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Preview for Ridgewood Retail Week

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Wearing Rieley & James Jeans — with Christie Lynn and Jeanna Palumbo at alba boutique.Alba Boutique , 10 S Broad Street Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450

Preview for Ridgewood Retail Week
Sun, September 22, 2013 – Sat, September 28, 2013
Time: 10:00 AM – 9:00 PM
Ridgewood, East Ridgewood Avenue
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The “Houston we have a PURPLE” baby bogg was spotted today at the street fair. The best looking bag on the block!  www.boggbag.com

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Fall Uniform from Femmebot Clothing, 203 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450

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New v back halter dress $165 so cute Suite 201 11 South Walnut Street
Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450

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Bergen County Executive Kathleen A. Donovan invites you to the Bergen County Job Fair – Tuesday, September 10

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Bergen County Executive Kathleen A. Donovan invites you to the Bergen County Job Fair – Tuesday, September 10

Tuesday, September 10 from 9AM to 3PM at Bergen Community College – Bergen County will present a Job Fair. Companies will be looking to fill full-time, part-time and seasonal positions. Come prepared with plenty of resumes and dress professionally. Workshops, including: Resume Writing, Interview Skills, Spruce up Your Resume, How to Answer Interview Questions, Stress Management and more will be available from 10AM to 3PM.

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North Jersey may get decent view of Perseid meteor shower Sunday, Monday

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North Jersey may get decent view of Perseid meteor shower Sunday, Monday
Thursday August 8, 2013, 7:57 PM
BY  JILLIAN MACMATH
ACCUWEATHER.COM
NorthJersey.com

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. – AccuWeather.com reports stargazers are in for a show this weekend as the Perseid meteor shower will once again illuminate the night sky. Though the display commenced in mid-July, the peak will be visible Sunday night into Monday morning.

ACCUWEATHER.COM

Perseid meteors are particles from the debris trail on the comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle and hit the Earth’s atmosphere moving 132,000 miles per hour.

Conditions will be prime for viewing the show in the Northeast, but the mid-Atlantic, especially Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., will be on the edge. A front pushing into the south could create an obstructive, cloudy sky.

“Right now, it seems that the front will hold stubbornly across the Carolinas,” according to AccuWeather.com Meteorologist Kristina Pydynowski, promoting fair conditions.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/Viewing_Conditions_Perseid_meteor_shower_to_peak_Sunday_Monday.html#sthash.QKECFS74.dpuf

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Interview with Chryssoula Katsikoudi Director of International Relations and Middle Eastern Affairs at GSFC

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Interview with Chryssoula Katsikoudi Director of International Relations and Middle Eastern Affairs at GSFC

The Ridgewood blog spoke with Chryssoula Katsikoudi Director of International Relations and Middle Eastern Affairs Geostrategic Forecasting Cooperation – (GSFC) to get her take on the Boston Bombers

TRB : We wanted to get you take on the Boston Bombers

Chryssoula , Yes, I have lot’s of thoughts on the Boston Bombers. First, the one thing that bothers me the most is this feeling I have that something is not right with this whole story. After careful research of the two suspects, I find it very,very hard to believe that someone like the younger Brother, who seemed so normal, grew up in the States, wasn’t really that religious, and after looking at his twitter account; that he would suddenly turn within the last two years into a terrorist, or some radical “jihadist.”

Chryssoula , I do believe that his brother brainwashed him, after his trip to Russia, and I am also highly convinced the Russians are somehow involved in this.

Chryssoula, After the attacks, I have done a lot of research on Chechens, their religion, and their resistance against Russia; Chechens are Sufi Muslims…Sufism is not necessarily associated with radical Islam, it is a more spiritual,and peaceful version of Islam…

Chryssoula , I also do not believe these attacks were religious related…some form of “jihad” like so many now say…furthermore, what I found really interesting, was that a couple days before the bombings occurred, the Boston Globe had reported on their Twitter account that Boston Police or officials were going to have the bomb squad out practicing and having detonations going on near the Library which was right at the finish line…

Chryssoula , I am not saying that the suspects are completely innocent, but until the younger one confesses or there is hard core evidence that he was the one who placed the bag with the explosives on the ground; I believe there is more to this story than we know. After all, we had NEVER had an incident were Chechens had any reason to attack the US JUST because they’re Muslim? Sounds a little off to me. Or maybe I’m just all into conspiracies 🙂

TRB : Were not the Chechen Rebels  the group that took over a Russian school under the guidance of al Quada ? Did not they follow the al- Quada play book? I do agree with you that the younger brother at lest not on face value appears not to fit any profile at all , but what was the influence of his older brother and it seems like they had NO parental guidance what so ever .

Chryssoula , Yes, you are right about the school take over, however, whether they were following the al-Qaida play book or not, has not been determined 100%, it was assumed that they were. Chechens after the Russian resistance had found their faith in Islam again after many centuries, and have turned back to their religious roots.

Chryssoula , But, like I said, they are Sufi Muslims…I don’t see Sufi Muslims be radical towards the US, at least not in the last three decades. Therefore, I do believe they have been brainwashed, at least the older brother, when he visited Russian a year before that.

Chryssoula , Chechens don’t have any beef with the US, at least not on religious grounds. I could see them doing an incident like this in Russia…but I don’t know..I don’t see a motive.

Microsoft Store

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Fairview Police Chief and Ridgewood Resident sets goal of $1M for the Shore

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newyork.cbslocal.com

Fairview Police Chief and Ridgewood Resident  sets goal of $1M for the Shore
Monday, April 15, 2013
BY  LINH TAT
STAFF WRITER
The Record

Running the better part of a 106-mile route in 30 hours isn’t a challenge most people would find appealing.

But compared with the victims of superstorm Sandy — who are still struggling to rebuild six months after losing their homes, businesses and livelihoods — running suddenly doesn’t seem that daunting.

At least that’s how Fairview Police Chief Frank Del Vecchio sees it.

Shortly after Sandy struck, Del Vecchio traveled to the Shore to witness the havoc for himself.

“My initial impression was, ‘Oh, my God!’ ” he said. “To see the boardwalks completely gone, to see homes completely leveled, it wasn’t something I could have imagined. … It’s going to take years for a lot of people to recover.”

Hoping to provide some relief, the Ridgewood resident has set a goal of raising $1 million by May 23. That morning, he’ll set off on a run from Moonachie to Cliffside Park and through several towns along the Hudson River before cutting across to Staten Island and back into the Garden State, arriving in Seaside Heights at 3 p.m. the next day.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/202960251_Police_chief_sets_goal_of__1M_for_the_Shore.html

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Developers, regulators unite on rules to speed minicipal review of building plans

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Developers, regulators unite on rules to speed minicipal review of building plans

A new rule proposed by the state would require local code officials to review a developer’s building plans and respond with recommendations within 20 business days.

The new regulation by the Department of Community Affairs would streamline the local approval process and add predictability to commercial developments, a panel of experts said today at an event hosted by the New Jersey chapter of commercial real estate development association NAIOP. The provision would be especially helpful to tenant fit-out projects, they said.  (Burd, NJBIZ)

https://www.njbiz.com/article/20120605/NJBIZ01/120609919/Developers-regulators-unite-on-rule-to-speed-municipal-review-of-building-plans

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>Budget review: School aid, pricey consultants are scrutinized

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Budget review: School aid, pricey consultants are scrutinized
The Christie administration’s education budget was first up for the Democrat-controlled legislature’s review yesterday, facing a barrage of questions from the fairness of its funding for local schools to the high-priced consultants hired inside the state department itself.
The target of the mostly polite questioning was acting education commissioner Chris Cerf, who with his top staff, sat through more than four hours of inquiry from the Senate budget committee about his decisions and policies on a broad range of topics, not all of them budget related.  (Mooney, NJ Spotlight)
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>Movie Review: The Cartel

>Cartel

https://jbspins.blogspot.com/2009/07/cartel.html

How far does a billion dollars go in New Jersey? Evidently, not very far. The NJ Schools Construction Corporation “lost” upwards of that amount, and how did they respond? Naturally, they demanded billions more from taxpayers. Yet, the SCC is only emblematic of far greater corruption. Bob Bowdon exposes pervasive graft and outright collusion between the New Jersey educational bureaucracy and the NJEA, the state teachers’ union, in his devastating documentary The Cartel (trailer here), which screens during the upcoming Jersey Shore Film Festival.

Even though New Jersey is the number one state in America for school funding, the current governor has proposed further increases. Yet as Bowdon documents, precious little of that money will actually reach students, or even teachers in the classroom. After all, New Jersey is not called the Soprano State for nothing. Still, the corruption in the New Jersey school system is absolutely staggering. In addition to the scandal of the disappearing SCC funds, a KMPG audit of the so-called Abbott districts (economically depressed school districts which receive massive amounts of state aid) revealed twenty-nine percent of expenditures were suspiciously excessive or insufficiently documented.

As scandalous as such potentially criminal financial shenanigans are, the abuse of power at the local level is arguably worse. Bowdon’s interview subjects have plenty of horror stories, like the principal who was unable to fire teachers for watching porn while on duty, because they were politically connected (perversely, he would be the one let go). For fun, Bowdon counts the number of luxury cars in the Jersey City Board of Ed parking lot. (Rather than spoil it, let’s just say the sequence takes a full thirty seconds, which is a considerable amount of screen time.)

There is no question beleaguered NJ taxpayers are taking it in the wallet and shins, but Bowdon always makes it clear the biggest victims of such institutionalized dysfunction are the students themselves. The bottom-line is far too many public school students cannot read at grade-level or perform basic arithmetic, leaving them ill-equipped for the future job market. His touchstone image for the film comes from the annual lottery for a prized place in one of Jersey’s few charter schools. For those kids and their parents, getting out of their “zip-code” school is considered their only chance for a future. Those who win a spot are truly overjoyed, while those who do not literally cry tears of sorrow.

Bowdon is a legitimate journalist, who worked as an on-air correspondent and producer for recognizable Tri-State outlets like WB11. While he conducts several on-camera interviews with union and school board bureaucrats, he is always fair, resisting the temptation of cheap gotcha tactics. In truth, he hardly needs such theatrics, given the strength of the scrupulously reasoned case he presents. Unfortunately, some viewers might dismiss his arguments on behalf of school vouchers as too “ideological,” even though he presents his case with unassailable logic. Yet, in doing so, he offers solutions instead of merely bemoaning the horrendous state of New Jersey schools.

Bowdon repeatedly makes the point that the distressing trends detailed in the film apply nationwide. While that is no doubt correct, the abuses are particularly egregious in the Soprano State. One would anticipate disturbing anecdotes in a documentary about the public school system, but The Cartel surpasses all expectations. It is an important documentary and a valuable alarm bell that both parents and taxpayers need to heed. After winning the Audience Award at this year’s Hoboken International Film Festival, The Cartel screens again at the JSFF on July 8th, July 14th, and July 15th.

https://jbspins.blogspot.com/2009/07/cartel.html

J.B. (Joe Bendel) works in the book publishing industry, and also teaches jazz survey courses at NYU’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies. He has written jazz articles for publications which would be appalled by his political affiliation. He also coordinated instrument donations for displaced musicians on a volunteer basis for the Jazz Foundation of America during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

https://jbspins.blogspot.com/2009/07/cartel.html

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>Steve Lonegan : Reprint of our Exclusive Interview

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Thursday, March 05, 2009

The Ridgewood Blog presents an Exclusive Interview with Gubernatorial Candidate Steve Lonegan

So after a little phone tag I finally had an opportunity to sit down with Steve Lonegan and talk the campaign ,Chris Christie ,Governor Corzine and the New Jersey Supreme Court .What stuck me the most is that behind the visions of a tough veteran campaigner is a very passionate man that cares a lot about people .Our interview in the midst of a long day on the campaign trail was only interrupted by a call from his mom.

So I started with something that always bugs me How can a guy running against government subsidies ,take matching funds to run a political campaign ? You see ,he said and i paraphrase ,Corzine can reach into his pocket and take out $60 million bucks but my own mother can only give me around $3400 so either you have to lift the limits or I would be at a huge disadvantage in not taking the matching funds.

I pressed him on why he thought he could really cut state spending and he assured me that cutting down and consolidating the number of departments in the state was very doable . He also reminded me that Pennsylvania one of the states New Jersey residents have been fleeing to ,has a flat tax so there was no reason we couldn’t do it here. He pointed me to his record running Bogota and how he enacted similar cuts .The difference being on a state level you had to add more zeros .

This moved our conversation to Bogota and that it had only 8000 residents and I wondered if he thought that was a fair comparison to Trenton ? Again he reminded me and I know this to be true from running this blog ,that in Trenton you have a lot of room to hide but at a local level you are looking people in the eye everyday who you might be dramatically effecting their lives.

This moved us to an other issue it seems Steve has his work cut out for him not only does he have to compete against the deep pockets of Jon Corzine and the Democratic machine but he also has to fight the “chosen one” every Republicans favorite son Chris Christie and the extremely liberal Republican party in this state .

Abbott and COAH were next on the table for discussion and changing the extremely redistributive almost socialistic NJ Supreme Court (my words ). Steve once again reminded me that as Governor he will have the opportunity to appoint 4 new justices and he assured me that the there is a pool of traditional constitutional defending judges.

Finally he stated that he is far more optimistic in the future than I and that the chief threat to New Jersey’s economy are the policies of Jon Corzine and in particular the very destructive policies of Barack Obama .

PJ Blogger

contact : onlyonesmallvoice@gmail.com

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>the UN “Fairness Doctrine”

>PJ:

Any word on whether blogs like yours will be in the crosshairs of regulators (see article below)?

A Fan

My friend,
First I am not sure the “Fairness Doctrine” applies to blogs the barriers of entry are just to low, and as we all know anyone could start a blog. But if we get challenged and there is an attempt to silence this blog I promise I have a few tricks up my sleeve lol..


PJ

._______________________________

Democrat Bingaman Tells Station He’d Reimpose “Fairness Doctrine”

Pete Winn, CNS News

October 23, 2008

A prominent liberal Democratic senator, while being interviewed on a conservative talk radio station Tuesday, said he hopes a new administration and Congress will re-impose the Fairness Doctrine on radio and TV broadcasters.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) told radio station 770 AM KKOB in Albuquerque, N.M., that he didn’t know if Democrats in Congress will try to re-impose the Fairness Doctrine next year – but he would certainly like them to.

Bingaman told the station he would support re-imposition of the regulation – which was rescinded in 1987 – on the station.

The Fairness Doctrine, which was first implemented in 1949 by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), technically forced broadcasters to “afford reasonable opportunity for the discussion of conflicting views of public importance.” Critics call it a “gag rule” on broadcasters.

Here’s a transcript of part of the interview with 770AM KKOB afternoon host Jim Villanucci:

Villanucci: You would want this radio station to have to change?

Bingaman: I would. I would want this station and all stations to have to present a balanced perspective and different points of view instead of always hammering away at one side of the political –

Villanucci: I mean in this market, for instance, you’ve got KKOB. If you want liberal talk, you’ve got Air America in this market, you’ve got NPR, you’ve got satellite radio – there’s a lefty talk station and a rightie talk station. Do you think there are people who aren’t able to find a viewpoint that is in sync with what they believe?

Bingaman: Well I guess my thought is that talk radio and media generally should have a higher calling than just reflect a particular point of view. I think they should use their authority to try to – their broadcast power to present an informed discussion of public issues. KKOB used to be a, used to live under the Fairness Doctrine, and every –

Villanucci: Yeah, we played music, I believe –

Bingaman: But there was a lot of talk also, at least it seemed to me, and there were a lot of talk stations that seemed to do fine. The airwaves are owned by private companies at this point. There’s a license to private companies to operate broadcast stations, and that’s the way it should be. All I’m saying is that for many, many years we operated under a Fairness Doctrine in this country, and I think the country was well-served. I think the public discussion was at a higher level and more intelligent in those days than it has become since.

In an interview with CNSNews.com Wednesday, Villanucci said that Bingaman was adamant about the need to balance conservative voices with liberals on the airwaves – and that his listeners called for four hours to oppose such a move.

“I guess the shocking part was to have a senator sitting across the table from me, basically threatening my job and my show on my show – (it) was kind of stunning,” the talk show host said.

Bingaman’s office confirmed that the senator supports efforts to reinstate the regulation, but Bingaman press secretary Jude McCartin said her boss has no plans to introduce any legislation himself toward that end.

Bingaman, by the way, is the chairman of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee – which does not have jurisdiction over communication issues.

The Democratic Party platform in 2000 called for the re-institution of the doctrine, and prominent congressional Democrats are on record in support of it.

In July, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) told CNSNews.com that both he and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) strongly supported legislation to reactivate the regulation, which many conservatives say is intended to silence conservative talk show hosts like Rush Limbaugh.

A bill to permanently ban re-imposition of the Fairness Doctrine, sponsored by Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.), will not be voted on this year, according to Hoyer.

In June, Broadcasting and Cable magazine reported a campaign spokesman for Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) — press secretary Michael Ortiz — as saying that the Democratic presidential candidate “does not support re-imposing the Fairness Doctrine on broadcasters.”

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), meanwhile, is on record in oppsition to bringing back the doctrine.

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>Interview with Greg May former BOE candidate on the current state of Ridgewood Schools

>Given all the mess with the school system the Ridgewood blog asks form BOE candidate Greg May his thoughts

RB: Greg, thanks for taking the time to give your thoughts on the situation going on within the school district.

GM: Well thank you, I must say I do enjoy reading the Ridgewood Blog and seeing some of the comments that folks post.

RB: Greg give us your take of the failure of the school system not meeting the national standardized test?

GM: Well first off, I am disgusted with the excuses that I read in the Ridgewood News and on the school district website. I can understand the fact that we had one district factor group that didn’t meet standards. From what I read, it seems that instead of saying “Look folks, we are sorry. We let a group of students down and we will be working to improve where we dropped the ball,” all we got was how we are being penalized and NCLB is unfair. Whether or not you think NCLB is fair or not, it is a tool that we can use to asses what the children are learning. It seems to me that we have a problem and it needs to be fixed.

RB: What would you do to reform the system?

GM: Well first, I think the BOE needs to take responsibility. Second I would look at what changes should be made in the curriculum and see what we, as a district, need to fix in order to bring all students up to standards. I can accept that for $76 million, we have flaws, but when we don’t try to fix them I start to wonder if the taxpayer’s money is being spent wisely. Also, with all the unfunded mandates the district is faced with, we should look into the legal aspects of opting out of these mandates. Simply put, if the State and Feds want us to comply with the regulations they set forth, they need to fund them. If they don’t live up to their legislation why should we comply?

RB: Didn’t you campaign on excellence in education?

GM: You know on the outside of the high school it says a “Tradition of Excellence in Education.” One of the themes I campaigned on was returning to that excellence. We have lowered the educational standards. A couple of years back there was a study released that stated a college senior today received the same quality education that a high school senior received in the 1950’s. By lowering the standards, we are failing the children. We need to return to those standards that our parents and grandparents had.

RB: Any other thoughts on this mess?

GM: I for one would like to see the Board and district take responsibility and stop the finger pointing. Tell us what you are going to do to fix this. This finger pointing seems to be a recurring trend. Over the past year it was we have lost home-rule, the year before that it was the State doesn’t provide the proper funding. We hear doomsday speeches around budget time, but never is there any we have a problem and we are going to work correct it.
I also hope with the promotion of Dr. Arilotta, we can move in a more proactive way to improve the school system. I was very impressed with Dr. Arilotta and I think he will be good for the district. I do wonder with his qualifications, why does the district need to search for a new superintendent. He seems like a good fit for the position and I think he would do a good job.

RB: Any plans to run again?

GM: Well it is too early to say. I have thought about running for the BOE again and I have also had thoughts about possibly running for the Village Council. I haven’t made up my mind yet and I really don’t know what the future holds. I have been pretty happy working with the Ridgewood Taxpayers Association and acting as kind of a watch dog on local government spending. I haven’t ruled anything out. I do know that if people want me to run I would gladly do it.