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Stephen Sweeney on school safety: ‘Sprinklers should be in all our schools’

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Stephen Sweeney on school safety: ‘Sprinklers should be in all our schools’

EDISON – Most New Jersey schools were built before the law required that they have sprinkler systems to put out fires.

And there’s no law on the books that requires local districts to retrofit their campuses.

On a tour of temporary classrooms housing studentsof a school that burned down earlier this year, Senate President Stephen Sweeney said today that that needs to change. Sweeney said he was open to legislation to address the matter.

“Sprinklers should be in our schools, in all of them,” Sweeney said today at James Monroe Elementary School’s temporary location on the Middlesex County College campus. “You can retrofit schools to put sprinklers in them.”

The New Jersey Schools Development Authority hasn’t done a good enough job keeping up with modern technology, Sweeney said. And with Gov. Chris Christie proposing a longer school year, there are a number of upgrades that schools need, including air conditioning on sweltering summer days, Sweeney said.

But the most important thing is safety, Sweeney said, standing in a school corridor as a class of youngsters passed. (Amaral/Star-Ledger)

https://www.nj.com/middlesex/index.ssf/2014/04/stephen_sweeney_on_school_safety_sprinkers_should_be_in_all_our_schools.html#incart_river 

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Annual RBSA Parade and Family Fun Day in Ridgewood

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RBSA website

Annual RBSA Parade and Family Fun Day, Saturday, April 26

Grand Marshall is “The Special All Stars”.  Special All Stars is a program designed to give children with special needs, in and around our community, an opportunity to play baseball/softball with the help of community volunteers via one on one personal instruction.

The Parade will begin as usual at 9:00 a.m. at the Ridgewood Train Station on the Wilsey Square side of town and will conclude at the Kasschau Band Shell at Vets Field.
Bring your family and enjoy food, activities and the RHS Varsity Baseball Game. We are looking for parent volunteers. If you would like to participate as a volunteer please contact Brendan Buckley; [email protected]

All Players and Coaches should be at the train station 8:30am.   This year we ask that each player brings (1) non-perishable food item to the train station. The Social Services Association of Ridgewood and Vicinity will be collecting these for the needy in our immediate area. PLEASE SUPPORT THEM by bring a box of cereal, can of soup, or any item you can spare.

There will be RBSA Board Members walking around with Help Signs should any player or parent need assistance. Please view the attached TEAM ASSEMBLY AREA MAP.

PARENTS and COACHES – the Parade Assembly Area and the congregation of Teams at the Band Shell at the end of the Parade route is very chaotic.DO NOT LEAVE ANY CHILD UNATTENDED. If you find any child in need of help, bring them to the Band Shell and summon a Parade Marshal.

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Reader says NJ Public Pensions are a ticking time bomb

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Reader says NJ Public Pensions are a ticking time bomb

We can’t do anything at a local level about already promised pensions, unless the Village wants to challenge final salary calculations used for pensions. We can move all new hires to 403(b) defined contribution plans and ask them to contribute more than 10% of their pay towards their pension. The state pension fund could file for Chapter 9 bankruptcy if their assets are insufficient to meet their obligations. It’s slowing the rate of growth that matters the most, taxpayers are already on the hook for $100bn of unfunded promises made to NJ municipal retirees.

taxpayers are already on the hook for $100bn of unfunded promises made to NJ municipal retirees.

NJ Accrued Pension Liability highest to lowest

Teachers Pension – TPAF Accrued Liability $51.405 Billion Dollars

Municipal Workers – PERS Accrued Liability $45.393 Billion Dollars

Police & Fire Pension -PFRS Accrued Liability $31.732 Billion Dollars

Page 13 from the NJ Pension study Report dated January 2014

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Ridgewood municipal budget introduced with no increase in taxes

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Ridgewood municipal budget introduced with no increase in taxes

APRIL 24, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2014, 3:27 PM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER

Following a healthy debate this week, the Ridgewood Council moved forward with a 2014 municipal spending plan that carries a zero percent average tax increase for all village property owners.

The $46.2 million budget was introduced by 3-2 vote Wednesday night and will be up for formal adoption at a May 28 Village Council meeting. If the plan is adopted, the municipal portion of the Ridgewood tax bill would total $3,959 – a sum based on the village’s average assessed home value of $688,358.

According to Village Manager Roberta Sonenfeld, the 2014 average tax bill is $5 less than the amount presented with last year’s budget. The 2013 municipal spending plan also offered a zero percent tax increase over the previous year.

Council members pushed forward the flat taxes plan after weighing it against a separate version that called for a 1 percent tax increase, or roughly $50 tacked on to annual bill. The alternative would have generated approximately $450,000 for the municipality.

“If we have the opportunity to again provide some relief, my view is we should absolutely do it,” said Mayor Paul Aronsohn. “Last year, we got zero [percent increase], and this year we’re hoping for zero. Prior to that, tax increases were significant. If you compound what the municipal tax increase was with the Board of Education tax increase and the county, and then the burdens that Ridgewood families are feeling generally, it adds up.”

The mayor added that “$50 might sound like a little bit, but every bit adds up. If we can provide relief, we should do it.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-municipal-budget-introduced-with-no-increase-in-taxes-1.1002605#sthash.q7BgrILI.dpuf

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N.J. politicians urge U.S. not to use Sandy aid for other projects

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N.J. politicians urge U.S. not to use Sandy aid for other projects

Members of New Jersey’s congressional delegation say they won’t let the federal government use Superstorm Sandy aid for a nationwide funding competition that could benefit states that were not affected by the storm.

Reps. Bill Pascrell Jr., D-Paterson; Albio Sires, D-West New York; and Frank Pallone, D-Long Branch, and Sen. Bob Menendez, D-Union City, are urging Shaun Donovan, the secretary of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, not to divert a third round of federal aid to resiliency projects in other parts of the country.

The Wall Street Journal first reported Sunday that more than $1 billion of the remaining $3.6 billion in Community Development Block Grant funds could be used for a national resiliency competition. Pascrell sent a letter to Donovan on Tuesday objecting to the proposal, and Pallone issued a statement Monday saying he would personally address the issue during a meeting with the secretary next week.

Sires is sending a letter today, and he said Wednesday that the entire New Jersey delegation could join together in opposition of a nationwide competition for the money.

“They better be very careful about who they are messing with because we’re not going to take this,” Pascrell said Wednesday. “Many of the congressmen have had it up to our eyeballs. We are not going to sit down and allow HUD to take the money that we voted for, for those folks, those towns, those counties that were impacted by this storm.”

The Community Development Block Grants are discretionary funds that the states can tailor to their needs. New Jersey received $1.83 billion in the first round. The state used $710 million of that for its Reconstruction Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation program, which offers grants of up to $150,000 to rebuild homes significantly damaged in the storm. That money funded 5,124 grants, but more than 7,000 residents remain on a waiting list.

The state is set to receive a second round of funds — $1.46 billion — next month and plans to allocate $390 million to take residents off the waiting list. The block grant money has also been used to help businesses recover from the storm. (Boburg/The Record)

https://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-politicians-urge-u-s-not-to-use-sandy-aid-for-other-projects-1.1002237#sthash.tMtBB2dP.dpuf

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Number of Children Living in Poverty Climbs Sharply in NJ, Rising in all but 3 Counties

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Number of Children Living in Poverty Climbs Sharply in NJ, Rising in all but 3 Counties

The number of children living in poverty continues to rise in New Jersey, as measured by the newest edition of the Kids Count report for the state, which is being released today by Advocates for Children of New Jersey.

Almost one-third of all New Jersey children — 646,000 — were considered low-income, which is defined as living in a family with an income at twice the federal poverty limit, in 2012, the latest New Jersey Kids Count shows.

That’s a big increase from 2008, when some 310,000 children, or 15 percent of all New Jersey children, were living at the poverty level, with almost half of those considered very poor, in families with incomes of less than half the poverty limit. That year, the poverty level for a family of four was $23,050.

“While the rankings shift every year, we see certain trends across many counties, including increasing child poverty, fewer child care options for working parents and high housing costs,” said Cecilia Zalkind, ACNJ’s executive director. “These statistics should be used to inform local, county and state leaders, as well as community organizations, in their efforts to improve the well-being of all New Jersey children.”

The report shows that child poverty continued to rise from 2008 to 2012 in all but three counties — Morris, Salem and Warren. Warren and Salem saw substantial declines, at 46 and 22 percent, respectively, while Morris had a modest 1-percent decrease. In the other counties, increases in the number of children living in families earning too little to meet their children’s needs ranged from a low of 8 percent in Monmouth County to a high of 246 percent in Somerset County.

Statewide, the number of children living in poverty jumped 22 percent during this time.  (O’Dea/NJSpotlight)

https://www.njspotlight.com/stories/14/04/23/number-of-children-living-in-poverty-climbs-sharply-in-nj/

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Chris Christie in no position to slam Colorado on cannabis

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Chris Christie in no position to slam Colorado on cannabis

Pity the poor saps who live in the beautiful Rocky Mountain State, where voters decided in a referendum that marijuana should be legal, beginning this year.

Now their quality of life has deteriorated, according to our governor.

“See if you want to live in a major city in Colorado, where there are head shops popping up on every corner, and people flying into your airport just to get high,” Chris Christie said on a radio show Monday. “To me, it’s not the quality of life we want to have here in the state of New Jersey. And there’s not tax revenue that’s worth that.”

Of course, if Christie were truly concerned about quality of life, he would not have sabotaged our medical marijuana program with his foot-dragging, as patients wallow in chronic pain.

But let’s put that aside for a moment. We are talking about marijuana legalization here — an idea most New Jerseyans and even municipal prosecutors support.

A New Jersey lawmaker has proposed a bill that would legalize, regulate and tax marijuana like liquor, predicting we could raise $100 million a year in revenue. That’s certainly a big plus. Colorado collected more than $2 million in recreational pot taxes in January. (Star-Ledger Editorial Board)

https://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2014/04/christie_in_no_position_to_slam_colorado_on_cannibis_editorial.html#incart_river

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Marijuana may cause heart problems in young adults

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Marijuana may cause heart problems in young adults
By Kerry Sheridan | AFP – 14 hours ago

Young adults who smoke marijuana may be at risk for serious or even fatal heart problems, according to a study by French researchers on Wednesday.

The findings in the Journal of the American Heart Association raises new concerns about the safety of marijuana, just as many parts of the world are relaxing laws on its use and medicinal marijuana is gaining popularity for treating certain health conditions.

The risk of heart complications appeared small in the study, which included nearly 2,000 people who sought medical attention for complications related to marijuana from 2006 to 2010.

Of those, two percent, or 35 people, had heart attacks or circulation problems related to arteries in the brain and limbs.

Of greater concern was the high death rate. One in four of the patients with cardiovascular complications died, said the researchers.

The analysis also found that the percentage of reported cardiovascular complications more than tripled from 2006 to 2010.

“The general public thinks marijuana is harmless, but information revealing the potential health dangers of marijuana use needs to be disseminated to the public, policymakers and healthcare providers,” said lead author Emilie Jouanjus, a medical faculty member at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Toulouse in Toulouse, France.

“There is now compelling evidence on the growing risk of marijuana-associated adverse cardiovascular effects, especially in young people,” Jouanjus said.

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/marijuana-may-cause-heart-problems-young-adults-195750879.html#4na1gQT

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Who Gets Rewarded for Stiffing the IRS? IRS Agents!

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Who Gets Rewarded for Stiffing the IRS? IRS Agents!
J.D. Tuccille|Apr. 23, 2014 12:17 pm

If you and I pay the Internal Revenue Service less than it claims it owes us, we can get slammed pretty hard with fines, penalties, and even jail time. The IRS even stages armed raids in its search for a few more sheckels to feed the government’s appetite. We even can getdinged $5,000 for filing “frivolous” returns that just annoy the tax collectors.

But there is one class of people that can misbehave and even stiff the IRS, and receive rewards in return. Who has that sweet deal? IRS employees.

According to a press release from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration:

between October 1, 2010 and December 31, 2012, more than 2,800 employees with recent substantiated conduct issues resulting in disciplinary action received more than $2.8 million in monetary awards and more than 27,000 hours in time-off awards. Among these, more than 1,100 IRS employees with substantiated Federal tax compliance problems received more than $1 million in cash awards and more than 10,000 hours in time-off awards.

Whoops!

https://reason.com/blog/2014/04/23/who-gets-rewarded-for-stiffing-the-irs-i

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Keystone XL’s continued delay is absurd

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Keystone XL’s continued delay is absurd
By Editorial Board, Published: April 23

IF FOOT-DRAGGING were a competitive sport, President Obama and his administration would be world champions for their performance in delaying the approval of the Keystone XL pipeline.

Last Friday afternoon, the time when officials make announcements they hope no one will notice, the State Department declared that it is putting off a decision on Keystone XL indefinitely — or at least, it seems, well past November’s midterm elections. This time, the excuse is litigation in Nebraska over the proposed route, because that might lead to a change in the project that various federal agencies will want to consider. The State Department might even decide to substantially restart the environmental review process . This is yet another laughable reason to delay a project that the federal government has been scrutinizing for more than five years.

At this point, there is little doubt about the big picture. After two thorough environmental analyses, State Department experts determined that the pipeline’s impact probably would be minimal, even on climate change-inducing carbon dioxide emissions. The economic rewards of extracting Canadian oil are too attractive and the options for getting it out of the countryare too numerous. We would rather see Canadian crude traveling a well-built, well-regulated pipeline in the United States than on the rail cars, barges and ocean tankers that will move it until cheaper options inevitably come online.

That does not mean we like burning dirty oil sands crude. But symbolic gestures will have no impact on climate change. Governments should steadily reduce global carbon dioxide emissions with smart, economy-wide policies such as carbon taxes, which meaningfully and permanently cut demand for carbon-heavy fuels. Alberta’s provincial government, which oversees much of Canada’s oil development, is considering enhancements to its fairly weak carbon price system, which could redress some of the excess emissions associated with pulling the viscous oil out of the ground.

If activists want to make a real difference on carbon dioxide emissions, they should devote their energies to establishing an ambitious carbon price across Canada and in the United States — or, if that’s not achievable, any number of second-best but serious policy options. In a comprehensive and efficient system, it might well make economic sense to burn some Canadian crude for quite a while as the world slowly transitions away.

As for the pipeline’s routing, planners and regulators have already considered all sorts of options through Nebraska, and they already shifted the route once. Neither route posed environmental concerns of a sort that would justify concluding that Keystone XL is outside the national interest. It is bizarre to imagine that a new route from an even more careful process in Nebraska would significantly increase environmental concerns.

The administration’s latest decision is not responsible; it is embarrassing. The United States continues to insult its Canadian allies by holding up what should have been a routine permitting decision amid a funhouse-mirror environmental debate that got way out of hand. The president should end this national psychodrama now, bow to reason, approve the pipeline and go do something more productive for the climate.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/keystone-xls-continued-delay-is-absurd/2014/04/23/81dab79c-c98c-11e3-95f7-7ecdde72d2ea_print.html

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RHS Senior Ziqian Xu is a National Young Arts Foundation Merit Winner

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RHS Senior Ziqian Xu is a National Young Arts Foundation Merit Winner
April 23,2014

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Ridgewood NJ, The RHS Art Department is proud to announce that senior Ziqian Xu is a National Young Arts Foundation Merit Winner. Ziqian was one of 700 students chosen from over 10,000 national applicants to participate in regional programs. She was awarded $500 and last week she attended a weeklong art program of master classes and workshops in New York City.

Photo top: Teachers Anjali Shah and Kellie Conforth joined Zi at the Young Arts Exhibition at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City, NY, which featured the artwork of the all the winners.

wine.comshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=209195

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PARKING ENFORCEMENT OFFICER POSITION AVAILABLE

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PARKING ENFORCEMENT OFFICER POSITION AVAILABLE 

Part time Parking Enforcement Officer for the Ridgewood Police Department. P/T position, up to 20 hours per week starting at $16.98/hr. Applications are available at the Police Desk. Send resume, cover letter and application to Police Chief John Ward, Ridgewood Police Dept, 131 N. Maple Ave., Ridgewood, NJ 07450 by May 19, 2014. 

The Village of Ridgewood is an EOE and civil service community. All hiring is provisional and subject to Civil Service and residency requirements.

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Coffee With the Chef: Lisa Mayisoglu of Lisa’s Mediterranean Cuisine, Ridgewood

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Photo by Selma S.

Coffee With the Chef: Lisa Mayisoglu of Lisa’s Mediterranean Cuisine, Ridgewood

APRIL 23, 2014    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2014, 12:16 PM
THE RECORD

Lisa’s Mediterranean Cuisine, Ridgewood

In 1985, Lisa Mayisoglu left Ankara with her family and started working in restaurants. Seven years ago, she opened her first Lisa’s Turkish Kitchen in Ridgewood. Her husband died a year later, leaving her to care for their three children alone. Two years ago, with the help of her sister, the 46-year-old chef moved locations and renamed her place Lisa’s Mediterranean Cuisine. The restaurant received three out of four stars from this newspaper. Here, Mayisoglu discusses why Turkish cuisine is good for you, her love for desserts and how she stays thin.

The most difficult dish to make: The dumplings ($18). It’s time-consuming. It’s a little dumpling stuffed with lamb and seasoning, but everything is done from scratch. We never buy anything from the outside. The Turkish kitchen is the most difficult to cook in, ’cause everything is done by hand. I know a lot of restaurants say that, but I know myself that it’s true here.

I make my own: Stock, tomato sauce, tahini, cacik [yogurt mixed with cucumber and seasonings], thick Turkish pita bread. A lot of customers take the bread home.

Turkish cuisine is … Unique. It’s very healthy. It’s Mediterranean. We cook with a lot of nuts, a lot of tomatoes, cucumbers. It doesn’t have a lot of creamy sauces, butter.

Advice for diners: Be happy.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/food-and-dining-news/coffee-with-the-chef-lisa-mayisoglu-of-lisa-s-mediterranean-cuisine-ridgewood-1.1000985#sthash.4l17AmXV.dpuf

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Troy Dunn , Kostya Kennedy, Mookie Wilson at Bookends

Troy Dunn , Kostya Kennedy, Mookie Wilson at Bookends

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Troy Dunn Thursday, April 24th @ 7:00pm
Known as “The Locator” on TNT and star of APB with Troy Dunn, will sign his new book: Family: The Good F Word Books available April 21st

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Kostya Kennedy Wednesday, April 30th @ 6:00pm
Assistant Managing Editor of Sports Illustrated, Kostya kennedy, will sign his new book:  Pete Rose: An American Dilemma Books available April 29th

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Mookie Wilson Wednesday, April 30th @ 7:30pm
Former Player for the ’86 World Champion New York Mets, Mookie Wilson, will sign his new book: Mookie:  Life, Baseball and the ’86 Mets Books available April 29th

Bookends is a legendary New Jersey Landmark! We are known for our incredible author events and have hosted well over 1,000 authors in the past 15 years!

All books MUST be purchased from BOOKENDS for any of our events and a valid Bookends receipt must be presented for entry.

Appearing authors will only autograph books purchased at Bookends and must have valid Bookends Receipt.
Availability & pricing for all autographed books subject to change.
Bookends cannot guarantee that the books that are Autographed will always be First Printings.Autographed books purchased at Bookends are non-returnable.

While we try to ensure that all customers coming to Bookends’ signings will meet authors and get their books signed, we cannot guarantee that all attendees will meet the author or that all books will be signed. We cannot control inclement weather, author travel schedules or authors who leave prematurely.

Bookends, 211 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 201-445-0726

Missed one of our events? We have Signed Books from some of our recent signings. Call the store to order 201-445-0726.

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F.C.C., in a Shift, Backs Fast Lanes for Web Traffic

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F.C.C., in a Shift, Backs Fast Lanes for Web Traffic
By EDWARD WYATTAPRIL 23, 2014

WASHINGTON — The principle that all Internet content should be treated equally as it flows through cables and pipes to consumers looks all but dead.

The Federal Communications Commission said on Wednesday that it would propose new rules that allow companies like Disney, Google or Netflix to pay Internet service providers like Comcast and Verizon for special, faster lanes to send video and other content to their customers.

The proposed changes would affect what is known as net neutrality — the idea that no providers of legal Internet content should face discrimination in providing offerings to consumers, and that users should have equal access to see any legal content they choose.

The proposal comes three months after a federal appeals court struck down, for the second time, agency rules intended to guarantee a free and open Internet.

Tom Wheeler, the F.C.C. chairman, defended the agency’s plans late Wednesday, saying speculation that the F.C.C. was “gutting the open Internet rule” is “flat out wrong.” Rather, he said, the new rules will provide for net neutrality along the lines of the appeals court’s decision.

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/24/technology/fcc-new-net-neutrality-rules.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-nytimes&_r=0