is there any real planning going on in town? The HS turf – BF Track, Valley Expansion,Train Station, Water Park, Parking garage,condos and COAH obligations are making my head spin.

What is the impact of these projects and how do they affect each other? How built out should the town become? What is the difference between a village and a city? Is there really is a Master Plan, and just what is the plan?”

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>Reader Is Skeptical of BOE’s Ability to Manage a $84.4 Million Budget

>In light of the recent disclosure that BOE employees failed to deposit donated funds earmarked for an athletic scholarship in memory of RHS graduate Edward “Ted” Winfield, I will be voting “no” on the school budget this coming Tuesday.

Clearly, an organization incapable of promptly depositing checks, and holding no one accountable once the egregious error was discovered, should not be trusted to manage $84.4 million in taxpayer monies.

I’m fed up with all of the BOE’s mistakes, and their continued failure to discipline those responsible for making them.

Vote “no” on Tuesday, April 21 and send a clear message that taxpayers expect increased effectiveness and more accountability for less money.

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>Got to love it: Taxpayers Storm ‘Luxury Lavatory’ at State House

>https://www.nowhampshire.com/2009/04/15/taxpayers-storm-%E2%80%98luxury-lavatory%E2%80%99-at-state-house/

“About seventy women and forty men” visited the Senate President and Speaker of the House’s new taxpayer-funded “luxury lavatory” at the State House to relieve themselves all at once today, sources tell NowHampshire.com.

About 500 people showed up for the Concord “Taxpayer Tea Party.” After protesting the federal government’s spending policies in Concord during the noon hour many of the taxpayers needed to relieve themselves. So Republican state Rep. Fran Wendelboe invited anyone who had to go to the third floor bathroom, which cost the state $72,000 and is seen by many in New Hampshire as an unnecessary extravagance in the middle of an economic recession.

bathroom-after2Sources on the ground tell NowHampshire.com three state troopers were called up to monitor the taxpayers even though they were well behaved. It’s unclear whether the troopers were called in at the behest of Speaker Terie Norelli or Senate President Sylvia Larson, both of whom are Democrats.

The fancy bathroom has become the source of controversy for leadership in both houses of the state legislature. Senate leadership says the new bathroom was necessary because of urine stains on the floor.

The bathroom has also become a national story. It was featured on the Fox News Channel last weekend.

https://www.nowhampshire.com/2009/04/15/taxpayers-storm-%E2%80%98luxury-lavatory%E2%80%99-at-state-house/

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>Village Council tried to boost shuttle bus ridership

>Highlights:

PJ- you missed a barn burned tonight at village hall.

Happy to fill you in…..

Anne Zusy told the taxpayers of Ridgewood to suck it up and stop being cranky.
Mayor Pfund threatened to re-open the debate over train parking on Ridge road.

When it was pointed out the shuttle is paid for with borrowed
money and council tried to boost ridership to justify the bus with
that Thursday night email the mayor threatened to put the Ridge Road
parking idea back on the table?

Anne Zusy claiming the shuttle has 4-6 people on board on every run
when we watch it go by empty?

quite a night..

J&R Computer/Music World

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>Advocating for the Budget Committee ABC

>April 16, 2009

Dear Neighbor,

Join me in supporting the Ridgewood School Budget at the polls on April 21st. The 2009-2010 budget rises to the current financial challenges before us, adheres to the statutory constraints imposed by the State of NJ and meets the educational expectations of our community.

Key Points-
1.Unprecedented financial challenges balanced by strong decisions to support the core values of our community.
2. Fully explores cost saving measures with professional service providers, bargaining units, and purchasing consortiums to bring the most value to the taxpayer.
3. Moves us forward to meet the educational needs of our students by maintaining class sizes, curriculum work, textbook materials, and professional development for our staff.
4. Continues our commitment to facilities improvements.

The hard decisions have already been made. We encourage you to support the Ridgewood School Budget in the voting booth on April 21st by voting, “YES”. A budget defeat will likely result in further cuts to the education offered Ridgewood’s children.

Let’s not let that happen.

Sincerely,
ABC
Advocating for the Budget Committee

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>Thousands of Anti-Tax ‘Tea Party’ Protesters Turn Out in U.S. Cities

>Hundreds of anti-tax rallies kicked off Wednesday in several U.S. cities as demonstrators protested high taxes and massive government spending

like “Give me liberty, not debt” and “Our kids can’t afford you” were heard across several U.S. cities Wednesday as anti-tax “tea party” protesters took to the streets to voice their opposition to big government spending.

Thousands of protesters — some dressed in colonial wigs with tea bags hanging from their eyeglasses — showed up in states from California to Kentucky to Massachusetts, holding signs and reading speeches lambasting the Obama administration’s tax-and-spend policies.

“I have two little kids and I know we are mortgaging their futures away,” one protester at a rally in Austin, Texas told FOX News. “It makes me sick to my stomach.”

The demonstrations are part of a larger grassroots movement against government spending called Taxed Enough Already, or TEA — giving name to the Tax Day Tea Parties — and come more than 235 years after the original Boston Tea Party revolt against taxes.

Protesters gathered in cities across the country.

Shouts rang out from Kentucky, which just passed tax increases on cigarettes and alcohol, to Salt Lake City, where many in the crowd booed Republican Gov. Jon Huntsman for accepting about $1.5 billion in stimulus money. Even in Alaska, where there is no statewide income tax or sales tax, hundreds of people held signs and chanted “No more spending.”

“Frankly, I’m mad as hell,” said businessman Doug Burnett at a rally at the Iowa Capitol, where many of the about 1,000 people wore red shirts declaring “revolution is brewing.” Burnett added: “This country has been on a spending spree for decades, a spending spree we can’t afford.”

In Boston, a few hundred protesters gathered on the Boston Common — a short distance from the original Tea Party — some dressed in Revolutionary garb and carrying signs that said “Barney Frank, Bernie Madoff: And the Difference Is?” and “D.C.: District of Communism.”

Texas Gov. Rick Perry fired up a tea party at Austin City Hall with his stance against the federal government, as some in his U.S. flag-waving audience shouted, “Secede!”

But unlike many events around the country, politicians were not allowed to speak at a separate rally in San Antonio.

“They are welcome to come and listen to us, for a change,” organizers said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Obama seized the opportunity to defend his tax policy Wednesday, saying, “Make no mistake: this tax cut will reach 120 million families and put $120 billion directly into their pockets, and it includes the most American workers ever to get a tax cut. This will boost demand, and save or create over half a million jobs.”

“I know that April 15 isn’t exactly everyone’s favorite date on the calendar. But it is an important opportunity for those of us in Washington to consider our responsibility to the people who sent us here and who pay the bills,” he said.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs also defended the president’s promise to cut taxes.

“If anybody involved looks at the facts, they’ll find out that this president promised and this president delivered on putting more money back into the pockets of hardworking Americans, cut their taxes, made it more affordable to buy a home, made it more affordable to send their kids to go to college, provided tax incentives for businesses to create jobs through things like clean energy,” Gibbs told reporters during an afternoon press conference.

“I’ll let the organizers of whatever these are speak to their motivations,” he said.

Earlier in the day, poor weather and permit problems threatened crowd turnouts at protests in Washington, D.C.

One million tea bags delivered to Lafayette Park were reloaded and sent away because tea party organizers did not have the proper permit, protest organizer Rebecca Wales told FOX News.

And a D.C. rally scheduled to take place outside the Treasury Department was cancelled when the U.S. Secret Service prevented protesters from gathering outside for lacking a permit.

The latest round of protests started yesterday when about 200 people gathered at the Missouri state capitol.

The movement has attracted prominent Republicans, some considering a 2012 presidential bid.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich address a tea party in a New York City park Wednesday night. His advocacy group, americansolutions.com, has partnered with tea party organizers to get word to the group’s members.

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, another likely 2012 GOP presidential hopeful, planned to attend tea parties in Columbia and Charleston. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal sent an e-mail to his supporters, letting them know about tea parties taking place throughout the state.

There were several small counter-protests, including one that drew about a dozen people at Fountain Square in Cincinnati. A counter-protester held a sign that read, “Where were you when Bush was spending billions a month ‘liberating’ Iraq?” The anti-tax demonstration there, meanwhile, drew about 4,000 people.

In Lansing, Mich., outside the state Capitol, another 4,000 people waved signs exclaiming “Stop the Fiscal Madness,” “Read My Lipstick! No More Bailouts” and “The Pirates Are in D.C.” Children held makeshift signs complaining about the rising debt.

More than 1,000 protesters gathered outside a downtown federal building in Salt Lake City despite the rain and snow. Kate Maloney held a cardboard sign that read “Pin the tail on the jacka$$” with a picture of Obama on a Democratic donkey.

Other protesters also took direct aim at Obama. One sign in the crowd in Madison, Wis., compared him to the anti-Christ. At a rally in Montgomery, Ala., where Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It” blared from loudspeakers, Jim Adams of Selma carried a sign that showed the president with Hitler-style hair and mustache and said, “Sieg Heil Herr Obama.”

Still others talked of their children’s futures. In Washington, D.C., Joe Hollinger said he took the day off to attend the protest with his 11-year-old daughter.

“I’m concerned about the incredible amount of debt Congress is going to put on our children,” Hollinger said, pointing to his daughter’s sign, which read, “Congress get your hand off my piggy bank.”

“Across our nation, thousands of Americans are participating in taxpayer tea parties today for one simple reason: overtaxed families and small businesses have had enough,” House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Wednesday.

“They’ve had enough of Democrats forcing taxpayers to pick up the tab for more wasteful spending instead of working together to make the tough fiscal decisions Americans are forced to make each and every day. They’ve had enough of seeing their hard-earned tax dollars wasted on pork-barrel spending that won’t create jobs, rebuild their savings, or get our economy moving again. And they’ve had enough of Congress and the White House mortgaging our children and grandchildren’s future by saddling them with mountains of debt destined to bankrupt our country,” Boehner said.

FOX News’ Griff Jenkins and Eric Shawn and the Associated Press contributed to this report

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/15/anti-tax-tea-party-protests-expected/
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>Outcome of the Wednesday, April 15 Village Council Meeting – Shuttle BUS Through the Heights

>Dear all,

Thanks everyone for your support regarding the Shuttle Bus through the Heights. Last night the Village Council came back with a modified version of the Shuttle Bus project, which was a direct result of our concerted effort and making our voices heard. Although there were still some heated debate and commentary, most of us walked away feeling that this was a good compromise for the time being.

The modification is as follows:

~NJT will provide a smaller bus for 10 passengers plus one handicap seat within the next week.

~The schedule will remain the same: M-F morning and evening rush hour there will be a 15 loop, M – F & S/S daytime schedule will run hourly.

~The rush hour loop will be rerouted to Hillcrest, Glen, Oak to the train station and back.

~The daytime schedule will run through the Heights for the seniors.

Follow up points:

~It was asked that NJT ensure that background checks are completed on all of the drivers assigned to our area.

~The bus schedule may also be amended based on rider use.

Thanks again to all that have helped with the many emails and phone calls.

And a special thanks to those who attended last night with their kids! (The kids were especially well behaved, model citizens).

Sincerely,

Angela, Allison, Carla, Jeff, Dave, Dohyun, Craig, & Bill.

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>Thank You Again Another Record Month for the Ridgewood Blog

>Sorry this is so delayed we had some tech glitches in the last couple of weeks

Sunday, March 1, 2009

to

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

the Ridgewood blog had 13415 unique ip visits
and 44005 hits making March 2009 another record month


email us with your announcements ,comments ,editorials and garage sales [email protected]

twitter /ridgewoodblog

I am also avaliable for public speaking , I look good in a TUX and if you would like to learn how to use blogging to market your business email me your contact info.

thank you so much

PJ Blogger

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>TAX DAY !

>Washington, Apr 15 –

From federal taxes to property taxes, New Jersey residents face one of the highest total tax burdens in the nation. Tax day serves as a stark reminder of the ever-present fact that these crushing taxes make New Jersey unaffordable for too many individuals and families. New Jerseyans are not unaccustomed to this reality, but this year’s tax day arrives amid a unique level of populist anger. Americans all around the country are participating in citizen protests in the form of tax day tea parties, such as the one taking place in the Hampton Plaza in Sussex County, in order to express their outrage at the use of their tax dollars to bail out Wall Street and “stimulate” the economy through a spending bill with questionable economic impact.

In addition to authoring income-saving legislation such as the Individual AMT Repeal Act of 2009 and the Economic Recovery and Middle-Class Tax Relief Act of 2009, I have been outspoken against government actions that increase taxpayer risk. I opposed the bailout of Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, AIG, and the auto industry, I voted against the TARP program, and called on Congress to give its Members time to actually read the stimulus package, rather than rushing the legislation through the House and Senate.

While the actions taken by our government have staggering costs, I remain an optimist and have great confidence in the power of the American people. Americans recognize that the government needs their tax dollars to function and provide essential programs for our country, and Americans have always been willing to pay their fair share. During times of extreme crisis, the people of this country have banded together and made sacrifices for the greater good, but there is no tolerance for the spending rampage in which our government is currently participating.

On tax day this year, taxpayers are asking the American government to be accountable for how it spends their money. In a state like New Jersey, which only sees sixty-one cents in return for every dollar that goes to Washington, DC, taxpayers have a right to demand such accountability for what is being done with their tax dollars. Washington politicians should set aside their political agendas to see how Congress can reform the tax code, reduce the financial burden on the American people, and promote accountability and transparency in government spending.

Rep.Scott Garrett

Rep. Scott Garrett represents New Jersey’s fifth district and is the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government-Sponsored Enterprises for the House Financial Services Committee.