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Bank failures fading, but not completely, from view

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Bank failures fading, but not completely, from view
Aug. 12, 2014, 11:11 a.m. EDT

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The number of bank failures is slowing down due to the improving economy and rising property values, but the industry is still not back to pre-crash levels and future growth remains uncertain.

Only 14 banks failed in the first half of this year, according to the most recent data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Last year, 24 banks failed – down from 157 failures in 2010, the peak failure year since the banking sector was taken down by the financial crisis in 2008. Typically, when a bank fails, its capital becomes too low to meet obligations to its creditors because of sustained losses, causing regulators to close it.

“This is a very typical bank failure cycle,” said Bert Ely, a banking industry consultant based in Alexandria, Va. “As the economy improves, banks work out their problems and the FDIC and other banking regulators closed failed banks, then you revert back to the normal situation of having very few bank failures.”

With the economic recovery continuing, many FDIC-regulated banks have improved their balance sheets, made more loans and enjoyed stronger earnings, but the industry has not improved to the single-digit annual failure rate pre-crisis.

“I don’t think we are back to the zero failure,” FDIC’s Chief Economist Richard Brown said, referring to 2005 and 2006 when no banks went under. “There are still institutions dealing with the aftermath of the recession.”

More than 400 banks remain on the FDIC’s unofficial problem list of troubled institutions that may run the risk of failure in the near terms. The list has shrunk to half the size of the peak year of 2010. However, the number remains elevated when measured against the pre-crash year 2007 with its mere 76 problem banks.

The declining pace of failures is an indication of more business activity, lower unemployment rates and a relatively stronger lending market.

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-failures-fading-but-not-completely-from-view-2014-08-12?mod=latestnewssocialflow&link=sfmw

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Reader says Soccer 11 months a year…crazy…

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Reader says Soccer 11 months a year…crazy…

Remove the friggin’ lights. This is not Friday Night Lights. Horrendous.

Trouble is not with grass but too many people and teams expecting the grass to withstand continuous use. It needs time to recover.

Reduce the number of teams and forget the leagues. Just stop it and give us our parks back. They’re all ruined.

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Born Again: Rebirth of the Jersey Tomato

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Born Again: Rebirth of the Jersey Tomato

Everyone pays lip service to the juicy Jersey tomato. Now three Rutgers scientists are close to recreating the greatest Jersey tomato of them all.

On a sunny afternoon in May, the contenders, each plant about 4 inches tall, were growing in a greenhouse in a rural stretch of Cumberland County. A hanging thermometer said the temperature indoors had reached 85 degrees.

“This is about as warm as you want it to get,” said Tom Orton, the plant breeder here at the Rutgers Agricultural Research and Extension Center farm in Upper Deerfield, looking protectively over his seedlings. Orton has a PhD. in plant genetics and tends to talk like a scientist, but he can speak tenderly, almost anthropomorphically, about tomatoes.

As in: “Above the high 80s, tomatoes don’t like it. Around 90, they just sit there and wait for it to get cooler. But if you keep water on them, they get over it.”

As in: “Tomatoes don’t take the weekend off,” so each Saturday and Sunday Orton drives 30 miles round trip from his home in Salem County to water them.

It’s not yet clear which of these 250 little plants in their plastic trays, now starting to branch into the familiar serrated leaves, will triumph in this genetic competition to recreate the Rutgers tomato, touted as the greatest Jersey tomato of all. Orton and his two compadres on this quest have been diligently hybridizing and selecting for four years. These are F-6’s, the sixth generation selected from the two parents Orton began cross-pollinating in 2011.

“These will go out in the field in about two weeks,” Orton said. He noticed a double (two seedlings growing in one plastic cell) and gently dug one out, replanting it in an empty slot. The plan was to truck the seedlings to Rutgers’ Snyder Farm in Hunterdon County, where they’d grow to maturity.

https://njmonthly.com/articles/lifestyle/people/born-again-rebirth-jersey-tomato.html?ct=t(Side_Dish_Issue_1974_11_2013)

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Rabbi Chanoch Kaplan , Franklin Lakes Chabad “Stand With Israel”

Rabbi Shmuel Kaplan - Scholar - Large

West Bergen Tea Party,“Proud To Be An American ” Presents
          

Rabbi Chanoch Kaplan , Franklin Lakes Chabad “Stand With Israel”

Join us 7 pm, Tuesday, August 12 At the Larkin House
380 Godwin Avenue, Wyckoff (1/4 mile North of Stop & Shop on the right)

More Information: 201 891-5918 , [email protected]
www.westbergenteaparty.com Twitter: @WestBergentp

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Village Hall Upgrading Telephone System On August 14

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Village Hall Upgrading Telephone System On August 14

Thursday, August 14th the Village Hall telephone system will be migrated to a new Light Path system. If you experience difficulties in contacting Village Hall August 14th , it may be due to the telephone system upgrade. Thank you for your patience.

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Ridgewood panel to review master plan

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file photo Councilwoman Susan Knudsen

Ridgewood panel to review master plan

AUGUST 12, 2014    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — The Village Council plans to create a committee of residents, business owners and officials who will be charged with taking a long, hard look at Ridgewood’s master plan.

The decision came during a lengthy discussion at a recent council meeting, spurred by Councilwoman Susan Knudsen’s suggestion that an ordinance — known as “3066” — be modified.

That ordinance requires that developers requesting changes to the village master plan cover the costs associated with those changes, including, for example, the retention of experts to testify on the proposed changes.

Residents opposed to three high-density, multifamily housing developments proposed for downtown contend the ordinance, adopted in 2007, has made it easier for developers to propose changes to the master plan. Some residents, who suggested the ordinance be repealed, said it limits master plan amendment requests to those who can afford to pay for the process.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-panel-to-review-master-plan-1.1066076#sthash.iuSs2ucD.dpuf

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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED A FLOOD WATCH

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file photo Boyd Loving

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED A FLOOD WATCH

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
428 AM EDT TUE AUG 12 2014…HEAVY RAIN AND FLASH FLOODING POSSIBLE FROM LATE TONIGHT
INTO WEDNESDAY…

…FLASH FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM LATE TONIGHT THROUGH
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON…

THE FLASH FLOOD WATCH CONTINUES FOR

* ALL OF SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT…NORTHEAST NEW JERSEY AND SOUTHEAST
NEW YORK.

* FROM LATE TONIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.

* AS A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM OVER THE GREAT LAKES MOVES INTO
SOUTHERN CANADA TODAY…AN ONSHORE FLOW OF DEEP TROPICAL
MOISTURE WILL DEVELOP…AND SHOWERS WILL GRADUALLY SPREAD
EASTWARD INTO THE REGION THROUGH THIS EVENING. THIS MOISTURE
WILL BE WRUNG OUT BY AN UPSLOPE FLOW OVER INTERIOR
SECTIONS…AND ALSO BY A SECONDARY LOW DEVELOPING NEAR THE AREA
LATE TONIGHT…AND THEN MOVING SLOWLY ACROSS DURING THE
DAY ON WEDNESDAY.

* SHOWERS WILL LIKELY BECOME HEAVY AT TIMES FROM LATE TONIGHT INTO
WEDNESDAY MORNING OR EARLY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. RAINFALL RATES
OF 1 TO 2 INCHES PER HOUR ARE LIKELY DURING THE PERIODS OF
HEAVIEST RAIN…AND WIDESPREAD RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 1 1/2 TO 3
INCHES AND LOCALLY OVER 4 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A FLASH FLOOD WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS MAY DEVELOP THAT LEAD
TO FLASH FLOODING. FLASH FLOODING IS A VERY DANGEROUS SITUATION.
YOU SHOULD MONITOR LATER FORECASTS AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE ACTION SHOULD FLASH FLOOD WARNINGS BE ISSUED.

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Watch: This Guy Just Proved That Obama Is Opening The Door For Our Absolute WORST Enemies

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James Okeefe

Watch: This Guy Just Proved That Obama Is Opening The Door For Our Absolute WORST Enemies

“Do you feel safe?”

James O’Keefe, dressed in a trademark military jacket and dishdasha while wearing an Osama bin Laden mask, can casually cross into the U.S. without fear of the Border Patrol stopping him. O’Keefe asks, “Do you feel safe” before stepping into the 2-foot-deep Rio Grande in Hudspeth County, Texas.

The area looked well-worn with footprints, campsites, and littering, indicating that O’Keefe is not the only person crossing into the U.S.

Read more at https://www.westernjournalism.com/james-okeefe-dresses-bin-laden-walks-unopposed-across-texas-border-u-s-mexico/#r9kODcjhAwvSGeUp.99

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The new back-to-school: Deeper discounts, longer sales

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The new back-to-school: Deeper discounts, longer sales
Hadley Malcolm, USA TODAY 11:53 a.m. EDT August 11, 2014

You may be basking in the last few weeks of summer and counting down to Labor Day getaways, but for retailers it was time to go back to school a month ago.

That’s when many of them started promotions for one of the biggest shopping periods of the year — one that’s also become perhaps the most prolonged shopping period of the year, with families buying back-to-school items from practically the fourth of July until after classes start. Deloitte’s annual back-to-school shopping survey out last month found that more than a quarter of parents plan to finish their shopping after the start of the school year.

“We’re seeing it expanded out throughout the season,” says Steve Bratspies, executive vice president of general merchandise for Walmart. He says customers are shopping more frequently and making smaller basket purchases over a longer period of time rather than doing one huge buy.

And that means stores are throwing absurdly cheap prices — think 17-cent notebooks — and price-matching guarantees at customers in an effort to stay relevant and competitive over three months of back-to-school shopping.

• Staples is offering a 110% price-match: If a customer finds a product cheaper somewhere else, Staples will match the price plus give the customer back 10% of the difference. And those 17-cent notebooks are part of a list of items at low prices for the entire shopping season. Rulers, glue, paper, colored pencils, erasers, crayons, ballpoint pens and markers are all on sale for a dollar or less through Labor Day.

• Walmart has 30% more back-to-school items available online than last year and is reducing prices on 10% more back-to-school items than last year both online and in stores. This month, a price-matching pilot program rolled out store-wide. It allows customers to enter an ID code listed on their in-store receipt at Walmart.com and compare the prices of everything they bought to all advertised prices from that week. If Walmart’s prices were more expensive, it will refund the difference in the form of an e-gift card.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2014/08/11/retail-back-to-school-shopping-trends/13717463/

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Federal Aid Is Likely Driving College Costs Up

Back-to-School

Federal Aid Is Likely Driving College Costs Up
Jillian Frost / August 11, 2014

Federal financial aid for higher education was supposed to grow the market, bring down costs and help families afford this critical step to financial security.

But a recent report finds the effort to provide educational assistance to students has turned into decades of unaccountable federal spending on higher education.

According to the report from the Center for College Affordability and Productivity, the federal student aid system “contributes to skyrocketing costs, finances a wasteful academic arms race, weakens academic standards, lowers educational opportunity, and worsens the underemployment/overinvestment problem.”

As authors Richard Vedder, Christopher Denhart, and Joseph Hartge explain:

“The most striking thing to observe is that, not only have tuition fees risen after adjusting for inflation, but the rate of increase is rising since 1978. Federal involvement in providing student financial assistance is also growing over time… Before 1978, increases in tuition fees after adjusting for overall inflation were roughly 1 percent a year. In the era of substantial federal student aid after 1978, inflation-adjusted tuition fee increases have ratcheted up to 3-4 percent a year.”

It’s not just students who feel this burden. Taxpayers currently shoulder nearly $90 billion of the $1 trillion dollars of student loan debt now in default. The CCAP report also details shortcomings on the part of the federal government to account for risk in making federal student loans:

“The federal student loan programs are fundamentally unique because any consideration of risk is largely ignored when deciding whether to make a loan… During the past 11 years, the number of seriously delinquent student loans has grown by about 15.41 percent per year on average, outpacing those loans that are merely delinquent (fewer than 90 days past due on payments) which averaged 13.54 percent annually. In other words, student loan debt is growing at an unsustainable pace.”

Moreover, the federal government’s current accounting practices largely fail to account for market risk, which means the costs to taxpayers of student loans probably are higher than estimated. Federal student loan programs fail to take into account students’ credit worthiness, major or whether the student has a co-signer, which means federal student loans probably cost the government money, rather than turn a profit as is often claimed. Fair-value accounting, which takes into account market risk, would be a far more accurate reflection of the cost of federal student loans.

Attempts to rein in college costs by expanding the Pay As You Earn Plan, as President Obama did, or allowing for the refinancing of student loans, as Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., proposes, encourage further borrowing without creating pressure on colleges to limit spending and keep tuition reasonable.

The Dynamic Repayment Act of 2014, offered by Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Mark Warner, D-Va., is little better. It would expand federal involvement in higher education by not only requiring “every borrower of a federal student loan to pay 10 percent of his monthly income upon graduation,” it would “garner those payments through paycheck withholding.” The withholding provision in particular would, as a recent report from The Heritage Foundation detailed, enshrine the federal government in lending.

As Congress prepares to reauthorize the Higher Education Act, a number of other bills have been introduced, the most promising of which is the Higher Education Reform and Opportunity Act (HERO) proposalfrom Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla.

HERO would restructure higher education by decoupling federal financing from accreditation and allowing states to permit any entity to credential individual courses. This could help reduce college costs, decrease federal involvement in higher education and make for a more customized college experience for students who choose to attend.

https://dailysignal.com/2014/08/11/federal-aid-likely-driving-college-costs/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

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‘Open Space’ Travesty Says It All

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‘Open Space’ Travesty Says It All
Aug. 11
By Matt Rooney | The Save Jersey Blog

Everything that drives me crazy about Trenton played out in last week’s passage of a new “Open Space” measure, Save Jerseyans, setting up a ballot question for the November election and another expenditure which we can ill-afford.

Bad logic. Reckless spending. And a little good old fashioned horse trading?

In case you’re not aware of the background information, SCR-84 results in a proposed constitutional amendment on New Jersey’s next general election ballot which, if approved by the voters, dedicates $150 million per year for open space conservation over 30 years.  That’s a roughly $4 billion investment at a time when our government just declined to make an additional, pre-planned $2.4 billion payment towards our chronically underfunded pension system.

And it doesn’t make much sense, does it? At least not right now regardless of how you feel about open space land preservation. But it’s part of a disturbing trend where our legislators shirk their responsibility to make tough decisions by passing reckless constitutional amendment proposals that are designed, at least in part, to boost Election Day turnout. Last year’s minimum wage question and 2012′s higher education Big Labor stimulus package were apparently just the beginning.

Set aside for a moment your conceptions of what government should do or what you know it can afford. Personally, I think open space is great idea as a general concept. Government should use smart zoning and general funds to create parks and prevent our entire state from resembling that planet-sized capital city from the Star Wars movies.

What you may not know is that New Jersey taxpayers have already preserved an area of land, inside our state’ boundaries, that’s approximately the same size as Delaware – almost 2,000 square miles.

– See more at: https://savejersey.com/2014/08/open-space-bail-reform-new-jersey/#sthash.zCmy7klW.dpuf

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Political crisis deepens in Iraq

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Political crisis deepens in Iraq

BAGHDAD — In a surprise speech late Sunday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki resisted calls for his resignation and accused the country’s new president of violating the country’s constitution, a speech that plunged the government into a political crisis while it battles advances by Islamic State militants. (Yacoub, Salama/Associated Press)

https://www.northjersey.com/news/political-crisis-deepens-in-iraq-1.1065323

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Ouch! Hillary Clinton Blames Rise of Islamic Militants on Obama Policies

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Ouch! Hillary Clinton Blames Rise of Islamic Militants on Obama Policies
Posted by Jim Hoft on Sunday, August 10, 2014, 7:30 PM

In September 2011 in an interview with VOA Hillary Clinton said,
“Al-Qaeda was on the path of defeat.”

Posted by Jim Hoft on Sunday, August 10, 2014, 7:30 PM

In September 2011 in an interview with VOA Hillary Clinton said,
“Al-Qaeda was on the path of defeat.”

This was before the Benghazi massacre one year later.

But now she’s singing a different tune…
In an interview published Sunday, Hillary Clinton blamed the rise of Islamic militants in Iraq-Syria including ISIS on Barack Obama’s foreign policy.
AFP reported:

Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton blamed the rise of Islamist militants in Iraq and Syria on failures of US policy under President Barack Obama, in an interview published Sunday.

Clinton specifically faulted the US decision to stay on the sidelines of the insurgency against Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad as opening the way for the most extreme rebel faction, the Islamic State.

“The failure to help build up a credible fighting force of the people who were the originators of the protests against Assad —- there were Islamists, there were secularists, there was everything in the middle -— the failure to do that left a big vacuum, which the jihadists have now filled,” Clinton told the Atlantic.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/08/ouch-hillary-clinton-blames-rise-of-islamic-militants-on-obama-policies/