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Many Bergen County bridges nearing end of lifespan

Road work theridgewoodblog.net

Many Bergen County bridges nearing end of lifespan

Editors Note : What we should be asking ourselves is why did the county see fit to spend over $1 million dollars on a dog run and $100 million on a county  park and yet not see fit to do up keep on local bridges?

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2012

BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Drive over any bridge in Bergen County and there’s a pretty good chance that it either needs major repairs or replacement, according to a national rating system.

The Kingsland Avenue Bridge in Lyndhurst is among 25 in Bergen County classified as ‘functionally obsolete’ by a rating system used by a national bridge inventory.
The county has 195 bridges, 25 of which have been rated as “functionally obsolete,” meaning that they are candidates for replacement. And 65 others have been rated “structurally deficient,” signifying that major repairs are needed.

But this year, the county will spend just $29 million on bridge repair and reconstruction — a figure that comes nowhere near addressing the amount of work that state inspectors say is needed to return the spans to a state of good repair. For instance, a recent major renovation of a swing-span bridge connecting Hackensack and Bogota cost nearly $20 million.

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

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

url1

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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NJ firms rank among nation’s fastest growing

theRidgewood blog ICON theridgewoodblog.net 14

NJ firms rank among nation’s fastest growing

FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 2012 LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY AUGUST 24, 2012, 7:11 AM
BY JOAN VERDON
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

More than two dozen North Jersey companies made Inc. magazine’s 2012 list of the 5,000 fastest-growing private companies in the country, and several local businesses said their revenue grew by more than 1,000 percent since 2008.

Vitals, a Lyndhurst-based company that operates a website that matches patients with doctors, was ranked the fastest-growing private company in New Jersey, and the 47th-fastest growing in the country, by Inc. Vitals generated $6.4 million in revenue last year, up 4,637 percent since 2008. Englewood brokerage Victor Securities, Fairfield outdoor advertising firm Pearl Media and Little Falls construction management company Landmark Retail all had three-year growth rates of more than 1,000 percent.

The list is based on revenue growth since 2008. The list only includes companies that submitted certified financial results to the magazine, so the rankings don’t take into account companies that chose not to participate. But the list nonetheless documents an impressive growth spurt among New Jersey companies, 153 of which made the list.

Among the 20 North Jersey companies ranked highest on the list, three are related to the health-care industry, and three are software companies. But the list covers a broad range of industries, from popcorn snacks producer Popcorn, Indiana, in Englewood, to paper supplier Thermal Paper Direct in Mahwah.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/passaic_morris/passaic_news/167286905_Fast-growing_North_Jersey_companies_make_Inc__s_list.html

Inc.com https://www.inc.com/inc5000/welcome

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>Undercover Operation Results In Charges Against 12 Allegedly Unlicensed Contractors

>
Undercover Operation Results In Charges Against 12 Allegedly Unlicensed Contractors
Wednesday, January 4, 2012

NEWARK – The staging place for the undercover operation was a four bedroom, three bathroom Cape Cod-style dwelling that, like many homes in its Lyndhurst neighborhood, suffered extensive structural and mold damage as a result of floodwaters caused by Tropical Storm Irene. The home served as the base for a multi-agency, four-day undercover operation to expose allegedly unregistered home improvement contractors seeking to capitalize on the August 2011 natural disaster that left many homeowners in desperate need of home repair help.

As part of the operation, Division of Consumer Affairs investigators, posing as homeowners, responded to home repair advertisements shortly after the floodwaters receded. The investigators invited a total of 16 contractors to visit the undercover house, examine the damage, and provide repair estimates.

Read more: https://njtoday.net/2012/01/04/undercover-operation-results-in-charges-against-12-allegedly-unlicensed-contractors/#ixzz1iffoHSU3

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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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>New Year’s Eve sees weak demand in North Jersey so far

>
New Year’s Eve sees weak demand in North Jersey so far

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 2011  
BY RICHARD NEWMAN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

With New Year’s Eve two days away, many area restaurants are not yet fully booked for the festivities as a weak economy continues to dampen spending and consumers keep a sharp eye out for bargains.

This Jan. 1, 2011 file photo shows fireworks as they erupt from a building to signal the New Year, 2011, in Times Square in New York.
“Things are not back to where they were,” said Ricardo Salazar, head of marketing and sales for Medieval Times in Lyndhurst, which will host a New Year’s Eve jousting exhibit, roasted half-a-chicken dinner and midnight balloon drop.

Salazar said that as of Tuesday afternoon, Medieval Times had sold 564 tickets for the venue that seats more than 1,300.

While the adult ticket price is $70, sales for this New Year’s Eve event have been driven in part by deep discounts for groups of 10 or more and children under 12 years old, he said. “The consumer is very price-driven,” he said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/136361293_New_Year_s_Eve_sees_weak_demand.html

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>Kathleen A. Donovan : To suggest that the County is providing $400 million of public funds for the American Dream development in the Meadowlands is an outright lie

>November 3, 2011

Senator Robert M. Gordon
14-25 Plaza Road
P.O. Box 398
Fair Lawn, NJ 07410

Dear Senator:

You are running a campaign television commercial which irresponsibly misrepresents the County’s role and support for the region’s most significant economic development and job creating initiative.

To suggest that the County is providing $400 million of public funds for the American Dream development in the Meadowlands is an outright lie.  You know it.  But in your rush to pander to voters who rejected your party last year because of irresponsible bonding and borrowing practices you have evidently allowed your personal ambition to cloud good judgment.

To be clear, the County is not putting taxpayers at risk. Freeholder Chairman John Driscoll and I are in total agreement on this.  In fact, there is no proposal to provide taxpayer funds for this most worthwhile project.  Your commercial is a lie and should be immediately pulled.  You should apologize to the voters for misleading them and to Mr. Driscoll for purposely misrepresenting his record.

I support construction of American Dream.  It will provide over 9,000 construction jobs and some 15,000 permanent jobs with an economic ripple that will reach throughout the County.  For your information, unemployment in Bergen County is now nearly 10 percent and unemployment in the construction trades is a whopping 40 percent.  Your irresponsible action could jeopardize the greatest employment opportunity in not only Bergen County but throughout northern New Jersey.  You should apologize to these residents for undermining their opportunity to support themselves and their families.

I note that you stood by as a member of the State Senate and allowed private developers like EnCap to plunder Bergen County taxpayers by misusing tens of millions of dollars of public funds.  That scam, supported by Democrat administrations in Trenton and Bergen County, left a number of communities including Lyndhurst, North Arlington and Rutherford in total fiscal disarray. Local taxpayers will be paying for your silence for decades.  Moreover, you were silent when the Democrat administration that Bergen County voters kicked out of office last year doubled the County’s debt and borrowed over $100 million to complete one park — at least $70 million more than what was needed.  For this you owe every taxpayer in Bergen County an apology.

Let me be very clear.  Bergen County has not and will not commit to any taxpayer funds for this or any other private sector project.  Moreover, we have not been asked to do so by the developer. We will, however, assist wherever possible to make this project a reality.  Freeholder Chairman Driscoll joins me in that commitment.

American Dream will be an economic generator which will reverse the downturn that has hit so many Bergen County families.  It will be completed in spite of your irresponsible action and without taxpayer funding.  It deserves all of our support.

Sincerely,

Kathleen A. Donovan
Bergen County Executive

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>The Ridgewood blog Special Series: Restoring Honor in Washington, Part III

>The Ridgewood blog Special Series: Restoring Honor in Washington, Part III

Restoring Honor in Washington, DC.

by Jason A. Vigorito

Part III

Barry and I have never attended a rally before. We are two of those Conservative/Libertarian-minded individuals among the masses who cannot regularly attend rallies because we’re busy, hard-working guys. And most rallies occur in the middle of a weekday. The Restoring Honor Rally for both of us, and according to many others who attended, is considered one of the most important experiences of our lives. And the rally’s climax at 1pm was one of the most important moments.

The 240-member “Black Robe Regiment”—a multi-faith group of religious leaders—came on stage at the end for a final prayer session. To see these men and women of diverse religious backgrounds come together shoulder-to-shoulder, singing and praying locked arm-in-arm, was mind-blowing. The scene beautifully illustrated our country’s potential.

Hearkening back to MLK’s eloquent “I Have A Dream” speech, the scene and common thread throughout the rally contributed to King’s statement to not look at skin color but at character. The idea of unity through breaking barriers is inherent in returning our national identity back to God. Racial barriers, ideological barriers, religious barriers, can all be overcome!

A truly inspirational moment, and a truly inspirational message.

Jo Dee Messina, John Rich, and other singers brought a fun end to this historic event. Barry and I spent some time at the Lincoln and other memorials, mingling with the crowd, savoring the moment. We ate some Sabrett hotdogs with some fellow ralliers and hit the road at 5pm. It was a long drive back home to Nutley and Lyndhurst, and on that drive Barry and I realized the event was a national epiphany—how to come together again as Americans. Spirituality and reliance on self-governance were stressed at the rally, only echoing what others—Jefferson, Washington, Whitfield, de Tocqueville, Churchill, King—have said to be America’s successful exceptionalism.

If you are pro-faith, pro-military, pro-individualism, etc., and you feel isolated in your beliefs…don’t. I conclude with Sarah Palin’s reassuring words, “Look around you, you are not alone. You are Americans!”

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>Route 17 corridor : Ridgewood Planning Board hears idea for new commercial zone

>Route 17 corridor : Ridgewood Planning Board hears idea for new commercial zone

Ridgewood Planning Board hears idea for new commercial zone
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
BY MICHAEL SEDON
The Ridgewood News
Staff Writer

https://www.northjersey.com/news/101479349_Ridgewood_Planning_Board_hears_idea_for_new_commercial_zone.html

The Planning Board heard a conceptual idea at its last meeting that would require re-zoning a portion of the village’s property that abuts Route 17 for commercial use.

No formal application has been submitted to the board, but Attorney Thomas Wells discussed the possibility of re-zoning block 4807, lot 1 to allow a variety of possible commercial uses on the property and add ratables to the village’s tax rolls.

Wells requested a meeting with the Planning Board attorney and the village planner to discuss the next steps in this process, said Planning Board Secretary Barbara Carlton.

“He [Wells] may want to know that this is not inconsistent with Blais’ [Brancheau village planner] contemplated proposal for the redevelopment corridor, but he wasn’t that explicit,” said Planning Board Vice Chairman Albert Pucciarelli. “Route 17 is almost unrelenting retail from Suffern to Lyndhurst but for this stretch, which seems to be a green break in that unrelenting retail, to which Mr. Wells replied that his client should not be required to dedicate his land to green space.”

A broader discussion took place at the Planning Board months ago to re-zone Ridgewood’s portion of the Route 17 corridor to allow commercial development, but those discussions were “preliminary,” Pucciarelli said. That discussion will have to basically “start over,” since the makeup of the board has changed, he added.

Board members at the meeting had concerns about the topography of the property and how the steepness of the slopes would affect rain water runoff, and buffers between this property and its neighbors, Pucciarelli said.

Some commercial uses that would be considered are offices, a hotel, self storage, car wash, cell towers, retail and many other possibilities, according to information from the Planning Board. This particular property has been in the news previously as one of the lots considered for re-zoning in the plan was the site of the controversial Baker Residential townhouses, according to conceptual drawings and the village’s tax map.

MORE: https://www.northjersey.com/news/101479349_Ridgewood_Planning_Board_hears_idea_for_new_commercial_zone.html

E-mail: sedon@northjersey.com

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>THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED TORNADO WARNING

>THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN UPTON NY HAS ISSUED A

* TORNADO WARNING FOR…
PASSAIC COUNTY IN NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…
NORTHERN ESSEX COUNTY IN NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…
SOUTHERN BERGEN COUNTY IN NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY…

* UNTIL 815 PM EDT…

* AT 735 PM EDT…NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED A
SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING A TORNADO 8 MILES WEST OF
WEST MILFORD…MOVING SOUTHEAST AT 45 MPH.

* OTHER LOCATIONS IN THE WARNING INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO
BLOOMINGDALE…POMPTON LAKES…WAYNE…FAIRFIELD…HAWTHORNE…
CALDWELL…RIDGEWOOD…PATERSON…PARAMUS…BLOOMFIELD…PASSAIC…
HACKENSACK…MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS…TETERBORO…RUTHERFORD…
RIDGEFIELD…LYNDHURST…FORT LEE…ENGLEWOOD AND BERGENFIELD

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

WHEN A TORNADO WARNING IS ISSUED BASED ON DOPPLER RADAR…IT MEANS
THAT STRONG ROTATION HAS BEEN DETECTED IN THE STORM. A TORNADO MAY
ALREADY BE ON THE GROUND…OR IS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP SHORTLY. IF YOU
ARE IN THE PATH OF THIS DANGEROUS STORM…MOVE INDOORS AND TO THE
LOWEST LEVEL OF THE BUILDING. STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. IF DRIVING…DO
NOT SEEK SHELTER UNDER A HIGHWAY OVERPASS.

THE SAFEST PLACE TO BE DURING A TORNADO IS IN A BASEMENT. GET UNDER A
WORKBENCH OR OTHER PIECE OF STURDY FURNITURE. IF NO BASEMENT IS
AVAILABLE…SEEK SHELTER ON THE LOWEST FLOOR OF THE BUILDING IN AN
INTERIOR HALLWAY OR ROOM SUCH AS A CLOSET. — USE BLANKETS OR PILLOWS TO
COVER YOUR BODY AND ALWAYS STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS.

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>"one shot to get the Bond issue done. Funding at the state level is going to get worse not better. If we miss this we’re screwed".

>Go ahead and split the fields from the additions, upgrades and renovations. Cost for the fields is just under $5 million bucks. The State of NJ has agreed to pay $2.1 million specifically for the field upgrades. So for that portion of the project we are getting 42% of it paid for by the State and end up with up to par facilities that will require far less maintenance. My guess is when intelligent people look at the math and see they are getting significant upgrades to embarassingly bad facilities for less than 60 cents on the dollar they will find that attractive. Combine that with the sheer numbers of students, both boys and girls involved in athletics at RHS as well as the reality that one of the things that has been demonstrated time and time again in this town is that the sports groups raise significant amounts of money to support the athletic programs and they get things done. So my money says that part would get passed if it was on its own.

There is going to be one shot to get the Bond issue done. Funding at the state level is going to get worse not better. If we miss this we’re screwed. I know it is a lot of money, in fact it is a ridiculous amount of money. But, the reality is we have facilities that are old and getting older. We’ve had BOE after BOE who defered maintenance and capital projects and when the funding formula in Trenton changed (capping yearly budget increases) along with the Democratically controlled government mandating program after program with no funding we got caught in the perfect storm.

I was at back to school night last night also. There are definitely areas of that HS that aren’t perfect. Next time you see Jack Lorenz ask him about his maintenance and repair budget. Ask him about how long it takes to get someone over to fix something. Ask him about the broken cable in Gym I where the backboard is chained to the roof support so it doesn’t come down and kill someone. Ask him about having running water in the ceilings and walls before the repairs on the roof were started. Ask him what it is like to try and keep a building that size, that old, and filled with that many kids all day long clean and neat with a underpaid transient custodial and maintenance staff. It is a big old building and it costs money to upgrade and repair it. It is that simple.

The HS “Stadium” (what a joke) gets used maybe a dozen times a year between football and lacrosse. The track team doesn’t even have home track meets because the track is so substandard. The Ridgewood Relays (one of the top running events in the spring) are run at Ramsey HS!!!!! Think about that for a second. Our track teams host their signature event at Ramsey HS. Does Ramsey play their football games at Ridgewood? No, they have a beautiful field and track, as does; Lodi, Hasbrouck Heights and Lyndhurst, All towns we aspire to be. Our kids deserve the same.

Go to a meeting and listen to Dan and some of the BOE members outline the plans. Ask questions and learn. You may still not be in favor of it but at least you will understand it. Do not just look at $48 Million dollars (Which is really more like $35 million when the state money gets credited) and say it is too much money. It is a lot of money, no doubt about it, but it is money that is needed and it gets a lot of things fixed and upgraded, many of them things that should have been done gradually a long time ago but weren’t.

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>ALL-BERGEN Boys Outdoor Track

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

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

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

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

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>Lost amid 40th District election battle – the issues

>

Lost amid 40th District election battle – the issues
Thursday, May 28, 2009
BY RICHARD COWEN
NorthJersey.com

https://www.northjersey.com/politics/Lost_amid_40th_District_election_battle__the_issues.html

The bitter primary campaign by Republicans in the 40th District Assembly race has produced a lawsuit, three election complaints and a lots of angry rhetoric — but not a lot of discussion of the issues.

Incumbents Scott Rumana, R-Wayne, and David C. Russo, R-Ridgewood, face a stiff challenge from two businessmen, Joseph A. Caruso of Wayne and Anthony Rottino of Franklin Lakes, both making their first run for the state Legislature.

Gaining a GOP primary nomination in the heavily Republican 40th District makes a candidate a heavy favorite to win the general election in November.

Challenger Joseph Caruso says he’s bringing fresh blood to the Republican Party, which he says has lost its voice even as the state budget has become a huge problem for ruling Democrats. Like the other Republicans in the race, Caruso blames the Democrats for a state budget that has spiraled from $21 billion to $33 billion in seven years.

“The Republican Party is broken in New Jersey,” Caruso said. “We’re a party in need of a major overhaul. We raise money, but our party has no message. Our party has no unique ideas anymore.”

Both incumbents and challengers agree that the state must make deep cuts in its spending to help New Jersey struggle past the economic doldrums. Rottino and Caruso are calling for abolishing the state’s business tax, now pegged at 9 percent, as well as a 20 percent reduction in state spending, which is favored by gubernatorial candidate Steve Lonegan.

“Every time you turn around, it’s getting harder and harder to do business in New Jersey,” said Rottino, a developer who also owns two Harley-Davidson dealerships and a health club in Teterboro.

Rumana and Russo agree that state spending must be drastically reduced, but they say massive layoffs of the state workforce are not politically feasible. They favor steady reductions in state staffing through attrition and consolidation of positions.

“You can’t just shoot from the hip on these issues,” Rumana said. “The difference between Caruso and Rottino and myself is that they’ve never spent a day in office, and I have. I’ve been a freeholder, mayor and assemblyman.”

Caruso and Rottino say eliminating the state business tax would free millions of dollars to be poured instead into new business investment. Russo agrees with the idea in concept but says the lost tax revenue would somehow have to be replaced or it would open yet another gap in the state budget.

“I agree that business taxes are too high,” Russo said. “Eliminating the business tax might work, but only if you can find revenue elsewhere.”

Caruso, 35, is the finance chairman of the Bergen County Republican Organization and owns a financial services company in Lyndhurst. One of his more radical ideas is to close the state Department of Environmental Protection, which he claims is strangling business with overregulation. He says the federal government could pick up the responsibilities for protecting the environment.

Rumana, 45, and Russo, 55, don’t agree with getting rid of the DEP but favor abolishing the state Council on Affordable Housing (COAH), which is responsible for imposing low-income housing quotas on municipalities. The quotas stem from Supreme Court decisions that communities have an obligation to promote housing for people of modest means.

As assemblyman, Rumana has sponsored several bills that would limit COAH’s powers. Rumana also has sponsored a bill to create a constitutional amendment to eliminate COAH altogether.

Caruso and the 43-year-old Rottino say they, too, would work to abolish COAH. They also favor abolition of the state’s Green Acres program, which buys up land from developers and preserves it as open space.

Rottino said it should be up to municipalities, not the state, to pay for open space preservation. Both Rumana and Russo favor continuation of the Green Acres program, which has exhausted its funding and will need to be replenished through a bond referendum. But because the state is so deeply in debt, Rumana said, it appears unlikely that the Green Acres bond issue will make it onto the ballot this year.

The political stakes are highest for Rumana, the freshman assemblyman who also is chairman of the Republican Party in Passaic County. Rumana took over the leadership three years ago, in the wake of a corruption scandal in which then-Chairman Peter Murphy went to prison for wire fraud.

Caruso and Rottino both have the backing of a political action committee, GOP Strong, started by Murphy.

Throughout the campaign, Rumana has sought to paint Caruso and Rottino as puppets of Murphy. But Caruso and Rottino say they are in the race to advance their own ideas and agendas.

E-mail: cowen@northjersey.com

https://www.northjersey.com/politics/Lost_amid_40th_District_election_battle__the_issues.html

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>Stile: Republican primaries? Perish the thought

>thttps://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

Republicans pound their chests with pride, and even tear up on occasion, when preaching the virtues of free market competition — except when it comes to intraparty politics.

Mere mention of a primary this year in the governor’s race or in the North Jersey contests for the state Assembly and the free-marketers suddenly shudder in fear and disgust. It means forcing calcified incumbents to get off their cash hoards and defend themselves. It means forcing the party operatives to take sides.

It means — God forbid — giving voters choices.

Joseph Caruso, a Lyndhurst businessman and party operative chafing at conventional party wisdom, says he’s startled by all the fuss he has caused by pursuing a challenge against the incumbents in the Assembly’s 40th Legislative District.

“Should insiders hand-pick who is best, or should the voters make the decision? I don’t know what the problem is,” said Caruso, who lives in Wayne.

Caruso has rankled party regulars who believe his candidacy is part of a complicated two-county strategy to knock Assemblyman Scott Rumana out of his other political job, the Passaic County Republican Party chairmanship.

Critics say Caruso is being propped up by a cabal of Passaic County hardliners aligned with Peter Murphy, the former GOP party boss and determined Rumana foe. Caruso strenuously denies the charge.

Party officials also fear that a 40th District primary could force Rumana and running mate David Russo of Ridgewood to needlessly spend money that would better be spent waging war on Democrats in November. Caruso served as the Bergen County Republican Organization’s finance chairman last year, helping it stockpile cash. Now he threatens to indirectly drain the very fund he helped build.

“They create dissension,” said BCRO Chairman Bob Yudin, who has tried, unsuccessfully, to dissuade Caruso from running. The district includes parts of Essex, Passaic and Bergen counties.

Yudin says primaries only “make sense” when there is a

vacancy or if an incumbent “does something egregious,” like get indicted. Challenging “popular incumbents &hellip is not conducive to party building.”

The Internal Party Argument sounds sensible, at first. Yudin and other chairmen are cobbling together campaigns on shoestring budgets in a Democrat-dominated state. State party coffers are nearly empty. And past party squabbles, particularly in Bergen, have left the party in disarray. And why should the Bergen organization waste its resources on what is essentially a Passaic County turf battle?

All this might be true, but why should Republican Party voters be denied choices because the insurgent’s motives are suspect or because he doesn’t fit nicely into the statewide strategy? Legislative primaries in New Jersey are lame, low-turnout rituals. Incumbents generally yawn their way through them, flecking off the occasional gadfly with little effort. Voters stay home because they generate little interest.

Caruso is a member of the conservative wing of the party who believes the New Jersey GOP has become too liberal, too amorphous, too much like generic Trenton pols. “Where, for instance, are the Republican rallies to overturn the socialist edicts of the Council on Affordable Housing that even many Democrats think is a disastrous idea?” Caruso railed in a recent release.

Personally, I don’t think this kind of rhetoric will sway too many voters in the 40th, but who really knows unless it’s tested on the trail? If Rumana and the laundry list of party officials who endorsed them believe they represent the GOP base, then, in theory, they have nothing to worry about. The cost will be minimal. Will they really waste that much money? And what better way to test Caruso’s claim to independence than a vigorous Jersey campaign fight?

A similar impulse to minimize the competition in the governor’s race surfaced at a recent meeting of county chairmen in Princeton.

GOP officials asked the four Republican candidates not to run slates of local candidates in counties where they failed to win the party’s endorsement. Former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie agreed to the idea and so did Brian Levine, the mayor of Franklin Township in Somerset County. But former Bogota Mayor Steve Lonegan and Assemblyman Rick Merkt refused.

“I’m not going to unilaterally disarm,” Lonegan said. “If the establishment Republicans are trying to rig the system against me, then I intend to beat them.”

What Lonegan didn’t say is that he probably won’t get many of the counties to support him anyway. But he remains a curiosity in this race, a wily self-promoter who can deliver a sound bite and raise money.

His attacks on the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce train to Washington as the “tax and spend” express (and a similar salvo from Merkt), led Christie to snub — and criticize — the same trip. It became Christie’s first position of the campaign, brought about by old-fashioned competition.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergenpolitics/Republican.html

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>Society News : Caroline Haugen, Quentin Wiest III

>Caroline Mathea Haugen and Quentin William Wiest III were married on Saturday, June 28 at the Chapel of the Little Chief at Camp Lake Hubert in Lake Hubert, Minn. The Rev. Joan A. Gunderman, a Lutheran minister, performed the ceremony.

The bride and the bridegroom met at Kenyon College, from which they graduated.

The bride, 27, is a special education teacher at Public School 226 in New York. She received a master’s degree in early childhood special education from New York University.

She is the daughter of Barbara Richards Haugen and Gary J. Haugen of Edina, Minn. Her father is a partner in the Minneapolis law firm Maslon, Edelman, Borman & Brand. Her mother is on the board of Harpeth Hall, a private girls’ school in Nashville.

Mr. Wiest, 28, is a summer associate at the Manhattan law firm Sherman & Sterling; he specializes in bankruptcy, finance and property laws. In September, he will enter his final year of a joint M.B.A./J.D. program at Rutgers.

He is the son of Betty Wiest and Mr. Wiest II of Ridgewood, N.J. His mother is the deputy mayor of the Village of Ridgewood and the president of Ridgewood Rotary. His father is a senior project manager at Neglia Engineering Associates in Lyndhurst, N.J.

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