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KELLER WILLIAMS AGENTS TO COLLECT DONATIONS FOR EDGEWATER FIRE VICTIMS

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KELLER WILLIAMS AGENTS TO COLLECT DONATIONS FOR EDGEWATER FIRE VICTIMS
January 27, 2015
RIDGEWOOD, NJ – On Saturday, January 31st from 10am to 3pm,
four Keller Williams Realty sales associates will be collecting donations to help Avalon
apartment complex residents displaced by the devastating fire last week in Edgewater, New Jersey.  The collection will be held outside the Ridgewood Fire Department headquarters, located at 201 East Glen Avenue (at the intersection of Maple Avenue and East Glen Avenue) in Ridgewood.

Requested items include toiletries such as shampoos, soaps and diapers, along with
ready-to-eat meals, pet supplies, and gift cards.  No clothes are requested at this time. The collection will take place at the Jolly Trolley, which will be parked outside the fire station.

Maureen Ale, REALTOR® associate with Keller Williams Town Life in Tenafly and
owner of the Jolly Trolley, along with Crystal Burns and Rebecca Miller Pringle, also

REALTOR® Associates with KW Town Life and Susan Greenbaum, REALTOR® associate with Keller Williams Village Square Realty in Ridgewood, developed the idea to have residents drop off donations at the Trolley.

“When we heard about the fire, we all wanted to do something proactive, so the four of
us visited the Ridgewood Fire Department to see what could be done,” said Greenbaum. “After sharing our idea with the firefighters and fire Captain Hellerman and Chief Van Goor, we all felt this would be a great way to help the residents of the Avalon during this very difficult time.” The FMBA Local #47 has already generously donated ten  $25 Walmart gift cards.

The Jolly Trolley is an actual trolley bus with all interiors seats removed.  Ale, who
typically uses the Trolley for birthday parties throughout Bergen County, couldn’t think of a better way to have the Trolley help make a difference in a community.

If you would like to help victims of the Avalon apartment complex fire in Edgewater,
please bring your donations to the Trolley outside Ridgewood Fire Department headquarters this Saturday, January 31st between 10am and 3pm. Ale, Burns, Greenbaum and Pringle will be on hand to accept your donations before bringing the Trolley down to Edgewater to personally deliver the items.

Individuals with any questions regarding this collection may contact Crystal Burns with
Keller Williams Town Life at (201) 925-1228.

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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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Christie at Edgewater fire scene: “I’m here to make sure” displaced not forgotten

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Christie at Edgewater fire scene: “I’m here to make sure” displaced not forgotten 

EDGEWATER – New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, criticized in recent weeks for spending too much time traveling to set up a potential 2016 Republican presidential nomination bid, made sure that in the wake of Wednesday night’s devastating fire in Edgewater, he was front and center to offer the state’s help.

“At times like this, what people are most concerned about is being forgotten,” said Christie on Thursday as residents of the Edgewater apartment complex that was gutted by fire on Wednesday streamed into the borough’s community center seeking relief, some greeting the governor. “That’s why I’m here – to make sure that people know we will not forget. We will make sure that we do everything we can to try to assist them, and to have this transitional period be as short, safe and comfortable as it can be for themselves and their families, and then to move on from there.”  (Bonamo/PolitickerNJ)

Christie at Edgewater fire scene: “I’m here to make sure” displaced not forgotten | New Jersey News, Politics, Opinion, and Analysis

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You can help the people and pets in Edgewater…

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from former Freeholder John Mitchell

You can help the people and pets in Edgewater…

…Following the horrendous fire in Edgewater last night, donations of food and clothing were sent in immediately. The needs now are for pet supplies, health & beauty supplies and restaurant gift certificates.

Pet supplies, such as dog & cat food and kitty litter can be delivered to the Bergen County Protect & Rescue location at 302 2nd St (near Walker St) in Cliffside Park, NJ.

Health & beauty supplies can be delivered to the Edgewater Community Center at 1167 River Road, Edgewater, NJ.

Restaurant gift certificates (not necessarily upscale places; fast food places are fine) can also be delivered to the Edgewater Community Center or mailed to my fellow Rotarian, Brigitte Neumann at P.O. Box 215, Edgewater, NJ 07020.

Please help if you can.

Thank you!

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Massive fire at Edgewater’s Avalon apartments; hundreds evacuated

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Massive fire at Edgewater’s Avalon apartments; hundreds evacuated

JANUARY 21, 2015, 5:51 PM    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015, 2:08 AM
BY ABBOTT KOLOFF AND JIM NORMAN
STAFF WRITERS |
THE RECORD

Firefighters battled a five-alarm blaze at an Edgewater apartment complex Wednesday evening, but the advancing flames defied their efforts and destroyed the larger building of the four-story Avalon at Edgewater complex.

There were no deaths or serious injuries in the blaze at 102 Russell Ave., authorities said, but nearly 1,000 people were displaced from their homes.

Photos: Firefighters battle 5-alarm blaze in Edgewater

Police Chief William Skidmore said some people had fallen and suffered minor injuries during the evacuation, and a firefighter had cut a finger.

By 11 p.m., when Edgewater Mayor Michael McPartland announced that the fire was “more or less under control,” the main building in the two-structure complex was completely destroyed, with flames still licking at parts of the skeletal remains and the collapsed debris. When he was asked what he meant, he said the fire was “contained” and that it was no longer spreading.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/massive-fire-at-edgewater-s-avalon-apartments-hundreds-evacuated-1.1231207

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Where are the lowest property taxes in Bergen County?

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Where are the lowest property taxes in Bergen County?

BY MICHAEL SHETLER
Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Village Square Realty 0569304

January 07, 2015 04:59 AM

Bergen County property tax info released for 2014-15.

The state of New Jersey has just released tax rates for every municipality in the state. Before you look at the chart below, can you guess which Bergen County towns have the highest and lowest property taxes?

Ok, now you can look. If you guessed “Paramus” has the lowest, you would be partially right. While it’s eighth on the list, it qualifies as the lowest taxed borough with affordable home prices. Alpine, Saddle River, Englewood Cliffs, Rockleigh, Edgewater and Franklin Lakes all have an average list price above $1 million. (Teterboro essentially has no single family homes.) In Paramus, the average list is in the $600k range.

On the other end of the spectrum with an effective tax rate more than five times higher than Alpine’s isBogota. The general tax rate in Bogota is 3.630 and and its effective tax rate is 3.222.

What’s the difference between the two rates?

The general tax rate doesn’t take into account that your home’s assessed value is not equal to its market value. If your tax rate is high but your assessed value ratio is low, your taxes aren’t as high as you think they are – you’re not being taxed on the full value of your home!

So if you’re comparing tax rates between towns, use the effective tax rate.

The equalization ratio in the chart is simply an average of the area’s assessed value divided by the market value. The general tax rate is multiplied by the equalization ratio to get the effective tax rate. (Also see this video on comparing tax rates.)

For tax rate info on other counties in New Jersey, click here.

If you’re thinking of buying in Bergen County, call me for a consultation. I’ll give you an overview on how taxes and other factors such as quality of schools, commuting options and population density should figure into your buying decision.

Michael Shetler
Keller Williams Realty
201-421-0506 cell
201-445-4300 office

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Multifamily projects gain steam in Bergen County

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Multifamily projects gain steam in Bergen County

AUGUST 17, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 2014, 11:31 AM
BY KATHLEEN LYNN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

In a sign of the housing industry’s rebound, two large North Jersey redevelopment projects — in Wood-Ridge and Cliffside Park — are picking up momentum after being stalled during the real estate downturn.

The steel framework is going up at the Towne Center project in Cliffside Park, and developers Fred Daibes and James Demetrakis of Edgewater now expect the project to open around September 2015.

And at the Wesmont Station redevelopment, on part of the old Curtiss-Wright factory site in Wood-Ridge, Pulte Homes has begun work on a section of 217 town houses, while nearby, land is being cleared for 104 affordable apartments.

The Wood-Ridge and Cliffside Park redevelopments are moving forward at a time when home building — especially multifamily building — is on the rise again in New Jersey, after falling to post-World War II lows in the wake of the recession and housing bust. This year, New Jersey home construction approvals are running at their strongest pace since 2006, about 29 percent ahead of last year’s level.

“You’re seeing a convergence of long-term trends toward more multifamily, transit-oriented residential development and the housing market emerging from the deep recession that the industry was in,” said Christopher Jones, vice president for research at the Regional Plan Association.

“There’s a pent-up demand for housing, and builders are getting into position to meet this demand,” said Ralph Zucker, head of Somerset Development, the master developer at Wesmont Station.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/multifamily-projects-gain-steam-in-bergen-county-1.1068547#sthash.nS4GZBC9.dpuf

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Smoked salmon is this chef’s niche

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Smoked salmon is this chef’s niche

JULY 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014, 1:43 PM
BY ELISA UNG
RECORD COLUMNIST
THE RECORD

This summer, we’ll be spotlighting locally produced foods and drinks that have caught the attention of North Jersey’s chefs, bartenders and other tastemakers.

Where it’s on the menu

Moveable Feast provided this list of the local restaurants, caterers and clubs that serve its smoked salmon and other fish:

Alpine Country Club

Bareli’s, Secaucus

Bottagra, Hawthorne

Chakra, Paramus

Chef’s Table, Franklin Lakes

Fiesta Banquet, Wood-Ridge

The Elan, Lodi

The Graycliff, Moonachie

Latour, Ridgewood

Le Jardin, Edgewater

The Park Steakhouse, Park Ridge

Park West Tavern, Ridgewood

Rudy’s Inflight Catering, Teterboro

Village Green, Ridgewood


Alain Quirin has always been intrigued by how fresh-from-the-sea salmon can be transformed into the thin, silky, smoky slices that are twirled into canapés and draped onto buffet trays.

When the French-born chef ran the kitchen at the Greenwich Village restaurant Raoul’s, he often could be found spending afternoons on an outdoor terrace, tending to a few fillets of salmon in a small smoker, which he piled with ice to keep it from getting too hot.

“It was kind of like a game for me,” Quirin said. “It was interesting to go from A to Z on something that normally you just open a package.”

And eventually, he and his wife, Denise, turned that game into a family business. Their Moveable Feast, whose headquarters is in a Moonachie industrial complex, cold-smokes 5,000 pounds of buttery salmon a week, and customers say its quality is unrivaled.

“It’s just so much fresher,” said Chris Waters, executive chef of The Elan catering hall in Lodi, who serves platters of smoked salmon and also uses it in an avocado salad with apples and red onion. “You can smell the smoke as soon as you open the package. It takes over the room. People turn their heads.”

At Village Green in Ridgewood, chef-owner Kevin Portscher layers the salmon over warm potato pancakes, garnished with onions, capers and dill crème fraîche. “I couldn’t make it better myself — that’s why I buy it from him,” Portscher said. “There’s no chemicals, no crazy flavors. It’s fish, salt, hickory smoke. That’s the way they’ve been doing it for hundreds of years.”

Adds another Ridgewood chef, Michael Latour, who occasionally uses the fish in specials: “Some salmon can be a little too slimy. His technique is drier.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/food-and-dining-news/food-news/the-deans-of-smoked-salmon-1.1054271#sthash.Uh9A5QQR.dpuf

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There Goes the Neighborhood : Senator Menendez moves to Bergen County

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There Goes the Neighborhood : Senator Menendez moves to Bergen County

JULY 5, 2014, 4:29 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014, 12:13 AM
BY CHRISTOPHER MAAG
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Sen. Bob Menendez, long viewed as the unofficial boss of the Democratic Party in Hudson County, has moved to Bergen County. The senator has had the good fortune , of beating the odds in many tight political squeezes, BetWinner Cameroon

Menendez first talked publicly about his move at a political fundraiser in Edgewater on Wednesday night, where he announced not only that he will BetWinner entrar , support Democrat James Tedesco’s campaign for Bergen County executive, he’ll also be voting for Tedesco in the November election.

“Yes that is correct. He lives in Paramus now,” said Steven Sandberg, a spokesman for Menendez.

Menendez, who began his political career in Union City, had been living in North Bergen. The announcement of his move was originally reported by Politicker NJ, a website that covers state politics.

Menendez, who is divorced, is engaged to marry Alicia Mucci, a widow who lives in Paramus. Sandberg declined to say whether Menendez and Mucci have moved in together.

Several Bergen County Democrats hope the move by Menendez, New Jersey’s senior senator, may help their prospects for maintaining control of the Bergen County Board of Freeholders and winning back the office of county executive from Republican Kathleen Donovan.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/senator-menendez-moves-to-bergen-county-1.1046781#sthash.KTJDVrTz.dpuf

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North Jersey ambulance corps face volunteer crunch

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North Jersey ambulance corps face volunteer crunch
Sunday, August 25, 2013    Last updated: Sunday August 25, 2013, 9:44 AM
BY  REBECCA BAKER
STAFF WRITER
The Record

North Jersey ambulance corps’ struggles to fill their volunteer ranks were made painfully clear recently when a critically injured elderly woman had to wait a half-hour for a Moonachie ambulance to arrive because there were none available in her hometown of Hasbrouck Heights.

MICHAEL KARAS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
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Teaneck Volunteer Ambulance Corps members Emely Santana of Teaneck and Pete Philomey of Edgewater, on duty.

Police and paramedics cared for the woman until the ambulance arrived. But Hasbrouck Heights Fire Chief Richard Giarratana said the borough was stymied because its ambulance corps is down to just five volunteers, none of whom were available when the woman fell in the morning.

“You know,” he said, “we try.”

It has been a daunting task for volunteer ambulance squads to find dedicated people willing to go through hundreds of hours of training to work dozens of hours a week caring for the sick and injured for no pay. It has become worse in recent years, as the rising cost of living in North Jersey has drained the pool of prospective volunteers while private ambulance companies have lured trained emergency medical technicians away with the promise of a paycheck.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/220977221_LOCAL_ISSUE__AMBULANCE_CORPS__CHALLENGES_A_call_for_volunteers.html#sthash.hgI9mSo3.dpuf

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Bergen Democrats Not to be Out done: Money, power and 3 bad loans for top Bergen County Democrats

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Bergen Democrats Not to be Out done: Money, power and 3 bad loans for top Bergen County Democrats
Saturday, May 11, 2013    Last updated: Sunday May 12, 2013, 11:36 AM
BY  JEAN RIMBACH
STAFF WRITER
The Record

At a time when the local Democratic Party dominated county government, its longtime leader, Joseph Ferriero, received a highly favorable $350,000 loan from a bank owned by one of the county’s most politically active developers — a loan he obtained without having to put up collateral and that he defaulted on after being indicted on corruption charges.

The loan was one of three made to party leaders by Edgewater’s Mariner’s Bank that were unsecured by property or other assets during a period in which the bank and its owner did business on a number of fronts with the county and the Democrats.

The two other Democrats — Dennis J. Oury, the party’s former legal counsel, and former Dumont Mayor Matthew McHale, the party’s onetime executive director — also defaulted on their loans of $25,000 and $15,000, respectively, according to court papers filed by the bank, which has faced losses in recent years and has drawn the attention of government regulators. Last year, the bank signed agreements with state and federal agencies requiring sweeping changes designed to strengthen oversight by its board and resolve problem loans.

Among the three Democrats, the bank’s relationship with Ferriero stood out in particular, not just for the size and terms of his loan, but for a benefit the former county leader received while he was under indictment and was hard-pressed to find work as a lawyer: Mariner’s hired him to represent it in collection proceedings against other delinquent borrowers.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/Money_power_and_3_bad_loans_for_top_Bergen_County_Democrats.html#sthash.e7fKjWlc.dpuf

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Money, power and 3 bad loans for top Bergen County Democrats

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Money, power and 3 bad loans for top Bergen County Democrats
Saturday May 11, 2013, 11:32 PM
BY  JEAN RIMBACH
STAFF WRITER
The Record

At a time when the local Democratic Party dominated county government, its longtime leader, Joseph Ferriero, received a highly favorable $350,000 loan from a bank owned by one of the county’s most politically active developers — a loan he obtained without having to put up collateral and that he defaulted on after being indicted on corruption charges.

Fred Daibes, founder and majority shareholder of Mariner’s Bank of Edgewater, said he made it a practice to stay away from decisions regarding loan approvals.

The loan was one of three made to party leaders by Edgewater’s Mariner’s Bank that were unsecured by property or other assets during a period in which the bank and its owner did business on a number of fronts with the county and the Democrats.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/Money_power_and_3_bad_loans_for_top_Bergen_County_Democrats.html

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Generators become part of North Jersey town budget discussions

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Generators become part of North Jersey town budget discussions
Sunday, January 6, 2013    Last updated: Sunday January 6, 2013, 9:21 AM
BY  MONSY ALVARADO
STAFF WRITER
The Record

The extensive power outages superstorm Sandy left in its wake has forced emergency responders in North Jersey to evaluate their inventory of portable and standby generators and recommend the purchase of more this year.

Municipal officials will be crafting their budgets in coming weeks, and generators will surely be part of the discussion in several towns including Lyndhurst, Ridgefield Park, Ridgefield and Edgewater.

The generators would be used in a number of ways, town officials said, including powering traffic lights, pumping stations, and warming and cooling centers during power failure emergencies.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/185778242_LOCAL_ISSUE__Preparing_for_next_storm_Generators_become_necessity.html

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Tainted soil is everywhere, but where did it all come from?

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Tainted soil is everywhere, but where did it all come from?

The ominous findings seem to sprout like summer crabgrass. Soil is tested somewhere in North Jersey and the results are as scary as a cancer diagnosis.

From Teaneck to Edgewater, Dumont to Lyndhurst and Leonia to North Haledon, recent soil tests have found an array of formidable contaminants, some of them hidden for decades beneath parks where children kick soccer balls and parents push baby strollers.

Cleanups are already in motion in several of these spots. And across the state, more than 6,000 of some 22,000 contaminated sites have been cleaned in just the past two years, state Department of Environmental Protection officials say.  (Kelly, The Record)

https://www.northjersey.com/news/168348866_Tainted_soil_is_everywhere__but_where_did_it_all_come_from_.html

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>Payouts for unused sick days vary in North Jersey towns

>Payouts for unused sick days vary in North Jersey towns


Here’s a breakdown of data provided by Christie’s office for the obligation in each town in Bergen County:

Allendale – no obligation

Alpine – total obligation, $850,523.00; obligation per taxpayer, $1,169.46

Bergenfield – total obligation, $701,579.00; obligation per taxpayer, $83.44

Bogota – total obligation, $398,360.00; obligation per taxpayer, $162.76

Carlstadt – no obligation

Cliffside Park – total obligation, $100,000.00; obligation per taxpayer, $13.27

Closter – total obligation, $1,704,092.00; obligation per taxpayer, $549.02

Cresskill – total obligation, $319,192.00; obligation per taxpayer, $107.24

East Rutherford – total obligation, $1,101,518.00; obligation per taxpayer, $172.98

Edgewater – total obligation, $1,480,618.00; obligation per taxpayer, $266.69

Elmwood – total obligation, $2,004,685.00; obligation per taxpayer, $324.27

Emerson – total obligation, $400,926.00; obligation per taxpayer, $148.38

Englewood – total obligation, $5,353,655.00; obligation per taxpayer, $576.40

Englewood Cliffs – total obligation, $2,150,583.00; obligation per taxpayer, $793.98

Demarest – no obligation

Dumont – no obligation

Fair Lawn – total obligation, $1,635,758.00; obligation per taxpayer, $132.70

Fairview – total obligation, $1,473,045.00; obligation per taxpayer, $444.53

Fort Lee – total obligation, $9,225,587.00; obligation per taxpayer, $706.40

Franklin Lakes – no obligation

Garfield – total obligation, $2,692,885.00; obligation per taxpayer, $373.63

Glen Rock – total obligation, $1,004,087.00; obligation per taxpayer, $238.49

Hackensack – total obligation, $18,875,368.00; obligation per taxpayer, $1,030.51

Harrington Park – total obligation, $594,486.00; obligation per taxpayer, $356.08

Hasbrouck Heights – total obligation, $237,175.00; obligation per taxpayer, $55.77

Haworth – total obligation, $489,559.00; obligation per taxpayer, $370.61

Hillsdale – total obligation, $201,417.78; obligation per taxpayer, $56.48

Ho-Ho-Kus – total obligation, $1,283,024.58; obligation per taxpayer, $847.04

Leonia – total obligation, $551,626.93; obligation per taxpayer, $195.06

Little Ferry – total obligation, $227,896.00; obligation per taxpayer, $66.81

Lodi – no obligation

Lyndhurst – no obligation

Mahwah – total obligation, $2,033,561.94; obligation per taxpayer, $175.99

Maywood – total obligation, $140,840.00; obligation per taxpayer, $40.81

Midland Park – no obligation

Montvale – total obligation, $468,626.00; obligation per taxpayer, $129.63

Moonachie – total obligation, $552,913.00; obligation per taxpayer, $272.68

New Milford – total obligation, $2,738,820.00; obligation per taxpayer, $578.04

North Arlington – total obligation, $80,000.00; obligation per taxpayer, $17.53

Northvale – total obligation, $847,361.00; obligation per taxpayer, $402.78

Norwood – total obligation, $282,132.00; obligation per taxpayer, $135.63

Oakland – no obligation

Old Tappan – no obligation

Oradell – no obligation

Palisades Park – total obligation, $1,591,795.00; obligation per taxpayer, $328.29

Paramus – total obligation, $575,800.00; obligation per taxpayer, $38.45

Park Ridge – total obligation, $772,804.00; obligation per taxpayer, $230.36

Ramsey – total obligation, $2,425,192.27; obligation per taxpayer, $373.12

Ridgefield – no obligation

Ridgefield Park – total obligation, $678,973.00; obligation per taxpayer, $157.71

Ridgewood – total obligation, $7,203,566.23; obligation per taxpayer, $861.41

River Edge – total obligation, $733,050.20; obligation per taxpayer, $197.51

River Vale – total obligation, $1.00; obligation per taxpayer, $0.00

Rochelle Park – no obligation

Rockleigh – no obligation

Rutherford – total obligation, $3,620,854.00; obligation per taxpayer, $569.54

 Saddle Brook – total obligation, $1,295,495.00; obligation per taxpayer, $202.96

Saddle River – total obligation, $412,800.00; obligation per taxpayer, $318.05

South Hackensack – total obligation, $539,525.00; obligation per taxpayer, $320.47

Teaneck – total obligation, $4,379,922.16; obligation per taxpayer, $335.08

Tenafly – no obligation

Teterboro – total obligation, $94,299.77; obligation per taxpayer, $42.01

Upper Saddle River – total obligation, $986,895.00; obligation per taxpayer, $338.73

Waldwick – total obligation, $1,214,624.00; obligation per taxpayer, $324.61

Wallington – no obligation

Washington – total obligation, $567,071.00; obligation per taxpayer, $162.59

Westwood – – total obligation, $1,060,665.00; obligation per taxpayer, $247.79

Woodcliff Lake – no obligation

Wood-Ridge – total obligation, $1,417,724.00; obligation per taxpayer, $425.22

Wyckoff – no obligation

https://blog.northjersey.com/thesource/1768/payouts-for-unused-sick-days-vary-in-north-jersey-towns/