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Local Author, MIKE DOYLE,at Bookends This Sunday (January 25th) at 2:00pm

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Local Author, MIKE DOYLE,at Bookends This Sunday (January 25th) at 2:00pm

Local Author, MIKE DOYLE, will sign his new book: BEAUTIFUL LEGO 2: DARK ($39.95).  This Sunday (January 25th) at 2:00pm

Beautiful LEGO 2: Dark showcases dark LEGO masterpieces from artists around the world. From realistic sculptures of creepy crawlers to impressionist works of shadowy nightmares, this collection will leave you marveling at every turn. But dark has its lighter side, too—with sculptures of dark chocolate as well as plenty of black humor on display.

Gothic fantasies and sci-fi horrors come to life in scenes created entirely with the simple LEGO brick. Step into a world of pure imagination in Beautiful LEGO 2: Dark.

“Far from child’s play. An astonishing collection.” —Publishers Weekly praise for Beautiful LEGO

Appearing authors will only autograph books purchased at Bookends and must have valid Bookends Receipt.

Availability & pricing for all autographed books subject to change.
First In Line Certificate use is the the discretion of Bookends. Blackout dates may apply.

Bookends cannot guarantee that the books that are Autographed will always be First Printings.

Autographed books purchased at Bookends are non-returnable.

While we try to ensure that all customers coming to Bookends’ signings will meet authors and get their books signed, we cannot guarantee that all attendees will meet the author or that all books will be signed.  We cannot control inclement weather, author travel schedules or authors who leave prematurely.

Bookends, 211 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ   07450   201-445-0726

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Ridgewood has room for ‘beneficial change’

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Ridgewood has room for ‘beneficial change’

JANUARY 23, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2015, 12:30 AM
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

‘There is room for beneficial change’

To the editor:

For four years now – two as a resident observer and two as a consultant to the Enclave development – I have been following the dialogue around developing luxury residential units in Ridgewood’s downtown. The process will conclude in the next month or so with a vote at the Planning Board on amending the master plan to allow greater density for residential on four underutilized sites including two former car dealerships.

It has been fascinating to see this process unfold in my town after providing services to developers in similar scenarios over the last 30 years. The most common opposition to these plans comes under the umbrella of “Ridgewood is Different.” Yes, we’ve somehow persuaded ourselves to say it with a capital “D” and that is why this process, which should have taken no more than six months and been an exercise in information and logic, instead has dragged in for six years and tangled us in an unnecessarily wrenching dialogue.

The testimony from the developer’s side has been about what you’d expect – perhaps more intense in response to the opposition, but professional and comprehensive. The testimony from the village planner has been conclusive as to the planning issues: there is not better solution for these sites than what has been proposed if benefits are measured against impacts and if professional planning standards are imposed. Truly a masterful job was performed that the village should take pride in.

Where this process has had its breakdowns is not in its structure, which is part of well-established law. The hallmark of this process has been disingenuousness and political messaging – neither of which is appropriate when such critical issues as the village’s strategy to protect the viability of its downtown and its affordable housing obligation are at stake.

Our school populations are falling and even the most dire predictions of added school children have been called a non-issue by the school superintendant. The traffic consultant assures us that impacts from the proposed developments are less than previous uses and less than other options. The planner has worked to prevent additional sites from being subject to unwanted development.

And yet my friends – on the podium and in the audience – who don’t want the development are accusing developers of lying and village professionals of malfeasance. And they also are intimidating my other friends, who would like to move a parent into a nice apartment downtown or move there themselves when their housing needs change – from expressing their opinions by intimating social consequences.

Really people? It’s time to accept that on the edges of our own “Ridgewood is Different” visions and biases – and despite some downright racial prejudices that we very unexpectedly saw emerge – there is room for beneficial, if imperfect, change. When the Planning Board asks for your public comment, try and not use the capital D to Denigrate or Destruct; it should mean Distinguished.

Ron Simoncini

Ridgewood

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-to-the-editor-ridgewood-has-room-for-beneficial-change-1.1234677

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Remember this number: 165 . . .

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Remember this number: 165 . . .

For those of you who still believe that luxury apartments in Ridgewood’s Central Business District would not attract families with school aged children, this word from Board of Education officials in Edgewater regarding the number of school aged children living in the fire scorched Avalon apartment complex.

From nj.com:

“Of those displaced, school officials said Friday approximately 165 students in pre-kindergarten through grade 12 resided in the Avalon complex.”

https://www.nj.com/bergen/index.ssf/2015/01/the_150_kids_displaced_by_edgewater_fire_have_options_superintendent_says.html#incart_river

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Reader says New Meter Rules Hurt Business in the Central Business District

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Reader says New Meter Rules Hurt Business in the Central Business District

Reader says This council really has there heads up there asses.
Now all the town parking lots are empty.I guess that is what they wanted less revenue from the parking meters. Well they got it.  No parking meters in Allendale!

Parking Changes in Ridgewood – January 1, 2015

Effective January 1, 2015 there will be Parking Changes in Ridgewood – including metered street and lot parking; Ridgewood Parking Permits and Central Business District Employee Parking.

Click Here

We are making a major effort to share this important information with all who park in Ridgewood on a regular basis. Please share these facts with your friends, neighbors and co-workers.

***Parking Guide and Program DETAILS can be found by clicking the PARKING button section at the top of the Ridgewood Homepage

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Ridgewood Restaurant Week 2015

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Ridgewood Restaurant Week 2015
Sun, January 18, 2015 – Thu, January 22, 2015
Time: 12:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Restaurants in Ridgewood, Ridgewood NJ

Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce presents Restaurant Week 2015
Sponsored by Valley Hospital

What a great way to start the New Year-
RESTUARANT WEEK in RIDGEWOOD @ $25.15

Sunday-Thursday
January 18-22, 2015
January 25-29, 2015
Fine dining at $25.15

For these ten days, participating restaurants and caterers are offering you the chance to “experience” dining in Ridgewood and or your home, plus a wonderful selection of wines.

Each Chef is preparing a tantalizing 3-course, prix-fixe menu at $25.15
Please add a wine that will enhance the cuisine.

Visit the following participating restaurants and caterers. Call for reservations and details.

A Mano Neopolitan
24 Franklin Ave.
201-493-2000

Bella Notte Italian Bistro
14 Oak St.
201-445-7222

It’s Greek to Me
21 E. Ridgewood Ave.
201-612-2600

Latour Restaurant-LUNCH ONLY
6 E. Ridgewood Ave.
201-445-5056

Le Bon Choix
11 Godwin Ave.
201-689-0400

Mediterraneo
23 N. Broad St.
201-447-0022

Novo
37 Chestnut St.
201-444-4910

Park West Tavern
30 Oak St.
201-445-5400

Pearl Restaurant
17 S. Broad St.
201-857-5100

Raymond’s
101 E. Ridgewood Ave.
201-445-5125

Restaurant Memoire
16 Chestnut St.
201-857-8899

ROOTS Steakhouse
17 Chestnut St.
201-444-1922

Sakura Bana Japanese Restaurant
43 Franklin Ave.
201-447-6525

The Office Beer Bar & Grill
32 Chestnut St.
201-652-1070

Village Green Restaurant –
36 Prospect St.
201-445-2914

Home Dining and Specialty Wines

Chestnut Catering
25 Chestnut St.
201-445-3031

From Scratch Ridgewood
www.fromscratchridgewood.com
201-986-6316-Will deliver

Super Cellars Fine Wines & Marketplace
32 S. Broad St.
201-444-0012

The Wine Seller
6 W. Ridgewood Ave.
201-444-3300

Beverages, tax and tips not included. Regular menu will also be available.

FREE Parking all day Sunday and Monday-Saturday after 6:00pm

For more details, please call us at 201-445-2600 or email info@ridgewoodchamber.com www.experienceridgewood.com

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CBD Retail’s new rules for 2015: It’s all about being connected

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CBD Retail’s new rules for 2015:  It’s all about being connected

JANUARY 18, 2015    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY JOAN VERDON
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

* Stores must confront change from tech to real estate

This year, retailers are learning to play by a new set of rules.

Retailers are entering 2015 by confronting the most sweeping changes in the last 100 years. That was the consensus as a record number of retail executives gathered last week in New York City for the 104th meeting of the National Retail Federation.

It’s not just the steep increases in online shopping that they must respond to, but the shifts in how consumers connect with sellers through mobile phones, tablets and Wi-Fi-enabled devices in stores are causing retailers to rethink their business models. Today, building a state-of-the-art mobile application to ease instant transactions via smartphone is seen as a wiser investment than spending millions on a new store.

At the four-day retail convention, five new retail realities emerged from the thousands of hours of panel discussions, keynote addresses and informal meetings on the exhibit floor. Here are the new rules for 2015:

You need fans more than you need customers

It is telling that this year’s retail think-tank began with five sports executives — from the National Basketball Association, National Hockey League, and the Women’s Tennis Association, and two presidents of a National Football League team and a German soccer club — talking about the lessons retailers can learn from passionate sports fandom.

Paraag Marathe, president of the San Francisco 49ers football team, told retailers that during a typical game, 50 percent of the crowd is using the team’s mobile app, either making reservations for the stadium’s restaurants, downloading statistics, or buying team shirts and hats. The goal, Marathe said, is creating more fan loyalty and engagement, not selling. “You can’t sell season tickets to a sold-out house,” he said.

The hockey, basketball and women’s tennis associations also are trying to bolster fan engagement by making information and statistics available through mobile apps.

The customer-as-fan theme was repeated in sessions throughout the four days of the convention, with experts saying that in today’s world selling isn’t about getting a random person to stumble on your store and buy something, but about creating brand loyalty that makes shoppers look for you and buy from you, whether it is online, in a store, or on their phone.

In a later session at the convention, James Curleigh, president of the denim retailer Levi Strauss & Co., said that he thinks of his customers as fans and that retailers need to give them a memorable experience that keeps fans coming back. Levi’s decision to put its name on the new stadium in San Francisco, where the 49ers play and where rock concerts are held, is part of its plan to connect with new fans, he said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/retail-s-brave-new-world-1.1215250

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Liquor license among items auctioned off at Ridgewood’s former Harding Pharmacy and Liquor

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Liquor license among items auctioned off at Ridgewood’s former Harding Pharmacy and Liquor

January 15, 2015, 6:32 PM    Last updated: Thursday, January 15, 2015, 6:42 PM
By CHRIS HARRIS

RIDGEWOOD — Reading glasses, New York Jets key chains, nutritional supplements, cash registers and lots of wine. If it was inside the former Harding Pharmacy and Liquor on Thursday, it was up for grabs.

But it was a coveted liquor license that drew the most attention at an auction staged inside the 70-year-old store — selling for $255,000.

It took 10 bidders less than 5 minutes to battle it out for the right to sell booze to Ridgewood’s residents.

Ultimately, the liquor license went to Jonathan Davis, who said he was at the auction representing Maple Avenue Liquors.

Davis is a senior vice president at Woodbridge’s Onyx Equities, a real estate investment firm which owns several office and retail spaces in Ridgewood and is spearheading The Enclave, a 52-unit housing development proposed for East Ridgewood and North Maple avenues.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/liquor-license-among-items-auctioned-off-at-ridgewood-s-former-harding-pharmacy-and-liquor-1.1196183

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Ridgewood receives feedback on parking changes

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Ridgewood receives feedback on parking changes

January 16, 2015    Last updated: Friday, January 16, 2015, 12:31 AM
By Laura Herzog
STAFF WRITER |
The Ridgewood News

In a Jan. 9 letter to The Ridgewood News, Valerie Groom, owner of Ridgewood’s European Day Spa, addressed the impact of recent parking changes on the Central Business District’s (CBD) part-time employees.

She said that Ridgewood has “missed the mark.”

“I see all sides of this having been a resident of Ridgewood for 30-plus years and a merchant for 26 years. Unless the intention of the village is to penalize and ticket the workers that staff our businesses, I’m going to call the changes another failure to meet the needs of downtown Ridgewood,” she concluded.

Her letter was in response to sweeping new parking changes that went into effect in the new year, as a result of a unanimous council vote.

All 12-hour meters in the lots were recalibrated to three-hour meters, in effect from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and the cost was doubled, from one to two quarters an hour.

The intent is to open up spots for shoppers that were previously taken up by employees and commuters (whose parking has also been somewhat reformed, and prices increased).

This has been accomplished: In the past few weeks, spots have been available the North Walnut and Hudson lots, which used to be crowded by 9 a.m.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/village-receives-feedback-on-changes-1.1196376

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Ridgewood developers detail housing proposals

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Ridgewood developers detail housing proposals

January 15, 2015    Last updated: Thursday, January 15, 2015, 2:53 PM
By Laura Herzog
Staff Writer |
The Ridgewood News

Two developers proposing high-density multifamily housing in Ridgewood were the final witnesses in a year-long master plan amendment hearing

At Tuesday’s Planning Board hearing, they discussed their personal Ridgewood connections, the scant number of schoolchildren living in their other existing properties, and what makes their proposals “luxury.”

Garden Homes Development’s principal Scott Loventhal said his 1,000- to 1,800-square-foot units, proposed for a South Broad Street complex that could feature high-end appliances, WiFi café common areas and a doorman, would go for $3 per square foot, plus utilities.

Proposing a more-than-100-unit development at the old Brogan site (The Dayton) that could incorporate affordable housing, Loventhal was the first speaker of the night.

He said more than a dozen homes are currently for rent in Ridgewood, most between $3,000-$4,000 a month.

“They can rent a single-family home if their goal is to place their children in the school system,” Loventhal noted, adding that his expensive, small apartments “are simply not a place where families are going to go.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-developers-detail-housing-proposals-1.1196105

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Kid business concept born in Manhattan to see how it plays in Ridgewood

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Kid business concept born in Manhattan to see how it plays in Ridgewood

JANUARY 15, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY JOAN VERDON
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

* Early education and play center scheduled to open Saturday in Ridgewood

Michael Pickholz has 20 years of experience working on mergers and acquisitions and venture-capital deals. Now he’s switching from high finance to little kids and betting that a children’s educational and play facility born on Manhattan’s Upper East Side also will be a hit in northwest Bergen County.

Pickholz and his wife, Jessica, are opening a Ridgewood branch of the Manhattan-based franchise chain Kidville on Saturday. It will be the sixth Kidville in New Jersey and the second in Bergen County. An Englewood location opened in 2012.

Kidville centers, which offer developmental early childhood classes in art, music and gymnastics, as well as an indoor play space and birthday party services, have won raves from Manhattan moms and dads, and the Hoboken Kidville classes tend to sell out. However, their success in suburbia is less of a sure thing.

A Kidville franchise in downtown Westfield in Union County that opened in mid-2013 closed this week, with the owners saying the business was not bringing in enough money to balance the high operating costs.

Kidville is competing against similar play space and activity chains, such as The Little Gym, which has three locations in Bergen County, as well as with long-standing enrichment programs at YMCAs and Jewish community centers.

Michael and Jessica Pickholz, however, are confident Kidville is just what parents in Ridgewood and surrounding towns have been looking for.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/kidville-settles-in-the-burbs-1.1194628

38 Oak Street
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
973-869-9608

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Builders testify before Ridgewood board

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Builders testify before Ridgewood board

JANUARY 15, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — One developer proclaimed his firm’s apartment building would have “no amenities” for children. Another said some people will pay more for high-end luxury housing in the village. And a third allowed his proposal to speak for itself.

The three developers, who want to bring high-density multifamily housing complexes to Ridgewood, were given the opportunity to testify this week before the Planning Board, which is considering a master plan amendment that would allow such buildings.

Only one developer declined to address the board, saying he didn’t want to be redundant.

Scott Loventhal, the director of development for Garden Commercial Properties in Short Hills, said the development proposals would “fill a void” in Ridgewood’s housing market and help “make the downtown even more vibrant.”

For nearly five years now, the Planning Board has been considering the amendment to allow such projects in three distinct zones in the village. Four developers initially requested the amendment change; since then, one of the projects has been withdrawn.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/builders-testify-before-ridgewood-board-1.1194572

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Ben & Jerry’s Celebrates Mentoring Month

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Ben & Jerry’s Celebrates Mentoring Month

January is Mentoring Month!
Become a Mentor and Change a Life

Four years ago, Ben & Jerry’s partnered with TRUE Mentors, Hoboken’s only one on one mentoring program, to support their launch by giving away free ice cream at the launch party. Since then, Ben & Jerry’s partnership with TRUE Mentors has helped 28 children be matched with mentors in 2014, and taught over 300+ children about the value of giving back in their community and generated thousands of smiles since they started in 2011.

With more mentors, that means in our community children will be getting higher grades and be less likely to drop out of school, to do drugs, to consume alcohol or to skip class.

Mentors change lives. Become a Mentor Today.

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