Gov. Cuomo Awarded for Outstanding Achievement in State Tax Reform in 2014
Washington, DC (Oct. 16, 2014)—Today, the nonpartisan Tax Foundation will award New York Governor Andrew Cuomo with the 2014 Outstanding Achievement in State Tax Reform award for championing a comprehensive corporate tax reform bill that will transform New York’s treatment of corporate taxes from one of the worst in the country to one of the best. The Tax Foundation will present Governor Cuomo with the award at a 12:00pm press conference this afternoon at the Museum of American Finance in New York City.
As the award’s name suggests, honorees are selected due to their extraordinary efforts to advance the cause of simpler, smarter tax policy in the previous year. New York’s reforms in 2014 reduced unnecessary complexity in the corporate tax base and lowered the corporate income tax rate to the lowest level since 1968 (read more on the reform bill). As these reforms phase in, New York’s ranking on the State Business Tax Climate Index will improve from 50th to 48th and its corporate tax system will improve from 25th place to 4th best in the nation.
“New York’s efforts mark a tremendous step towards reforming one of the least competitive tax codes in the nation,” said Joseph Henchman, Vice President of State Projects at the Tax Foundation. “New York’s economic successes occur because of strengths that overcome a challenging business tax environment, but with 2014’s reforms, one less obstacle will stand in the way of the economic growth in New York.”
“At a time when the gridlocked federal government is slow to enact substantive reforms, it’s encouraging to see states enacting crucial and well-crafted reforms,” added Henchman.
This year, six people will receive the award, the rest of whom will be announced next week.
Category: Uncategorized
Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce Welcomes New Business to Ridgewood
Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce Welcomes New Business to Ridgewood
the town is filled with great businesses to visit…
PLEASE WELCOME
Grand Opening Party
Anik-Ridgewood
119 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Saturday, October 18, 2014, 6-9pm
6:00pm ribbon cutting
***
Grand Re-opening
Super Cellars
32 South Broad Street
Saturday, November 1, 2014 @ 3:00pm
ribbon cutting at 3:00pm
Super Cellars has doubled in size!
***
GRAND OPENING
PINOT’S PALETTE
25 Oak Street
Saturday, November 1, 2014 @ 4:00pm
ribbon cutting at 4:00pm
*****
Grand Re-Opening-new location
The Couture Baby
new location 66 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Ribbon Cutting at 12Noon
bigger and better than ever!
Privacy concerns lead to N.J. legislation restricting access to cars’ ‘black boxes’
file photo Boyd Loving
Privacy concerns lead to N.J. legislation restricting access to cars’ ‘black boxes’
OCTOBER 15, 2014, 11:55 PM LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014, 11:58 PM
BY KIBRET MARKOS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
A new federal requirement that automakers install black-box-type devices in nearly all new cars has been welcomed by New Jersey law enforcement officials, but the warnings of privacy advocates and others have prompted state lawmakers to call for safeguards that would restrict the use of the data collected.
The devices, called event data recorders, are already installed in most late-model cars and have been used by law enforcement authorities in North Jersey since at least 1994, said Andrew Rich, a retired accident investigator for the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office who is now a consultant on collision investigations.
Back then, the devices provided information only about the change of speed immediately prior to a crash, he said. They have grown much more high-tech, and now collect information on change in speed, brake application, seat belt use and air bag deployment, among other things, Rich said.
Experts stress that although the devices are commonly called “auto black boxes,” they do not continuously record and store information like aircraft black boxes do. Instead, they record only seconds worth of data, and continuously override the recording. The boxes store data only in the case |of an incident, usually a crash, that causes the air bags to deploy, said Jim Harris, an accident reconstruction expert in Miami, Fla.
“Otherwise, if you try to download data from a random car in a parking lot, you will find no information,” Harris said.
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/privacy-concerns-lead-to-n-j-legislation-restricting-access-to-cars-black-boxes-1.1109979#sthash.W4tVUjug.dpuf
Experts Offer Steps for Avoiding Public Hysteria, a Different Contagious Threat
Experts Offer Steps for Avoiding Public Hysteria, a Different Contagious Threat
By BENEDICT CAREYOCT. 15, 2014As health officials scramble to explain how two nurses in Dallas became infected with Ebola, psychologists are increasingly concerned about another kind of contagion, whose symptoms range from heightened anxiety to avoidance of public places to full-blown hysteria.
So far, emergency rooms have not been overwhelmed with people afraid that they have caught the Ebola virus, and no one is hiding in the basement and hoarding food. But there is little doubt that the events of the past week have left the public increasingly worried, particularly the admission by Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that the initial response to the first Ebola case diagnosed in the United States was inadequate.
On Wednesday, the C.D.C. offered up the latest piece of bad news, announcing that a second infected nurse in Dallas had flown back from Cleveland a day before developing symptoms. Even before the announcement, two-thirds of the respondents to a Washington Post-ABC News poll said they were concerned about a widespread epidemic of Ebola in this country.
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/16/health/ebolas-other-contagious-threat-hysteria.html?_r=0
Rep Scott Garrett: FINRA CARDS Proposal Short of a Full Deck in Protecting Investors
Rep Scott Garrett: FINRA CARDS Proposal Short of a Full Deck in Protecting Investors
Oct 14, 2014
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ), Chairman of the Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, issued the following statement regarding a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) proposed rule to implement the Comprehensive Automated Risk Data System (CARDS):
“After a preliminary reading of the proposed rule, I remain far from convinced that this new, costly, and burdensome proposal is needed. Moreover, I question whether the purported benefits will justify the significant costs. But even beyond the costs of the proposed rule, significant privacy concerns still linger, especially when the data are combined with other data in FINRA’s database. Before moving forward with this proposal, there needs to be a much better explanation of why this burdensome rule is necessary in the first place and what steps are being taken to protect investors’ personal financial information. The Capital Markets and GSE Subcommittee will continue robust oversight of this potential new rule and, more broadly, FINRA’s structure, mission and regulatory activities.”
Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce Warns Village Business owners on New Parking Rules
To all business owners and employees in Ridgewood
important notice about parking!
The Village of Ridgewood will begin strictly enforcing
REPEAT PARKING VIOLATIONS – on that date the police department will begin issuing tickets to vehicles that remain in a parking space beyond 3 hours.
This means that you will no longer be able to extend the time at the parking meter by adding additional quarters to the meters at the end of the time allowed.
The Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce and the Village of Ridgewood have arranged for a limited number of employee parking spaces at the former Ken Smith Motors Lot (at the corner of N. Broad St. and Franklin Ave)
Beginning October 20, 2014, PARKING PERMITS maybe purchased at Village Hall (first floor receptionist desk)-for $80 per month – Monday-Friday 8:30am-4:30pm – you must have proof of employment and your driver’s license with you at the time of purchase – cash/check and/or credit cards accepted.
For additional information call
Village Hall 201-670-5500 x 200
Spaces at Ken Smith are extremely limited.
PLEASE REMEMBER YOU WILL BE TICKETED FOR REPEAT PARKING VIOLATIONS.
Reader says MSNBC viewers are anti-business, anti-military, and pro-conspiracy
Reader says MSNBC viewers are anti-business, anti-military, and pro-conspiracy
I, too, laugh at MSNBC’s ratings. However, don’t disregard the power of these seemingly low numbers of people who follow their nonsense. They absolutely rule the comments sections of the online news and blog sites with their anti-business, anti-military, and pro-conspiracy stance. I’m convinced that few of them actually work based upon their whacky beliefs and total lack of understanding of how real humans go about their lives. But, they are incredibly powerful and in this age of the Internet and having a collective voice, they cannot be dismissed as the nutters that they are
Reader asks have we received signed assurances that our children would not be tracked?
Reader asks have we received signed assurances that our children would not be tracked?
Why do we have an online system that is a hodgepodge? Multiple signons. Skyward, blackboard, Google groups and that awful system to pay fees.
Do we have any assurance from Google that they will not be tracking our children? Teachers use Google class management. Is Google tracking the student’s grades and progress in school?
In California parents pushed for and received signed assurances that their children would not be tracked. Do we have the same guarantees?
Ebola Health Worker Flew Hours Before Reporting Symptoms
Ebola Health Worker Flew Hours Before Reporting Symptoms
By Caroline Chen Oct 15, 2014 11:38 AM ET
Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) — A second health-care worker in Texas tested positive after caring for an Ebola patient, opening new questions about oversight lapses by federal officials and spurring a nurses’ group to criticize safety precautions used within the hospital.
The second health-care worker diagnosed with Ebola in Texas flew between Cleveland and Dallas hours before she reported symptoms to state health workers, U.S. health officials said today.
The caregiver caught the deadly virus while treating patient Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas this month. She flew to Dallas on Frontier Airlines flight 1143 the night of Oct. 13, according to a e-mailed statement by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. She then reported symptoms the next morning.
“Because of the proximity in time between the evening flight and first report of illness the following morning, CDC is reaching out to passengers,” the agency said. The plane had 132 passengers, the CDC said.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-10-15/ebola-health-worker-flew-day-before-reporting-symptoms.html
Minivan and pickup collide in Ridgewood
Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving
Minivan and pickup collide in Ridgewood
October 15, 2014
Boyd A. Loving
6:03 PM
Ridgewood NJ, A Ford pickup truck collided with a Chrysler Town & Country minivan at the corner of Robinson Lane and Oak Street, Ridgewood at approximately 2:15 PM on Wednesday, 10/15. The minivan driver sustained a minor injury, but refused medical aid. The pickup truck driver was uninjured. A flatbed tow truck removed the minivan from the scene. The pickup truck drove off on its own power; damage to it was limited to a dented front bumper. The pickup truck driver told police that the minivan had run a stop sign. Police at the scene did not say if any summonses had been issued in connection with the crash. Ridgewood PD, EMS, and FD responded.

DC Babble Outbreak
CDC Director Thomas Frieden
DC Babble Outbreak
Oct 15 2014
Mike Huckabee
Two suspected Ebola patients, one in L.A. and one in Boston, fortunately tested negative, but they raised distrust among Americans that the CDC knows what it’s doing. And their own statements aren’t helping. Mike Huckabee
We don’t have an epidemic of Ebola, but we do seem to be suffering an outbreak of DC Babble…Two suspected Ebola patients, one in L.A. and one in Boston, fortunately tested negative, but they raised distrust among Americans that the CDC knows what it’s doing. And their own statements aren’t helping. First they assured us it wouldn’t come to the US, then that it was highly unlikely, then that it was unlikely to spread. Once it did spread on US soil, from the late patient in Dallas to a nurse who cared for him, CDC Director Thomas Frieden blamed the hospital. In a line worthy of the Pentagon babble from “M*A*S*H,” Frieden said, “I think the fact that we don’t know of a breach in protocol is concerning because clearly there was a breach in protocol.” That angered all caregivers, accusing them of making a mistake with no proof. And the hospital says the nurse wore protective gear at all times. So if all the protocols failed to stop the spread, maybe the protocol should’ve been to keep it out of the US in the first place.
https://www.mikehuckabee.com/2014/10/dc-babble-outbreak
N.J.’s long-term unemployed rate worse than 48 states
Congressmen Scott Garrett points out ,” Really disappointing news. It’s time to do away with the stale, failed ideas of the past. We must unleash our economy and help get our people back to work. The House has passed more than 40 jobs bills that are#StuckInTheSenate; it’s time for the Senate to take action.”
N.J.’s long-term unemployed rate worse than 48 states
By Erin O’Neill | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on October 15, 2014 at 6:50 AM, updated October 15, 2014 at 7:41 AM
Nearly half of jobless residents in New Jersey have been out of work for more than six months, according to a new report, a level that ranks the state among the worst in the country.
The brief released today by New Jersey Policy Perspective notes the “long-term unemployment crisis is a national problem” but found every other state except Florida fared better than New Jersey. Also, while the share of long-term unemployed in New Jersey has fallen from its peak in 2010, the brief found that drop has not been as sharp as it has nationally.
“We’re in a much deeper pickle than most of the rest of the country,” said Gordon MacInnes, president of New Jersey Policy Perspective, a liberal-leaning think tank. “The reason for that is pretty plain: we haven’t produced enough jobs for people who are unemployed over a long period of time to fill.”
The report, which relies on analysis of federal labor data by the Economic Policy Institute, shows that 46.3 percent of the state’s jobless residents were unemployed for more than six months as of March 2014, compared to the state’s peak of 51.4 percent in December 2010. Those values represent 12-month moving averages.
On the national level, the share of long-term unemployed peaked at nearly 44 percent of all jobless residents in November 2011 and has since dropped to roughly 37 percent.
Only Florida had a larger share of long-term unemployed among the states in March at 46.5 percent.
https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2014/10/njs_share_of_long-term_unemployed_ranks_among_worst_in_us_data_shows.html#incart_m-rpt-1
President Obama Cancels Trip to Meet on Ebola Outbreak
President Obama Cancels Trip to Meet on Ebola Outbreak
October 15th, 2014
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is cancelling political travel to meet with his Cabinet on the Ebola outbreak.
The White House says Obama is calling off a planned trip to New Jersey and Connecticut and instead will convene Cabinet officials coordinating the government’s Ebola response at the White House.
The change comes as a second health worker in Dallas who provided care for the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S. has tested positive for the disease.
https://www.wggb.com/2014/10/15/president-obama-cancels-trip-to-meet-on-ebola-outbreak/
The Secret Casualties of Iraq’s Abandoned Chemical Weapons
The Secret Casualties of Iraq’s Abandoned Chemical Weapons
BY C. J. CHIVERS
The soldiers at the blast crater sensed something was wrong.
FROM 2004 TO 2011, AMERICAN AND IRAQI TROOPS REPEATEDLY ENCOUNTERED, AND AT TIMES WERE WOUNDED BY, CHEMICAL WEAPONS THAT WERE HIDDEN OR ABANDONED YEARS EARLIER.
It was August 2008 near Taji, Iraq. They had just exploded a stack of old Iraqi artillery shells buried beside a murky lake. The blast, part of an effort to destroy munitions that could be used in makeshift bombs, uncovered more shells.
Two technicians assigned to dispose of munitions stepped into the hole. Lake water seeped in. One of them, Specialist Andrew T. Goldman, noticed a pungent odor, something, he said, he had never smelled before.
He lifted a shell. Oily paste oozed from a crack. “That doesn’t look like pond water,” said his team leader, Staff Sgt. Eric J. Duling.
The specialist swabbed the shell with chemical detection paper. It turned red — indicating sulfur mustard, the chemical warfare agent designed to burn a victim’s airway, skin and eyes.
All three men recall an awkward pause. Then Sergeant Duling gave an order: “Get the hell out.”
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/10/14/world/middleeast/us-casualties-of-iraq-chemical-weapons.html?_r=0
6th Annual “Access Ridgewood” Disability Awareness Program
6th Annual “Access Ridgewood” Disability Awareness Program
6th Annual Access For All Weekend – October 17 – 19
Ridgewood CAN !!!
Ridgewood Community Access Network
Three-Day Program to Feature Education, Entertainment, Religious Services
The Ridgewood Community Access Network (CAN) will be hosting the 6th annual “Access Ridgewood” disability awareness program October 17-19.
“The purpose of this three-day program will be to promote a better understanding and appreciation of the special needs and special gifts of people with disabilities,” explained Ridgewood Mayor Paul Aronsohn. “In so doing, it will provide a great opportunity for our entire community to come together to learn, to share and to embrace an issue — disability — that affects every person and every family … either directly or indirectly.”
Among our special guests for the weekend will be U.S. Senator Cory Booker, Bergen County Executive Kathleen Donovan and Bergen County Director of Disability Services James Thebery.
“I look forward to joining Mayor Aronsohn at this year’s ‘Access Ridgewood’ disability awareness program,” said Senator Booker. “This annual event is made possible by the generosity of so many, and it is a wonderful showing of how communities can come together to raise awareness and appreciation for people with disabilities.”
Below is the program for the weekend:
Friday, October 17
– Schools Program: All of our public schools will address the topic of disability through film, discussion or other means. The format for each school will vary, but most programming is expected to take place in the morning.
– Seniors Program: Seniors will be invited to a special program entitled, “When Clutter Becomes a Problem.” This event will take place in Village Hall at 10:00am.
– Family Party: Young children and their parents will be invited to a fun party at which they can create a mask with special art instructor Marcia Matthews, listen to music by Marlene Pillow and eat lots of fun food. This event will take place in the Library auditorium at 5:00pm.
– Teen Dance Party: Students – middle school and older – will be invited to a “Twilight” dance party with DJ and refreshments. This event will take place in Village Hall at 7:30pm.
Saturday, October 18
– Community Fair: The entire community will be invited to enjoy performances and a fashion show including children of different abilities. Local organizations will also be on hand to share information about programs and services. Food and refreshments will be served. This event will take place in the Village Hall courtyard and Library auditorium from 12:00pm to 3:00pm.
At 1:00pm, Bergen County Executive Kathleen Donovan will kick-off the performances in the library, and Bergen County Disability Services Director James Thebery will serve as Master of Ceremonies.
At 1:40pm, U.S. Senator Cory Booker will kick-off the fashion show in the library, and NJTV’s Marie DeNoia Aronsohn will serve as Master of Ceremonies.
Sunday, October 19
– Interfaith Service: The entire community will be invited to an interfaith service at the First Reformed Church in Ridgewood. Led by Pastor Judy Broeker, the service will include clergy from various local houses of worship. This event will take place at 303 Prospect Street at 7:00pm.
Throughout the weekend, some of the other houses of worship will include a discussion of disability issues in their respective services.


















