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N.J. towns blame state for part-timers on pension rolls

BlogICON theridgewoodblog.net 5

N.J. towns blame state for part-timers on pension rolls

Part-time work for the New Jersey towns of Leonia, Saddle Brook and Elmwood Park helped attorney Brian Giblin rack up pension credits worth $33,143 a year, even after a 2007 state law made contractors like him ineligible.

Giblin was among five attorneys singled out in a July 17 audit by Comptroller Matthew Boxer that found 202 people improperly enrolled in the state pension system. The potential cost of retirement payments to those attorneys, engineers and other professionals is at least $1.9 million annually, Boxer said, and probably much more because his office surveyed only 159 of New Jersey’s more than 1,000 towns and school districts.   (Young, Bloomberg)

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-07/n-j-towns-blame-state-for-part-timers-on-pension-rolls.html

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Free speech at parades Some say leave message home

Ridgewood 4thofJuly theridgewoodblog.net

Free speech at parades Some say leave message home

SUNDAY, JULY 1, 2012
BY REBECCA BAKER
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

According to Jane Tappen, the “Choose Life” banner she carried in Leonia’s Memorial Day parade this year wasn’t an antiabortion message; it was a tribute to the nation’s servicemen and servicewomen.

“If their parents had not chosen life, they wouldn’t have been here,” she said.

But some along the parade route were offended that a day meant to honor the military and men and women who died serving their country had been politicized. Criticism filled an online community comment board, bringing an apology from the American Legion organizer, who said he didn’t know the slogan has been adopted by abortion opponents.

….The Ridgewood Fourth of July Celebration Inc., a non-profit, bars groups from using the town’s parade as a “platform for political, commercial or special interest groups.” It bans elected officials from campaigning and requires them to ride in motorized vehicles. It also prohibits anyone from distributing handouts along the parade route and limits marchers to one sign identifying the group.

“What happened in Leonia has been specifically prohibited in our parade for years,” said Margie Downs, a member of Ridgewood’s July Fourth committee. “We monitor any signs they carry to guard against prohibited activity. We have always sought to be sure that our parade remains a community event that is not inherently political.”

Zurofsky said Ridgewood’s rule appears to violate the First Amendment because the committee and village are “intertwined.” Perhaps worse, he said, the committee is violating the spirit of Independence Day….

https://www.northjersey.com/news/160983565_LOCAL_ISSUE__Free_speech_at_parades_Some_say_leave_message_home.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/

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>Veterans Day ceremonies planned throughout Bergen County

>Veterans Day ceremonies planned throughout Bergen County

BERGENFIELD Ceremonies will begin Friday at 11 a.m. at borough hall, followed by rededication of the monument at Veterans Memorial Park on New Bridge Road. bergenfieldboro.com or (201) 387-4055.
CARLSTADT Services will be conducted at Memorial Park Friday at 11 a.m. (201) 939-2850.
CLIFFSIDE PARK A service with Father Willie Smith and Rabbi Engelmayer of Temple Israel will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 555 Palisade Ave., followed by refreshments. (201) 941-0643.
DEMAREST An outdoor ceremony at the Northern Valley Regional High School flag pole will begin Friday at 11:15 a.m., followed by a 1 p.m. assembly at Tenakill Middle School. The American Legion will hold a ceremony Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Memorial Park. (201) 768-5386.
EDGEWATER The traditional ceremony will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Memorial Park, Route 5 and River Road. 943-1700, ext. 3131.
FAIR LAWN Ceremonies at the municipal building, 8-01 Fair Lawn Ave., will be hosted by the Fair Lawn Veterans Council Friday at 11 a.m. fairlawn.org or (201) 794-5340.
GARFIELD The fourth annual Veterans Day Gala will be held Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Royal Manor, 454 Midland Ave., with a four-course luncheon, happy hour, dancing to live band, show, boutique shopping and door prizes, Registration required. $50-$55. aceshows.com or (800) 831-9801.
HACKENSACK A brief ceremony honoring veterans will be followed by refreshments Friday at 11 a.m. at the Courthouse Green, Main and Court streets. hackensack.org or (201) 646-3980.
LEONIA American Legion Post No. 1, 399 Broad Ave., will host ceremonies Friday beginning at 11 a.m. (201) 592-1332.
LITTLE FERRY Ceremonies will be conducted in front of Memorial and Washington schools on Liberty Street Friday at 11 a.m.. Afterward, food and refreshments will be served at the VFW at 100 Main St. (201) 641-6186.
MAHWAH Mahwah’s ceremonies will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Memorial Park on Franklin Turnpike. mahwahtwp.org or (201) 529-5757.
NEW MILFORD The annual ceremony will taker place Friday at 11 a.m. at the Veteran’s monument in front of borough hall, 930 River Road. newmilfordboro.com or (201) 967-5044.
NORTHVALE Northvale VFW Memorial Post 162 will conduct a ceremony Friday at 11 a.m. in front of the municipal building, 116 Paris Ave., with refreshments following at the American Legion Hall on Paris Avenue. boroughofnorthvale.com or (201) 767-3330.
OAKLAND Annual ceremonies will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at Veterans Park, 1 Veterans Drive. oakland-nj.org or (201) 337-8111.
PARK RIDGE The Wyckoff Midland Park VFW Post 7086 will hold ceremonies Friday at 11 a.m. at Midland Park Veterans Park. co.bergen.nj.us/parks or (201) 336-7267.
RIDGEFIELD PARK A traditional service will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at the Ridgefield Park Flagpole, Euclid Avenue and Mt. Vernon Street. ridgefieldpark.org or (201) 641-2612.
RIDGEWOOD Ceremonies will take place Friday at 11 a.m. at Graydon Park and include a rededication ceremony for a plaque being installed to honor the memory of the 14 Ridgewood casualties from World War I. (201) 670-5510.
RUTHERFORD A ceremony hosted by Rutherford Veterans Alliance will start Friday at 11 a.m. at the WWI monument on Park Avenue near the Rutherford Post Office and travel from monument to monument with different participants giving speeches about each war. rutherford-nj.com or (201) 939-9895.
TEANECK The Patriotic Observance Advisory Board will conduct ceremonies Friday at 11 a.m. on the Municipal Green. teanecknj.gov or (201) 488-6800.

https://www.nj.com/news/local/index.ssf/2011/11/veterans_day_ceremonies_planne.html

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>In North Jersey, teacher tenure is no sure thing

>
In North Jersey, teacher tenure is no sure thing

Sunday, May 22, 2011
LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY MAY 22, 2011, 9:41 AM
BY LESLIE BRODY
THE RECORD
STAFF WRITER

Five out of 20 teachers in the Leonia school system found out this spring they won’t get tenure after three years on the job because they weren’t making the grade.

At schools throughout North Jersey, officials say tenure is not a sure thing.
In Wayne, four teachers out of 41 eligible didn’t cut it.

And in Fort Lee, two teachers out of 15 hopefuls got the bad news.

In all, districts throughout North Jersey are denying the prize of tenure to some educators who, school officials say, aren’t performing up to standards, based on interviews with the leaders of more than a dozen North Jersey districts.

What percent of eligible New Jersey teachers are denied tenure for cause each year has long been a murky subject, and the New Jersey Education Department keeps no tally statewide. Teachers get tenure on the first day of their fourth year in a district, but reaching that point is by no means automatic, local leaders say, because they don’t want to get stuck with long-term teachers who can’t succeed.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/122406388_Tenure_s_no_sure_thing.html

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>Disko Associates kickback story pulled form the Ridgewood News

>Disko Associates kickback story pulled form the Ridgewood News 
Ridgewood News
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY MARCH 23, 2011, 1:20 PM
BY KELLY EBBELS
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
Staff Writer

Sorry, this content is no longer available.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/118447979_Engineering_firm_s_head_charged_with_taking_kickbacks_from_three_other_school_districts.html

Originally this story was on northjersey.com but it has since been pulled. Not sure why they would do that but seems a little odd.

Original link that no longer works:

https://www.northjersey.com/news/118447979_Engineering_firm_s_head_charged_with_taking_kickbacks_from_three_other_school_districts.html

There was another story that you can still find that talks about the bid rigging but doesn’t link it to Ridgewood schools and doesn’t have the comments from the Ridgewood BOE superintendant (I think that’s who it was) that recommended they remain on the project (apparently he made those comments Monday evening at a meeting).

We also noticed this story :

Head of Disko Associates charged with taking kickbacks in three other school districts
Full story: Leonia Life
The head of the Ridgewood School District’s architect of record, Disko Associates, has been charged with taking more than $80,000 in kickbacks from three other school districts for construction projects.

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>Isabel Park of Ridgewood, selected for JCC Thurnauer School of Music Master Class

>Isabel Park of Ridgewood,selected for JCC Thurnauer School of Music Master Class

JCC Thurnauer School of Music Announces Selected Students For Master Class

The JCC Thurnauer School of Music, recently named a Major Arts Institution by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, is pleased to announce the violin students selected to perform in a master class with New York Philharmonic concertmaster Glenn Dicterow on Sunday, April 10 from 2 to 5 p.m.

The class, open to anyone who would like to attend, will take place in the school’s Eric Brown Theater, located within the Kaplen JCC on the Palisades (411 East Clinton Avenue, Tenafly). The suggested donation to attend the class is $10, payable at the door.

The students (participants and honorable mention), selected by a panel of distinguished musicians and music educators, come from eight of the more than 50 municipalities in New York and New Jersey represented by the Thurnauer student body.
Selected student participants are Ari Boutris (New York, N.Y.); Stephanie Xu (Closter, N.J.); Mia Park (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.); Isabel Park (Ridgewood, N.J.); Amanda Chao and Andrew Yohann Kim (Tenafly); and Lucia Nowik (Warren, N.J.). Students chosen for Honorable Mention are Emily Chen and June Lee (Closter); Rachelle Huh (Demarest, N.J.); Dylan Hamme (Leonia, N.J.); and Sanford Whatley (Tenafly).

The master class is part of the music school’s Sylvia & Jacob Handler Master Class Series, and is the third and final class of the 2010-2011 Season. In January, the school welcomed New York Philharmonic cellist Eric Bartlett, and in March Philharmonic pianist (and music school parent) Jonathan Feldman.

The master class will mark Mr. Dicterow’s second appearance with Thurnauer School of Music students this year. On February 9, he performed the “Theme from Schindler’s List” as soloist with the Thurnauer Symphony Orchestra at the music school’s 2011 Gift of Music Gala Benefit Concert at the Bergen Performing Arts Center. The evening, which featured 10 musicians from the Philharmonic including music school parents Sheryl Staples (principal associate concertmaster), Judith LeClair (principal bassoon) and Mr. Feldman, raised nearly $100,000 in support of music education at the school.

Read more: https://nj.broadwayworld.com/article/JCC_Thurnauer_School_of_Music_Announces_Selected_Students_For_Master_Class_20110321#ixzz1HJxVCj4E

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>Election Day School Closures

>THE RECORD
Monday October 27, 2008
BY JOSEPH AX
STAFF WRITER

At least eight districts in Bergen County have made last-minute decisions to close their schools on Election Day in anticipation of a massive wave of voters.

County election officials have asked most districts to close, warning that a massive turnout for the presidential election could cause serious security and parking problems.

“You’d have hundreds and hundreds of people in the schools, potentially,” said Hackensack schools chief Edward Kliszus, who announced Oct. 15 that his schools would be closed. “On Election Day, the entire school ends up being open to adults that you don’t know. If it’s just a handful of people coming in, that’s one thing, but if you have hundreds.”

School officials in Bogota, Cliffside Park, Elmwood Park, Englewood, Hackensack, Palisades Park, Teaneck and Tenafly also will make Nov. 4 a day off for students and staff, joining dozens of other districts in the county that were already scheduled to be closed to teachers, students or both, election officials said.

Cliffside Park had scheduled a staff-only day but decided to close completely.

“The No. 1 issue is safety,” said John Czeterko, the superintendent of schools in Teaneck. “You get a lot of strangers in the building.”

A sampling of Passaic districts shows that Wayne and Pompton Lakes made decisions early in the school year to close on Election Day. Schools in West Milford, Ringwood, Wanaque, Butler, Pequannock, Lincoln Park and Kinnelon are expected to have classes.

Bergen districts that have decided to take the day off will use one of their allotted emergency days, usually employed for snow days.

Overall, 46 Bergen County districts will either be closed to students or have half days. About two dozen of those districts will ask teachers to stay for staff development, which could limit parking at some schools.

County Superintendent of Elections Patricia DiCostanzo said she and county Superintendent of Schools Aaron Graham hope to persuade as many districts as possible to shut down to avoid possible chaos inside the buildings. Half-days may not be enough of a solution, given the number of voters that could flood polling places early, she said.

“It’s the safest thing to do,” she said. “You can’t lock the doors. You can’t buzz them in. It’s going to be a free-for-all with people walking in.”

The county has seen a spike in registered voters to 544,000 from 483,000 since Election Day last year, an increase of more than 12 percent. The county processed 15,000 new registrations in the first two weeks of October alone.

Those numbers are testament to the level of excitement surrounding the contest between Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. The presidential primary earlier this year — particularly on the Democratic side, which pitted Obama against New York Sen. Hillary Clinton — saw a record number of voters statewide.

The Election Day school closings come at an inconvenient time for some districts. The annual teachers’ convention has already ensured that public schools statewide will be shuttered on Thursday and Friday following the election.

“The week is very short,” said Eugene Westlake, the interim superintendent in Tenafly.

Nevertheless, he said, security concerns and the potential disruption to classes convinced him that closing the schools was the proper move.

The last-minute closings could mean some working parents will now have to find child care. In Teaneck, the district is offering limited babysitting service through a youth agency headquartered at the high school.

Not all districts have accepted the county’s recommendations. In Leonia, where two of the three public schools serve as polling places, the board determined that school could remain open.

“We felt we could manage the concerns and keep school going,” Superintendent Bernard Josefsberg said. The district is adding security to prevent any problems, he said.

“Everyone in Leonia knows that parking, even on a normal school day is tight, and that’s not going to change on Election Day. You hope that people will recognize that and plan accordingly.”

Some districts that will remain open on Election Day are trying to accommodate voters. In Glen Rock, for example, teachers will be asked to park elsewhere to free space in school lots.

Posted on

>Towns delay projects, consider layoffs

>THE RECORD, Sunday, October 5, 2008
BY WILLIAM LAMB
STAFF WRITER

North Jersey towns are finding it nearly impossible to borrow money because of the credit crisis — and officials fear a wave of property tax appeals and delinquencies could follow if the economic outlook doesn’t improve soon.

Cities and towns across the region are putting major projects and big-ticket purchases on hold, betting the crisis will ease in a matter of weeks or months. Still, many finance directors aren’t taking chances, telling department heads not to expect any spending increases next year.

Municipalities were already reeling from a 7.2 percent cut in state aid, announced in July, when the bottom fell out of the credit market in mid-September.

Since then, hiring freezes have been imposed or extended, and some city officials have warned that they may be forced to cut services or lay off employees to keep their budgets balanced. All of it is happening in the face of state-mandated increases to employee pension funds and contractual pay hikes that are beyond the control of municipal officials.

Bill Dressel, executive director of the New Jersey League of Municipalities, called it “the perfect storm for economic doldrums,” adding that the current climate is the worst he’s seen in his 34 years with the league.

In Wanaque, Borough Administrator Tom Carroll has told department heads to put off equipment purchases until next year.
“We’re making do with what we have,” Carroll said. “We’re going to fix the leaf blower machine because it’s fall and we need it. But we’re going to put off buying any new computers. We’ll do computer maintenance and use the machines we have.”

Housing fears
Few towns have seen a significant increase in property tax delinquencies, though the outlook won’t be fully clear until January. Standard & Poor’s reported last week that New York City-area home prices fell 7.4 percent from July 2007 to July 2008, raising fears that residents may seek to have their property taxes lowered next year.

There are other signs that the economic downturn is beginning to have a real impact on municipal budgets. In Leonia, for instance, residents owed about $227,000 in delinquent property taxes for 2007, more than double the $101,000 in delinquent property taxes for 2006, said Myrna Becker, the borough’s chief financial officer. Becker said the borough briefly delayed payments on some bills this summer.

“We simply didn’t have the funds to pay for them,” she said. “When you’re dealing with tax money that’s not coming in on a steady basis, it has an impact.”

The bleak economic outlook for towns and cities took a sharp turn for the worse on Sept. 17, when the market for government-backed bonds, traditionally considered among the safest of investments, dried up virtually overnight. Suddenly, cities found they could no longer tap their cheapest and most reliable source of borrowed money, bringing municipal cash flow to a standstill.

The problem started, bonding experts said, when institutional and individual investors panicked and began pulling their money from money market accounts that had invested heavily in tax-free municipal bonds and the short-term notes that cities issue as a way of ensuring stable cash flow.

Market collapse
Interest rates on municipal bonds and notes increased to more than 3 percent by last week, significantly higher than the 2 percent or so that municipal officials were accustomed to paying, said Ed McManimon, a Newark attorney whose firm specializes in municipal finance law. Municipal Market Advisors, a Massachusetts consulting firm, reported that the yields on some 30-year municipal bonds rose as high as 5.24 percent in September.

“Essentially, the note market collapsed,” McManimon said. “There were no bidders. In the 36 years I’ve been doing this, that’s never happened.”

In Rutherford, Chief Financial Officer Edward Cortright said he would decide in April whether to go ahead with a planned $9.1 million bond issue to finance capital projects.

“At that time, we may very well be affected by the market,” he said.

The borough would use the bonds to pay off four loans, called bond anticipation notes, that the borough took out over the last three years to finance road maintenance and other projects, Cortright said.

Leonia is already feeling the pain of a sluggish bond market. Borough Administrator Jack Terhune said fewer banks are competing to buy the borough’s debt.

“Now, when we go out for tax anticipation notes or bond anticipation notes, we get two [banks] who would respond,” he said. “A few years ago, we’d get eight or nine.”

The new climate is forcing cities and school districts to be creative.

For instance, when one of McManimon’s clients, the Bergen County Technical Schools and Special Services District, had trouble finding bidders for a new short-term note recently, McManimon prevailed on another client, Bergen County, to buy it. The note, which matures in December, has an interest rate of 3.1 percent.

“So [Bergen County] gets a legitimate return and the vocational schools pay an interest rate that’s commensurate with the market,” McManimon said. “But that’s only a stopgap, not a long-term solution. We’re trying to find stopgaps until the market shakes out.”

Credit remains tight
The $700 billion rescue package for the financial system that President Bush signed into law Friday is not likely to immediately loosen credit for towns and cities, because so much of the money that had been invested in municipal bonds now locked up in treasury bonds.

“The spigot will turn back on, but it’ll be a progressive thing where it might take two or three weeks,” said Tom Hastie, a partner in McManimon’s firm.

Dressel, of the municipal league, said he is cautiously optimistic that experts are correct when they say the congressional bailout will help to create a better climate for New Jersey’s towns — and their residents.

“There’s no way of sugarcoating what’s happened in recent days,” he said. “But every expectation is that this thing is going to turn around as fast as it went on the downward spiral, that it’s going to come back just as fast as it went down. I hope they’re right, but time will tell.”

Staff Writers Stephanie Akin, Joseph Ax, Nick Clunn, Evonne Coutros, Richard Cowen, Jennifer H. Cunningham, John A. Gavin, Ashley Kindergan, Maya Kremen, Matthew Van Dusen, Barbara Williams and James Yoo contributed to this article. E-mail: lamb@northjersey.com

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>Beef sent to Ridgewood Public Schools Ordered Destroyed

>8 school districts added to beef recall

THE RECORD, Wednesday, February 27, 2008
BY WILLIAM LAMB

Eight North Jersey school districts were added Wednesday to a list of districts that must destroy meat as part of the nation’s largest beef recall.

The state Agriculture Department expanded its list of schools and school districts affected by the recall after officials identified two additional food processors that shipped meat for consumption by Garden State students enrolled in the national school lunch program.

The school districts added to the recall list Wednesday are:

• Bergen County Technical Schools
• Englewood
• Fort Lee
• Leonia
• North Bergen
• Passaic
• Ridgewood
• Wayne

Nationwide, federal officials have recalled more than 143 million pounds of meat that originated at the Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Co., of Chino, Calif. The company is accused of slaughtering sick cows.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has ruled it a “class two” recall, meaning the meat poses only a “remote possibility” of sickening those who eat it.

The North Jersey schools and districts identified on Monday as part of the recall were:

• Bergenfield

• Fair Lawn

• Hackensack

• Lodi

• Midland Park

• Palisades Park

• North Haledon

• West Milford

• Paterson Catholic

• Passaic County Vocational-Technical

• St. Gerard School

• St. Mary Elementary

• St. Mary Paterson

• St. Philip the Apostle

• St. Therese School

• Boonton

• Riverdale