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Two attempted child luring incidents reported in Bergen County

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photo by Boyd Loving

Two attempted child luring incidents reported in Bergen County

JUNE 7, 2014, 3:31 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 2014, 3:35 PM
BY AARON MORRISON
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Authorities in two Bergen County towns were dealing with reports of attempted child luring Saturday.

In Elmwood Park, a 10-year-old girl told police Saturday morning that a man driving a red sedan asked if she needed a ride. When she refused the offer, the man yelled at the girl and he sped off, said Sgt. Ralph Sigona of the Elmwood Park police. Detectives were reviewing security footage from a building near where the alleged luring attempt took place, added Sigona, who did not release the location of the incident.

Tenafly Schools Superintendent Lynn Trager described a similar incident, reported to police Friday evening, near the Stillman Elementary playground at Windsor and Tenafly roads. A student was approached by an “older teenager with short hair” at approximately 9:30 p.m.

The teen asked the girl to come with him, but she ran away and informed an adult, Trager wrote in an alert sent to parents.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/two-attempted-child-luring-incidents-reported-in-bergen-county-1.1031213#sthash.jNk0qP1h.dpuf

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Send in the Clowns; Rice’s credibility in question

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Send in the Clowns;  Rice’s credibility in question
By Alexander Bolton – 06/07/14 06:00 AM EDT

She doubled down on her statement Friday by insisting that Bergdahl deserved praise for volunteering to serve in a dangerous conflict.

“Let’s remember this is a young man who volunteered to serve his country. He was taken as a prisoner of war,” she said in a CNN interview.

National Security Adviser Susan Rice’s comments that Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl served with “honor and distinction” has amplified GOP criticism of President Obama’s prisoner swap and undermined Rice’s credibility on Capitol Hill.

Independent experts have cast doubt on Rice’s judgment, given questions about whether Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban after deserting his post in Afghanistan. Even allies of the White House are suggesting she stay off the Sunday talk shows.

“When I saw her on TV making that honor and distinction comment it just seems so phony to me,” said Andrew J. Bacevich, a professor of history and international relations at Boston University. “I think she doesn’t think seriously about the content of the words and it gets her in trouble and it embarrasses the president.

“It’s a problem if you have people who say things that end up attracting such adverse attention,” he added.

Rice is under fire for touting Bergdahl’s military record, after his former platoon mates accused him of deserting his post and endangering the lives of his comrades.

Patrick Ventrell, Rice’s spokesman, said “she stands by what she said in this instance and stands by her service.”

But even Obama’s allies say Rice should lay low for a while to avoid attracting more flak on Capitol Hill and elsewhere in Washington.

“First she’s given incomplete talking points about Benghazi, then she’s dispatched to say on the talk shows that Bergdahl served with ‘honor and distinction.’ If I were Rice, I’d start taking Sundays off,” wrote Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson.

Robinson’s unsolicited advice to Rice meshes with what her fiercest critics on Capitol Hill are saying.

“My recommendation is that from now on Susan Rice stay home with her family and not go on any of the Sunday talk shows,” said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).


Read more: https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/208565-questions-loom-over-rices-credibility#ixzz33y2lpW3S

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37.2%: Percentage Not in Labor Force Remains at 36-Year High

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37.2%: Percentage Not in Labor Force Remains at 36-Year High
June 6, 2014 – 8:05 AM

(CNSNews.com) – The percentage of American civilians 16 or older who do not have a job and are not actively seeking one remained at a 36-year high in May, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In December, April, and now May, the labor force participation rate has been 62.8 percent. That means that 37.2 percent were not participating in the labor force during those months.

Before December, the last time the labor force participation rate sunk as low as 62.8 percent was February 1978, when it was also 62.8 percent. At that time, Jimmy Carter was president.

In April, the number of those not in the labor force hit a record high of 92,018,000. In May, that number declined by 9,000 to 92,009,000. Yet, the participation rate remained the same from April to May at 62.8 percent.

The labor force, according to BLS, is that part of the civilian noninstitutional population that either has a job or has actively sought one in the last four weeks. The civilian noninstitutional population consists of people 16 or older, who are not on active duty in the military or in an institution such as a prison, nursing home, or mental hospital.

https://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/ali-meyer/372-percentage-not-labor-force-remains-36-year-high

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Surprise! The Government Now Can’t Even Guess How Much Obamacare Ultimately Will Ultimately Cost.

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Surprise! The Government Now Can’t Even Guess How Much Obamacare Ultimately Will Ultimately Cost.
Genevieve Wood June 06, 2014 

It’s no secret Obamacare is unaffordable. But now we also know that even the Congressional Budget Office can’t predict how much more this disastrous law will cost.

According to a footnote from a Congressional Budget Office report released in April but reported this week by Roll Call, the law’s true costs and long-term fiscal impact are simply impossible to track.

That’s a change in tune for the CBO, which originally reported in 2010 that Obamacare would pay for itself and over the course of a decade would decrease the deficit,

So what’s changed? Well, thanks to the constant modifications to the law, the only thing predictable about Obamacare’s provisions is that they’re unpredictable.  Many of the “savings” and “revenue” (read: mandates and tax increases) originally proposed to pay for this redesign of one-sixth of the U.S. economy, whether Medicare cuts or employer mandates, have been waived, stalled or simply not implemented, making a defensible revised forecast impossible.  The changes occurred because it became clear such measures were both politically unpopular and realistically unaffordable.

There are other reasons it’s virtually impossible to even guess how much Obamacare will ultimately cost. We learned this week that more than 2 million people—a whopping quarter of those enrolled in Obamacare—who  signed up for insurance via Obamacare’s health care exchanges have discrepancies in their records and paperwork. Apparently the government has inaccurate or inadequate information regarding the income levels of more than 1 million people who signed up and can’t verify the immigration or citizenship status for more than 900,000. That means some current enrollees may not be eligible for Obamacare subsidies and may lose their coverage or may have been given too generous a subsidy and eventually will have to pay the government back.

Serco, Inc., a government contractor hired to track down and verify the missing information, released a statement saying, “Current system access and functionality…limits the ability to resolve outstanding inconsistencies.” That means the government’s websiteis again was not up to par and much of the work to resolve the data discrepancies will require hands-on work to figure out who among these 2 million people should be getting insurance and subsidies through the exchange and who should not. In other words, there will need to be a significant number of extra staffers brought onto fix this mess. Guess the Obama administration finally is delivering on those “job creation” promises—too bad it’s at the taxpayers’ expense.

Not all the bad news regarding the spending train wreck that is Obamacare emanates from Washington. Many of the statesthat chose to set up their own exchanges spent hundreds of millions of federal dollars to do so—and yet ended up with exchanges that don’t work.

As we approach the next enrollment period in November, lawmakers in those states are frantically trying to figure out whether they can get more dollars from Washington to fix their problems or if they are going to have to use their own state funds. State Rep. John Delaney, a Democrat in Maryland, worries his state will have to divert dollars from education, fixing potholes and other programs to fix its broken exchange. “You can’t just print money in the states,” he said,

That’s right.  But the printing presses in Washington have been overused for some time as well—and  states that gladly jumped on the Obamacare bandwagon and took the bait shouldn’t be let off the hook by Congress.

So to sum up, the CBO can’t calculate Obamacare’s future costs, confusion about enrollees’ actual salaries could lead to wildly varying numbers on how much it costs this year, and there’s no telling how much money some states ultimately will weasel out of Washington to set up Obamacare.

Talk about a monstrosity of a government program.

What we do know for sure is that Obamacare will cost far more than President Obama and all those who voted for it in Congress told us it would. Which most of us realized all along.

Genevieve Wood advances policy priorities of The Heritage Foundation as senior contributor to The Daily Signal.

https://dailysignal.com/2014/06/06/surprise-government-now-cant-even-guess-much-obamacare-ultimately-will-ultimately-cost/?utm_source=heritagefoundation&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=morningbell

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Eisenhower had a second, secret D-day message

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Eisenhower had a second, secret D-day message

Eisenhower had a message for the world if D-day had failed. Any blame, he wrote, “is mine alone.” (REPEAT)

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was anxious and restless the night of June 5, 1944. He’d been working 20-hour days at his headquarters at Southwick House outside Portsmouth, England, planning the D-day invasion. The assault had already been postponed once by foul weather.

Eisenhower wasn’t sleeping well. He was drinking far too much coffee. He was smoking up to four packs a day of unfiltered Camels, according to Keith Huxen, senior director of research and history at the National WWII Museum in New Orleans.

The notes Gen. Eisenhower prepared for D-Day, win or loseOPEN LINK

And now Allied troops were launching. There was no turning back.

“Up to that point he was basically the most powerful man in the world — and then it’s out of his hands,” Huxen said. “There’s nothing he can do except hope the machinery he built works.”

In his private quarters inside a trailer on the Southwick grounds, Eisenhower wrote an Order of the Day to his troops. The first draft was typed. Eisenhower edited it in pencil.

https://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-eisenhower-d-day-message-story.html

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Concerns about hospital proposal

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Concerns about hospital proposal

JUNE 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2014, 12:31 AM
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Concerns about hospital proposal
Marcia Ringel

To the editor:

At two recent Planning Board meetings, residents were invited to share their concerns about Valley Hospital’s expansion proposal. This letter roughly reiterates my statement on May 20.

A child says, “I want a pony.” The parent says, “How about a puppy — or a guppy?”

Child’s counteroffer: “How about a slightly smaller pony with setbacks and an above-ground parking lot?”

The family doesn’t spend eight years discussing where a horse could be stabled or what it would eat. Just: “No pony.”

Valley Hospital’s revised proposal is a slightly smaller pony.

In the past 42 years I have entered Valley as an inpatient, outpatient, parent and visitor. But Valley feels less caring to me now. Our community has been treated with contempt by our community hospital, marketing madly with millions saved in taxes on the backs of this community. What began as David and Goliath morphed into David and Godzilla.

I feel perplexed as my neighbors must repeatedly remind our elected and appointed officials that we love our village, begging them not to destroy it in the name of progress or for fear of litigation.

I feel alarmed that almost every year a new group of residents has felt compelled to band together to protest the handing over of our public lands and space.

I feel betrayed by our Board of Education, who wimped out when they should have spoken out.

I feel dismayed that this issue has overshadowed five council elections.

Ridgewood neighborhoods are adjacent to schools, fields, parks, shops and a hospital. We lived in harmony for many years. That delicate balance must return.

Several decades ago the late Barney Van Dyk told me that he wanted to include indoor seating in his ice cream store, nestled among homes on Ackerman Avenue. But he graciously accepted the zoning board’s refusal, understanding that zoning laws protect residents. Ice cream is still eaten in the parking lot.

We have no dearth of fine hospitals. Even New York is coming: Memorial Sloan-Kettering in Basking Ridge and in the fall, physicians’ offices in Paramus for the Hospital for Special Surgery.

Village Planner Blais Brancheau’s recent report said Phase 2 of the hospital expansion might not happen. Of course it would, as would Phase 3, causing decades of unstoppable derangement — a tax-exempt Juggernaut that no wall, buffer or traffic island could mitigate.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-concerns-about-hospital-proposal-1.1030466#sthash.qhqYB8WM.dpuf

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Issues with road project

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Issues with road project

JUNE 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2014, 12:31 AM

Issues with road project
Kira Semler

LETTER TO THE EDITOR:

With regard to the article that appeared in the Friday, May 30, 2014 edition entitled, “Road project moving ahead,” I am in agreement with the thoughtful editorial letters submitted by Ridgewood residents regarding the fiasco with the paving of the road under the railroad bridge. I would like to add my comments:

1. The decision to reduce the lanes to one each way is ridiculous and seems to lack even a small thread of common sense.

2. Concerned residents attended this meeting with a panel of Village of Ridgewood employees and council members. Residents’ opinions/concerns fell on deaf ears.

3. How much are the cameras going to cost for the monitoring of this insanity? How about the extra manpower? Another cost the residents of the Village of Ridgewood will have to bear.

4. Will any cost overruns for later modifications be borne by the Village Council and the village manager? You know the answer to that question: There is no accountability and costs will come out of the pockets of the residents of the Village of Ridgewood.

5. What about the impact on the CBD? Of course, no one even gave that a thought.

6. I do not believe there was a study done on this project. No one heard about it until it was printed in the newspaper two weeks ago. The reason this project was not previously announced is simply because the village council did not want to hear any feedback.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/letter-issues-with-road-project-1.1030448#sthash.ystHaBUK.dpuf

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Ridgewood board approves temporary cell phone tower

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file photo Boyd Loving

Ridgewood board approves temporary cell phone tower

JUNE 6, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER
objections of a group of residents, the Ridgewood Zoning Board of Adjustment approved AT&T’s application to place a temporary cell tower at the Exxon Mobil station site on Route 17 in Ridgewood.

The removal date of the temporary tower, which will sit on a trailer, is Dec. 31, 2014, according to Zoning Officer Tony Merlino.

“This removal date was a condition of the approval, along with fencing/screening requirements,” Merlino noted in an email to The Ridgewood News.

At least 18 residents opposing the project were present at the meeting, according to Merlino.

Resident Diane Haderthauer, who lives near the tower and helped alert her neighbors to the issue, said she and other residents are concerned about what will happen after the temporary tower is removed. At that point, AT&T has said it plans to take steps to upgrade a permanent 120-foot tower that is already located nearby on Franklin Turnpike. This tower currently looks like a flagpole.

Haderthauer said the concern of the residents is “if they do remove this temporary struc-ture, how will that affect the flagpole?”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/temporary-tower-ok-d-1.1030279#sthash.ObqhRBec.dpuf

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Traffic engineers testify on Ridgewood housing proposals

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Traffic engineers testify on Ridgewood housing proposals

JUNE 5, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2014, 3:40 PM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER

Echoing the earlier findings of a consultant hired by the village, traffic engineers testifying at the latest multifamily housing hearing said that their proposed use would result in less additional downtown traffic than other allowable uses.

About 15 residents, including several leaders of the grassroots group opposing unrestrained development, Citizens for a Better Ridgewood (CBR), attended the hearing on Tuesday in the Benjamin Franklin Middle School auditorium.

In the case of The Dayton, where 106 units are proposed for the abandoned Brogan Cadillac site (currently used as a commuter parking lot), an expert said a residential use would generate less traffic than the current use.

“What’s proposed would not result in a detrimental traffic impact … I think that’s important to understand,” said The Dayton’s traffic expert Karl Pehnke, an associate for Langan Engineering. “The applicant could actually produce less traffic than could otherwise be expected.”

The 52-unit Chestnut Village complex proposed for Chestnut Street, on the site of a former vehicle inspection station, would also generate less traffic than other permitted uses, including medical offices, an expert for the developer said.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/traffic-engineers-testify-on-ridgewood-housing-proposals-1.1030111#sthash.6WrFpIJ6.dpuf

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Ridgewood council to vote on changes to Garber Square road project

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Ridgewood council to vote on changes to Garber Square road project

JUNE 5, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2014, 3:37 PM
BY BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER

Ridgewood Council members this week offered their preliminary support of recommended changes to the controversial Garber Square improvement project, and their decision will be official when they vote on a village resolution June 11.

Resident protest and input over the past three weeks prompted municipal officials to revisit the plans, which call for the installation of a bicycle lane in each direction of Garber Square from the train underpass to West Ridgewood Avenue. To accommodate the bike lanes, a majority of Garber Square was reduced to one motor vehicle lane for each direction of traffic.

Though the village will continue that portion of the project, officials have agreed to reduce the width of the median separating easterly and westerly traffic from 8 feet to 4 feet. A smaller median gives the village “flexibility” in the event engineering officials opt to reinstate the second traffic lane and eliminate the bike path, according to Village Manager Roberta Sonenfeld.

“It’s a fallback if congestion that is untreatable does occur,” Sonenfeld said at Wednesday’s council work session. “We’re not trying to cause congestion, but we’re trying to slow down traffic.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-council-to-vote-on-changes-to-garber-square-road-project-1.1030107#sthash.6B8TyDIm.dpuf

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U.S. Men’s National Team Coach: ‘We Cannot Win The World Cup’

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U.S. Men’s National Team Coach: ‘We Cannot Win The World Cup’

Klinsmann Offers Brutally Honest Assessment Before Team Even Arrives In BrazilJune 5, 2014 3:55 PM

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — The United States men’s soccer team has its work cut out for it at the upcoming World Cup.

The United States is in what has been dubbed this year’s “Group of Death,” containing Germany, Portugal and Ghana.

It will be very difficult for the U.S. to get out of Group G, and head coach Jurgen Klinsmann isn’t expecting a miracle in Brazil.

In fact, he’s being brutally honest and realistic about his club’s chances.

“We cannot win the World Cup because we are not at that level yet,” Klinsmann said, according to the New York Times. “For us, we have to play the game of our lives seven times to win the tournament.”

https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/06/05/u-s-mens-soccer-coach-klinsmann-we-cannot-win-the-world-cup/

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Bergdahl declared jihad in captivity, secret documents show

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Bergdahl declared jihad in captivity, secret documents show

By James Rosen

Published June 06, 2014
FoxNews.com

U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl at one point during his captivity converted to Islam, fraternized openly with his captors and declared himself a “mujahid,” or warrior for Islam, according to secret documents prepared on the basis of a purported eyewitness account and obtained by Fox News.

The reports indicate that Bergdahl’s relations with his Haqqani captors morphed over time, from periods of hostility, where he was treated very much like a hostage, to periods where, as one source told Fox News, “he became much more of an accepted fellow” than is popularly understood. He even reportedly was allowed to carry a gun at times.

The documents show that Bergdahl at one point escaped his captors for five days and was kept, upon his re-capture, in a metal cage, like an animal. In addition, the reports detail discussions of prisoner swaps and other attempts at a negotiated resolution to the case that appear to have commenced as early as the fall of 2009.

The reports are rich in on-the-ground detail — including the names and locations of the Haqqani commanders who ran the 200-man rotation used to guard the Idaho native — and present the most detailed view yet of what Bergdahl’s life over the past five years has been like. These real-time dispatches were generated by the Eclipse Group, a shadowy private firm of former intelligence officers and operatives that has subcontracted with the Defense Department and prominent corporations to deliver granular intelligence on terrorist activities and other security-related topics, often from challenging environments in far-flung corners of the globe.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/06/06/exclusive-bergdahl-declared-jihad-secret-documents-show/

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New Jersey’s warning for New York

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New Jersey’s warning for New York

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has faced heavy criticism since he announced that he’s deferring payments to the state’s pension system to balance his budget. But so far no one’s offering a real way out of Jersey’s pension dilemma.

Democrats blasted Christie for reneging on reforms passed in 2010 and 2011 to address the state’s massively underfunded pensions.

But they volunteer no reasonable alternatives to Jersey’s pension problems: Even more taxes on the rich don’t come near to fixing the mess.

Getting Jersey’s retirement system healthy is impossible without new ways of thinking about government in the Garden State — something that few in Trenton acknowledge.

Independent analysts rate the system as among the nation’s worst-funded, thanks to mismanagement and politically motivated self-dealing among politicians and union leaders dating back to the early 1990s.

The actual cost of beginning to pay down the state’s pension debt requires annual contributions of about $5 billion. But Jersey only collects about $32 billion a year in revenues.  (Malanga/New York Post)

https://nypost.com/2014/06/05/new-jerseys-warning-for-new-york/

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Bergen County freeholders introduce 2014 budget with no tax hike

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Bergen County freeholders introduce 2014 budget with no tax hike

JUNE 4, 2014, 9:34 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 2014, 9:42 PM
BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

The Bergen County freeholders on Wednesday introduced a $507.6 million county budget for 2014 that will result in no property tax increase.

The freeholders cut $6.8 million in spending from the budget proposed by County Executive Kathleen Donovan, a proposal that would have called for a 1.9-percent tax hike.

Donovan’s budget would have increased annual taxes by $6.49 on the owner of the average home, assessed at $324,200. That led to some partisan comments from Democratic freeholders, who criticized the budget presented by Donovan, a Republican who is running for reelection.

“If this were up to the county executive, your taxes would have gone up,” said Democratic Freeholder James Tedesco, who is running against Donovan this year.

But Jeanne Baratta, Donovan’s chief of staff, criticized the freeholder budget as “smoke and mirrors” for an election year in which control of both the Freeholder Board and the county’s executive’s office is at stake. She predicted the budget would result in the county running short of funds by the time the election is over.

“They’re playing a shell game with the taxpayer’s money,” Baratta said after the meeting.

However, Republican Freeholder John Felice said he was proud to vote for the budget, calling it an example of bipartisan collaboration. In particular, he cited the freeholders’ decision to tap into trust funds maintained by different departments to cut the budget.

“It’s the people’s money, not our money,” Felice said.

The board used about $1.7 million in trust funds to offset an increase to the county’s contribution to Bergen Community College of $1.8 million.

A public hearing on the budget and a vote of adoption has been scheduled for July 9.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergen-county-freeholders-introduce-2014-budget-with-no-tax-hike-1.1029019#sthash.zErNo9de.dpuf

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Reader says new route keeps him from stopping and shopping

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Reader says new route  keeps him from stopping and shopping

Love the fact that they are now going to do a traffic study after they have already impeded traffic and people have already adjusted their habits and started using other roads. Only in Ridgewood.

By the way, my new route takes me up Bellair Road where there are some lovely houses. Beats the heck out of looking at all the empty lots, parked trucks and construction equipment at Ken Smith’s and sitting at the lights in downtown Ridgewood. Also keeps me from stopping and shopping. So, win/win for me. Probably not so good for the retailers.

traffic calming – traffic calming – traffic calming – traffic calming

keep repeating this mantra until you too are brainwashed into thinking that automobiles are the root of all evil and must be stopped