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>Main Street businesses survive without slashing prices in Ridgefield Park

>
Main Street businesses survive without slashing prices in Ridgefield Park

THURSDAY DECEMBER 1, 2011, 10:49 AM
BY DARIUS AMOS
CORRESPONDENT
RIDGEFIELD PARK PATRIOT

RIDGEFIELD PARK – The idea of Main Street, Anytown, USA, conjures up images of pedestrian traffic and hustle and bustle during this time of year. In some Bergen towns, the idea rings true – think Ridgewood, Englewood, Westwood, and even to some extent Teaneck. Here in Ridgefield Park, however, holiday shopping is just not part of the village landscape.

Most residents ventured out of town on Black Friday and over the Thanksgiving weekend to catch the season’s big sales. Garden State Plaza, Bergen Town Center and The Shops at Riverside lured most of the heavy spenders, while retailers along routes 4 and 17 also drew considerable shopping numbers.

“I didn’t go out on Black Friday because I wanted to avoid the craziness, but I do plan on going to the mall later today,” said Ariana Rossi, 35, who stopped in for a latte at Dunkin’ Donuts last Saturday morning. “You just can’t pass up some of the deals at those stores. Even if you’re not doing your Christmas or holiday shopping, you might want something for yourself. This is the time to hit the malls and buy.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/134829393_Local_businesses_survive_without_slashing_prices.html

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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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>Dip in enrollments pushing town pools to open membership to non-residents

>Dip in enrollments pushing town pools to open membership to non-residents

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 2011 LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY JUNE 1, 2011, 7:10 AM
BY KARA YORIO
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Coveted your friend’s town pool or swim club every summer? Tired of being a guest once or twice a season and jealously checking out the amenities others enjoy every day? This may be your lucky year.

In Ridgefield Park, where Bogota and Little Ferry residents could always join the John B. Davies Municipal Pool, the town is widening its reach for this summer…

Among other communities following suit, Ridgewood is allowing non-residents (beyond Midland Park and Paramus, which have been included for a few years) to join its Graydon Pool. When the Ridgewood Village Council voted to open up the memberships in March, it was strictly a dollars-and-cents issue. Non-resident memberships are limited to 250.


At the time the measure passed, village parks and recreation director Tim Cronin estimated revenue would rise substantially from the new rules and fees.


“Based on last year, we think we can generate another $41,000 in revenue for the summer of 2011,” Cronin said.


Graydon, a sand-bottomed, beach-rimmed pool that is more like a lake, also has a new attraction called The Wibit, which looks like an inflatable obstacle course for kids to navigate over the water. The town’s website says The Wibit “is certain to enhance enjoyment while also providing physical fitness.”


They hope it’s a draw from near and far. The village council changed the rules for this year and 2012. Beyond that is unknown, but it might take a little time for non-residents to catch on and the town to cash in.

https://www.northjersey.com/recreation/122923858_Dip_in_enrollments_pushing_pools_to_open_membership.html

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>THE MAY MUNIS: BY THE NUMBERS

>THE MAY MUNIS: BY THE NUMBERS

By Steve Morris

As the merry month of May approaches so do Bergen’s five nonpartisan municipal elections in Mahwah, Ridgewood, Teaneck, Ridgefield Park, and Garfield. The candidates are out making stump speeches, local civic organizations are putting their two cents in, and the opinion sections of the weekly newspapers are chock full of commentary on the candidates and on the issues. This is all well and good, but what do the campaign finance reports say about the candidates and their campaigns?

MAHWAH – Sitting mayor Richard Martel may have been convicted of DUI back in 2006, but that hasn’t phased his fund raising efforts one bit; Martel has out raised his opponent, former councilman Gary Paton, nearly six to one.

The overwhelming majority of Martel’s contributions have been below 300 dollars and have been raised in the past six months, with Martel only carrying over about $500 from his 2004 re-election bid, suggesting a strong base of support among township voters. In stark contrast, 88% of challenger Gary Paton’s campaign cash came from one Gary Paton.

RIDGEWOOD – Bergen’s sign vendors and print shops shouldn’t count on having a very strong year in Ridgewood. Incumbent councilwoman Betty Wiest leads the pack with a whopping $2090 raised to date, followed by former Clinton administration policy wonk Paul Aronsohn, and longtime village cop Keith Killion. Jacques Harlow’s report is MIA and Anne Zusy’s campaign does not have a bank account.

TEANECK – The dominant candidate thus far in the fundraising department in this race is incumbent councilwoman Monica Honis. “Team Teaneck” (Elnatan, Robinson, and Hameduddin) generates most of their money from large $300+ contributions mostly from sources located outside Teaneck and the rest of the candidates are either majority self funded or have yet to break the $3500 barrier in fundraising.

Team Teaneck does possess the organizational edge though, as three candidates are operating as one significantly reducing expenses and broadening their base of potential donors.

With the exception of Honis, the other two candidates running with the endorsement of “Teaneck United,” a local civic group in opposition to Team Teaneck are not enjoying the sort of support one would expect of true grassroots candidates, lending support to the notion that Teaneck United is simply a Wienberg astroturfing operation. 66% of Barbara Toffler’s campaign fund came courtesy of her checking account and Audra Jackson has yet to break the $3500 mark in fundraising.

The numbers suggest that the residents of Teaneck have opted out of the latest battle between Joe and Loretta, instead writing their checks to Monica Honis or not at all.

GARFIELD – If winning elections was a simply a matter of out-fundraising your opponent, then this year’s municipal contest in the “city of champions” would have to go the incumbents, who have raised five times as much money than their primary threat of challengers Bonnano, Demarco, and Vistocky. Maverick candidate Gaetana Raymond’s campaign fund consists of a loan she made to herself and Richard Derrig’s campaign fund has yet to take in more than $3500 in contributions.

So where have Calandriello, Aloia, Delaney, Krone, and Moskal been spending all of that money, aside from the printer and the sign guys? Donating to all of Garfield’s various civic organizations, that’s where. One will be hard pressed to find a church, club, or other organization operating in Garfield who has not recieved a check from this slate of candidates.

RIDGEFIELD PARK – Challenger Frank Scerbo has purchased some lawn signs, and fellow challenger Junior Hernandez hasn’t cracked $3500 yet. As for the rest of the mostly incumbent candidates who are running together, their ELEC filing is MIA. The real winners in Ridgefield Park seem to be the village’s DPW, as a drive through the village recently revealed it to be sign-less for the time being, and with a slate of popular incumbents taking on two poorly funded challengers, we are willing to bet it will remain so for the foreseeable future.

THE RAW NUMBERS

LAST NAME FIRST NAME MIDDLE INITIAL MUNICIPALITY RAISED SPENT ON HAND

Paton Gary MAHWAH 2900 1591 1309

Martel Richard J MAHWAH 17119 7429.93 9689.07

Alderisio Samuel MAHWAH 2000 1000 1000

Roth John F MAHWAH 2000 1000 1000

Kelly John J MAHWAH 351 0 351

Derrig Stephanie A MAHWAH 2000 100 1900

Digiulio H. Lisa MAHWAH 1299 0 1299

Harlow Jacques RIDGEWOOD 0 0 0

Aronsohn Paul RIDGEWOOD 1813 963 850

Killion Keith RIDGEWOOD 1198.53 0 1198.53

Wiest Betty G RIDGEWOOD 2090 500 1590

Zusy Anne RIDGEWOOD 0 0 0

Rudolph Elnatan TEANECK 7872 6752.95 1119.05

Honis Monica TEANECK 14180.28 6265.24 7915.04

Toffler Barbara Ley TEANECK 7649 2973.98 4675.02

Goldman Ned TEANECK 7902 1400.29 6501.71

Hameeduddin Mohammed TEANECK 3371.5 11.07 3360.43

Robinson Robert H TEANECK 3371.5 11.07 3360.43

Rose Howard TEANECK 2000 1000 1000

Jackson Audra TEANECK 2000 1000 1000

Visotcky LouAnn GARFIELD 6161.66 5177.33 984.33

Bonanno Charles F GARFIELD 6161.66 5177.33 984.33

DeMarco Anthony W GARFIELD 6161.66 5177.33 984.33

Raymond Gaetana M GARFIELD 12100 1500 10600

Derrig Richard GARFIELD 2000 1000 1000

Calandriello Francis J GARFIELD 21102 14024 7078

Delaney Joseph P GARFIELD 21102 14024 7078

Krone James GARFIELD 21102 14024 7078

Moskal Stanley J GARFIELD 21102 14024 7078

Aloia Louis G GARFIELD 21102 14024 7078

Hernandez Junior RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

Scerbo Frank S RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

Fosdick George D RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

Anlian John H RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

Boyd Margaret R RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

MacNeill Adam A RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

Poli Hugo R RIDGEFIELD PARK N/A N/A N/A

RAISED % TOTAL SPENT % TOTAL ON HAND %TOTAL

TOTALS 219211.8 100 120150.5 100 99061.27 100

MAHWAH 27669 12.62204 11120.93 9.255832 16548.07 16.70488

RIDGEWOOD 5101.53 2.327215 1463 1.217639 3638.53 3.67301

TEANECK 48346.28 22.0546 19414.6 16.15857 28931.68 29.20584

GARFIELD 138095 62.99615 88151.99 73.36796 49942.99 50.41626

All candidates running as part of a joint campaign committee had the amount split equally amongst the candidates.

All candidates whose filings stated that they had not broken $3500 were assigned $2000 as the amount raised, $1000 as the amount spent, and $1000 as the cash on hand amount for mathematical purposes.

All of the Ridgefield Park candidates either did not have ELEC filings or had ELEC filings and were under $3500

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