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New Jersey bear hunt fueled by emotion over mauling death

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Recent Ridgewood Ridgewood School Bear , sound a sleep after tranquilized

New Jersey bear hunt fueled by emotion over mauling death

By Frank McGurty

WEST MILFORD, N.J. (Reuters) – New Jersey’s annual black bear hunt is stirring up even more emotion than usual this year after the mauling of a student by a 300-pound male bruin and controversy over how much humans may be responsible for the fatal encounter.

For opponents of the six-day hunt that starts Monday, the September death of Darsh Patel could not have come at a worse time, since the state is considering expanding hunting as part of a new five-year bear management plan.

Hunters say the mauling of the 22-year-old Rutgers University student was an extreme consequence of allowing black bears to encroach on populated areas by failing to cull their numbers.

“Animal rights activists have been calling bears ‘the dolphins of the forest’ … but things like this can happen,” said New Jersey Outdoor Alliance Chairman Anthony Mauro.

“I think that is why the attack may have been good, to help sober up people a little bit,” he said.

The attack on Patel while he was hiking in New Jersey’s Apshawa Preserve, some 30 miles west of New York’s bustling Times Square, marked the first fatal mauling ever recorded in the state. It came during a year when sightings and complaints about bears have jumped, despite their reduced numbers, in the northwest corner of New Jersey.

The state determined that the mauling was a rare case of predatory behavior by a male black bear, which, unlike the more aggressive grizzly of the western U.S. states, tends to be shy and avoid conflict with humans.

In North America, only 63 people have been reported killed in black bear attacks from 1900 to 2009, according to a study led by University of Calgary professor Stephen Herrero.

Opponents say bears in New Jersey have gravitated to populated areas in part because hunters are allowed to use bait, conditioning the animals to seek out garbage, barbecue grills and even kitchen pantries.

At the same time, there are no state requirements that New Jersey residents use bear-resistant garbage containers.

“Hunting does not solve any problems; it creates new ones,” said Susan Russell, wildlife policy director at the Animal Protection League. “Residents and public safety are far better served by removing attractants and learning how to behave in the presence of bears.”

https://news.yahoo.com/jersey-bear-hunt-fueled-emotion-over-mauling-death-164044394.html

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IMPORTANT VILLAGE ROAD WORK NOTICE -PSE&G Paving – December 8 & 9

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file photo Boyd Loving

IMPORTANT VILLAGE ROAD WORK NOTICE -PSE&G Paving – December 8 & 9

We have just received word that PSE&G will be paving the following streets on December 8 & 9 : Vesta Ct.; Down St.; Meadowbrook Ave.; Rose Ct.; Libby Ave.; Pearsall Ave.; Northern Parkway.

LEAVES ON THESE STREETS WILL BE COLLECTED ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5TH – Residents are asked to NOT put leaves in the street over this weekend.

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Ridgewood Waters FAQ could take out downtown development with a flush

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Ridgewood Waters FAQ could take out downtown development with a flush 
December 4, 2014
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, On July 17 , during the annual summer water restrictions David Scheibner, Ridgewood Water’s business director, said the developments, proposed for the Central Business District (CBD) would not strain the village’s water supply. https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-experts-weigh-in-on-housing-proposals-1.1053299?page=all

Yet according to Ridgewood Waters recent FAQ posted on the Village website , we are told  the vast majority of unexpectedly high consumption is due to lawn sprinklers and toilets .

So the new multi housing plan for the Central Business district will not involve flushing toilets ?

As for handling waste water  no mention here.

 

Ridgewood Water – Quarterly Billing FAQ

Quarterly Billing FAQ

The following facts may be useful:

Each meter removed is tested for accuracy. If over-registering were to be discovered, we would follow the refund procedure New Jersey Board of Public Utilities requires.

New meters are similarly high in accuracy. They also have features that can be used to help determine the causes of unusually high consumption.

In certain circumstances where a customer had been receiving estimated bills, over/underestimation may have occurred which could result in an unusually high bill or credit.

Any customer receiving an unusually high bill after a period of estimated bills is eligible for a deferred payment arrangement with no interest charges. Any account that was improperly charged interest will be credited for those charges.

The new meters will provide actual readings remotely with no hindrance to the customer.

If you would like to obtain a reading yourself on the new meter, simply shine a flashlight on the display and it will activate. Two screens will then cycle. The first will be the current read and the second is a rate screen which shows the current gallons per minute passing through the meter.

The vast majority of unexpectedly high consumption is due to lawn sprinklers and toilets.

Many people do not realize or notice that water may be trickling from the toilet tank into the bowl and down the drain. This can really add up when it’s happening 24/7. Ridgewood Water has free dye tablets that can be used to determine if this is happening.

Verizon announced in May 2014 that they would be discontinuing the access to their system for meter reading by the end of the month. That deadline was extended to the end of December.

If you have any further question please contact our Customer Service Department at 201-670-5500 ext. 269 or 275 M-F 8:30 – 4:30. You can also contact us by email at [email protected]

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Historic Ridgewood parking studies have familiar findings

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Historic Ridgewood parking studies have familiar findings

DECEMBER 3, 2014    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2014, 10:32 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

They’ve been mentioned. They’ve been complained about. They’ve been disbelieved.

And now, for easy referral, all four of Ridgewood’s much-discussed parking studies – from 1945, 1967, 1971 and 2002 – are on the history page of the library’s website.

They were put online this fall by local realtor Bill Gilsenan, partly for the public’s research and perusal, and partly just to add urgency to what has been characterized by some members of the public as an increasingly tiresome parking conversation.

“They [the studies] were all around in different places, but they weren’t around in one central location … People don’t believe us when we say this has been going on forever,” said a half-laughing and half-exasperated Gilsenan.

Gilsenan, who owns Gilsenan & Company on East Ridgewood Avenue, scanned all the studies and worked with Ridgewood librarian and local historian Peggy Norris to get them online.

The realtor, who was in possession of the 1971 and 2002 studies, happens to have a personal connection to the studies: His uncle was president of Ridgewood’s Chamber of Commerce for many years and is actually mentioned in one of the studies, Gilsenan noted.

To complete the study package, Gilsenan obtained the 1967 study from longtime local businessman Tom Hillmann. The library had the 1945 document.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/historic-ridgewood-parking-studies-have-familiar-findings-1.1145306

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N.J. Supreme Court: Fort Lee co-op board violated man’s free-speech rights in leafletting case

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N.J. Supreme Court: Fort Lee co-op board violated man’s free-speech rights in leafletting case

DECEMBER 3, 2014, 1:36 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2014, 5:57 PM
BY PETER J. SAMPSON
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that the free-speech rights of a resident of a high-rise co-op building in Fort Lee were violated when the co-op’s board barred him from distributing leaflets under the doors of his neighbors.

In a unanimous decision, the court held that Robert Dublirer, a regular critic of the co-op board, had been denied a fundamental right guaranteed by the state’s Constitution.

In 2008, Dublirer sued the owners of the 483-unit Mediterranean Towers South complex, claiming a rule it enforced against him was unconstitutional.

Dublirer was contemplating a run for a seat on the board, but was denied permission to distribute campaign materials to residents. The board had previously distributed literature that criticized its opponents.

But the board cited a “house rule” that barred soliciting and distributing written materials without board authorization. The rule was intended to preserve the residents’ privacy and quiet enjoyment of their homes, and minimize litter.

“Dublirer’s right to promote his candidacy, and to communicate his views about the governance of the community in which he lives, outweigh the minor interference that neighbors will face from a leaflet under their door,” Chief Justice Stuart Rabner wrote in the 24-page decision.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-supreme-court-fort-lee-co-op-board-violated-man-s-free-speech-rights-in-leafletting-case-1.1145408

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Moody’s says N.J. pension fund shows severity of credit status

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Moody’s says N.J. pension fund shows severity of credit status

DECEMBER 3, 2014, 2:20 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2014, 2:20 PM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

TRENTON  — A rating agency says New Jersey’s unfunded pension liabilities show the severity of the state’s credit circumstances.

Moody’s finding comes after the state’s recent announcement that public pension liabilities nearly doubled to $83 million, due to new accounting rules.

The agency laid out its concerns in a report released this week. Among the concerns it raises are the possible depletion of public worker and teacher pension funds by 2024 and 2027, respectively.

Despite the concern, Moody’s says the new liability figure is in line with its own calculations.

Moody’s says it has downgraded the state’s credit rating twice, in part due to the pension fund.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/moody-s-says-n-j-pension-fund-shows-severity-of-credit-status-1.1145420

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T’is the Season – join the Celebration in Ridgewood 2014

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T’is the Season – join the Celebration in Ridgewood 2014

The Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce Wishing everyone Happy Holidays

The Seasons is here!

Ridgewood presents its 29th Annual Tree Lighting Celebration and

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Downtown for the Holidays.

Bring you family, friends and neighbors to share the excitement of this evening,

Friday, December 5th, 2014
5:30pm-9pm … enjoy
the music, lights, shopping, dining,
and (you bet) Santa!
Tree Lighting will happen around 7:30pmish!
For more details: [email protected]
201-445-2600 www.experienceridgewood.com
see you there!

wine.comshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=209195

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Top Republicans to SEC: Shift Resources to ‘Immediately’ Boost Advisor Exams

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Top Republicans to SEC: Shift Resources to ‘Immediately’ Boost Advisor Exams

Hensarling and Garrett tell SEC Chief White to inform them by Dec. 5 how the agency plans to reallocate resources, consider possible third-party exams

Two top Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee told Securities and Exchange Commission Chairwoman Mary Jo White in a recent letter to reallocate resources to “immediately” boost the number of investment advisor exams because allowing the SEC to collect user fees from advisors to achieve this same goal is too costly.

In their Nov. 24 letter to White, Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, and Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., chairman of the committee’s Capital Markets Subcommittee, said that user fees “will impose significant new costs” on RIAs and that those “added costs will be passed along to their customers in the form of higher advisory fees.”

User fees, the two lawmakers say—who both will resume their current positions in the new Congress—could also have a “disproportionate impact on small and mid-sized” RIAs, making it more difficult to compete with larger firms.

“Increasing costs for small businesses and retail investors and curtailing access to investment advice will directly undermine the SEC’s statutory mission to protect investors, maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets and facilitate capital formation,” the two lawmakers said.

What’s more, the two argue that authorizing the SEC to collect user fees would require the agency to hire “hundreds of additional examiners and enforcement lawyers, with six-figure salaries,” which will also increase costs.

The solution, Hensarling and Garrett write, is for the SEC to reallocate existing agency resources “to immediately increase the amount” of RIA exams. The two cite their Sept. 2013 request that the SEC redirect resources its using to protect “millionaire and billionaire” investors in private funds and to shift “more responsibility” for broker-dealer exams to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2014/12/02/top-republicans-to-sec-shift-resources-to-immediat

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Lego misses U.S. Christmas rush with new ‘Frozen’ sets

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Lego misses U.S. Christmas rush with new ‘Frozen’ sets

DECEMBER 3, 2014    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY KATARINA GUSTAFSSON AND BENJAMIN KATZ
BLOOMBERG NEWS |
WIRE SERVICE

Kids in North Jersey and elsewhere in the U.S. asking Santa for a “Frozen” Lego set won’t find it under the tree this year — unless their parents travel to Santa Claus’ back yard to make them happy.

One of the Lego sets that will be out in 2015.

Lego, Europe’s biggest toymaker, will add a product based on Walt Disney Co.’s animated hit film to its Disney Princess line in the U.S. in January. The toy will go on sale in the Nordic and Baltic regions, as well as select other northern European markets between Dec. 13 and Dec. 19, said Vicki Stoltz, a Lego brand manager.

The post-Christmas release date means that Lego is missing out on offering a “Frozen” product in the U.S. at a time when items related to the movie are ranked as most desired by American girls. Lego, which generates about half its revenue at the holidays, tops the list of items wanted by boys in the world’s biggest economy, the National Retail Federation said last week.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/shopping/lego-misses-u-s-rush-1.1145126

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How a former Beatle helped shape immigration policy

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How a former Beatle helped shape immigration policy

DECEMBER 2, 2014    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014, 8:10 AM
BY MICHAEL WILDES
THE RECORD
Print

FORMER BEATLE John Lennon left us a beautiful legacy of extraordinary music. He also left us an immigration legacy that, while less well known, could have an equally profound effect upon life in the United States as it relates to immigrants.

John Lennon and the author’s father, Leon Wildes.

The recent steps announced by President Obama to expand the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and now to offer deferred action to certain parents of U.S. and permanent residents have their roots in the John Lennon case. We can visualize a smiling Lennon because it was the successful litigation and outcome in his case that enabled the government to accomplish this feat.

How did he accomplish this?

John Lennon and Yoko Ono were placed in deportation proceedings precipitously in 1972 when their request for an extension of their visitors’ stay was summarily denied. The reason for instituting deportation was not because they had broken any American law, but simply because then-President Richard Nixon felt that their presence in the United States could adversely affect his chances for reelection.

Throughout the deportation proceedings, which lasted almost five years, from 1972 to 1976, immigration officials publically said they were treating the Lennons no differently than any other undocumented person and that the Immigration and Naturalization Service had no option other than to deport every illegal alien. Thousands of letters sent to the INS also received written responses to that effect.

Nothing was further from the truth.

Opinion: How a former Beatle helped shape immigration policy

DECEMBER 2, 2014    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014, 8:10 AM
BY MICHAEL WILDES
THE RECORD
Print

FORMER BEATLE John Lennon left us a beautiful legacy of extraordinary music. He also left us an immigration legacy that, while less well known, could have an equally profound effect upon life in the United States as it relates to immigrants.

John Lennon and the author’s father, Leon Wildes.

The recent steps announced by President Obama to expand the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and now to offer deferred action to certain parents of U.S. and permanent residents have their roots in the John Lennon case. We can visualize a smiling Lennon because it was the successful litigation and outcome in his case that enabled the government to accomplish this feat.

How did he accomplish this?

John Lennon and Yoko Ono were placed in deportation proceedings precipitously in 1972 when their request for an extension of their visitors’ stay was summarily denied. The reason for instituting deportation was not because they had broken any American law, but simply because then-President Richard Nixon felt that their presence in the United States could adversely affect his chances for reelection.

Throughout the deportation proceedings, which lasted almost five years, from 1972 to 1976, immigration officials publically said they were treating the Lennons no differently than any other undocumented person and that the Immigration and Naturalization Service had no option other than to deport every illegal alien. Thousands of letters sent to the INS also received written responses to that effect.

Nothing was further from the truth.

https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-guest-writers/how-a-former-beatle-helped-shape-immigration-policy-1.1144583

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Jonathan Gruber and the Truth About Obamacare

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Sen. Chuck Schumer’s admission that passing Obamacare was a mistake.

Jonathan Gruber and the Truth About Obamacare

In a 2009 interview with George Stephanopoulos of ABC News, President Obama emphatically rejected the notion that the individual mandate is a tax. He was adamant that it was a penalty and not a tax, reasoning that because people without health insurance sometimes end up in the emergency room, causing costs to rise for the rest of us, the individual mandate penalty was not a tax.

Then in 2012, White House attorneys argued before the Supreme Court that it was indeed tax, and repeatedly called it that before the Court, which in its ruling found that the only way the mandate could pass constitutional muster was if it is construed as a tax, not a penalty. In what is by now Gruber’s most famous video, he explains that the bill was “written in a tortured way to ensure that CBO did not score the mandate as taxes. If CBO scored the mandate as taxes the bill dies.” Clearly, he considers the mandate a tax, albeit one cleverly written not to be scored as such by the Congressional Budget Office, but a tax nonetheless.

This is a pattern. In one of the Gruber videos, he admitted that the purpose of the “Cadillac tax” on certain employer-sponsored health plans is to discourage employers from providing health insurance. The ultimate goal, Gruber explained, is to get rid of the tax subsidy for employer health plans altogether, albeit indirectly, by “mislabeling it, calling it a tax on insurance plans rather than a tax on people when we all know it’s a tax on people who hold those insurance plans.” At a town hall meeting in 2009, the president specifically said this was not the purpose of the Cadillac tax and that it had been “taken off the table.”

In terms of understanding Gruber’s unexpected honesty about his deceit, it could be that four years is just the distance necessary for people in politics to admit their failings. That seems to be the rationale for Sen. Chuck Schumer’s admission that passing Obamacare was a mistake.

https://news.heartland.org/newspaper-article/2014/11/25/jonathan-gruber-and-truth-about-obamacare

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Woman fatally struck by NJ Transit train in Rutherford is ID’d

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Woman fatally struck by NJ Transit train in Rutherford is ID’d

DECEMBER 2, 2014, 6:58 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014, 10:33 PM
BY JIM NORMAN
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RUTHERFORD — A woman was fatally struck by an outbound NJ Transit train during the evening rush hour on Tuesday.

Lissy Perez, 22, of Passaic, was standing on the tracks and did not move when the engineer of the train sounded his horn, according to a spokeswoman for the rail line.

The seven-car train, with about 500 people aboard, had left Hoboken at 4:47 p.m. and was scheduled to arrive in Port Jervis, N.Y., at 6:55 p.m., said a spokeswoman for the railroad.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/update-woman-fatally-struck-by-nj-transit-train-in-rutherford-is-id-d-1.1144933

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Tolls Set to Increase as Port Authority unveils proposed $7.8B budget

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Tolls Set to Increase as Port Authority unveils proposed $7.8B budget

DECEMBER 2, 2014, 6:28 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014, 6:34 PM
BY SHAWN BOBURG
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Days before tolls on Hudson River crossings are set to rise again, the Port Authority on Tuesday released a proposed spending plan for 2015 that relies heavily on those tolls to pay for upgrades to some of the region’s airports, rail lines, roadways and the World Trade Center.

The $7.8 billion overall budget — larger than that of approximately a dozen U.S. states — is about $400 million less than what the agency spent in 2014, mostly due to a significant drop in spending to rebuild the World Trade Center, which is taking shape and will start bringing in office rental revenues in 2015.

That may come as little comfort to motorist who will see the fourth toll hike in as many years starting Dec. 6. Cash tolls will rise $1, to $15, while E-ZPass rates will rise $0.75, to $12.50 during peak hours and $10.50 at off-peak times. It is estimated that an additional $100 million will be collected at the bridges and tunnels in 2015 compared with this year.

The agency’s 2015 budget will be voted on by commissioners at their Dec. 10 meeting.

The agency plans to spend $2.9 billion on day-to-day operations—a 1.8 percent increase over this year. The agency said Tuesday that it was the ninth consecutive year that it had kept its operating budget at or below the annual rate of inflation. That is despite adding hundreds of new officers to a police force that is expected to number 1,840 in 2015, the largest it has been in at least a decade.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/port-authority-unveils-proposed-7-8b-budget-1.1144925

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Stephen Hawking warns artificial intelligence could end mankind

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Stephen Hawking warns artificial intelligence could end mankind

By Rory Cellan-JonesTechnology correspondent

Stephen Hawking: “Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete and would be superseded”

Prof Stephen Hawking, one of Britain’s pre-eminent scientists, has said that efforts to create thinking machines pose a threat to our very existence.

He told the BBC:”The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.”

His warning came in response to a question about a revamp of the technology he uses to communicate, which involves a basic form of AI.

But others are less gloomy about AI’s prospects.

The theoretical physicist, who has the motor neurone disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), is using a new system developed by Intel to speak.

Machine learning experts from the British company Swiftkey were also involved in its creation. Their technology, already employed as a smartphone keyboard app, learns how the professor thinks and suggests the words he might want to use next.

Prof Hawking says the primitive forms of artificial intelligence developed so far have already proved very useful, but he fears the consequences of creating something that can match or surpass humans.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-30290540