Posted on 3 Comments

PSE&G Readies for Snowstorm

Ridgewood_snow_storm_theridgewoodblog.net_-12

PSE&G Readies for Snowstorm

(NEWARK, NJ – Feb. 28, 2014) Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G), New Jersey’s largest electric and gas utility, is preparing for the approaching snowstorm expected to impact the region Sunday evening through Monday.

Up to a foot of snow accumulation is possible in some areas. While snow usually isn’t an issue for utilities, the possibility of sleet and freezing rain can increase the likelihood of downed wires and resulting power outages. Vehicles striking utility poles can also cause wires to come down.

In anticipation of the storm, PSE&G is ensuring that all available personnel are ready to respond beginning Sunday. The utility is also arranging for contractors, including tree crews, to assist the utility’s own skilled workforce, and ensuring that additional supplies such as poles and transformers are on hand.

PSE&G offers the following tips to customers to prepare:

Charge your cell phones, tablets and other mobile devices.
Fill up your car’s fuel tank.
Ensure you have a battery-powered radio and a supply of fresh batteries.
Check your supply of flashlights, blankets, nonperishable food and bottled water for everyone in your family.
Put your refrigerator and freezer at the coldest setting. Keep a blanket handy to throw over these appliances for added insulation. If electricity is interrupted, keep refrigerator and freezer doors closed as much as possible.
Sign up for MyAccount at www.pseg.com and bookmark the mobile-friendly homepage on your smart phone so it’s easy to report outages and check restoration progress.
Compile a list of emergency phone numbers, including PSE&G’s Customer Service line: 1-800-436-PSEG. Call this number to report power outages or downed wires.

Accumulation of heavy snow may weigh down power lines and as a result cause power lines to come down. PSE&G urges its customers to be cautious if they see downed lines. Downed wires may appear dead but should always be considered “live.” Do not approach or drive over a downed line and do not touch anything that it might be in contact with.

To report downed wires or power outages, customers should call PSE&G’s Customer Service line at 1-800-436-PSEG. Customers with a handheld device, or who are at an alternate location with power, can also report power outages and view the status of their outage by logging in to My Account on www.pseg.com, PSE&G’s mobile-friendly website.

General outage activity throughout our service territory is available online atwww.pseg.com/outagecenter and updates are posted on www.pseg.com during severe weather.

The utility’s Twitter and Facebook pages also keep the public informed about our restoration progress. Sign up as a follower at https://www.twitter.com/psegdelivers andwww.facebook.com/pseg  to monitor restoration progress. Customers also can register for text and email alerts at www.pseg.com/myaccount.

Microsoft Store

Posted on 7 Comments

The Valley Hospital Among the First in the Nation to Use Miniature Implantable Heart Monitor Expected to be a Game Changer for Patients, Doctors

Heart-inplant

Cardiac Electrophysiologist Dan L. Musat, M.D., attending physician at Valley’s Arrhythmia Institute, with the newly approved miniature heart monitor.

The Valley Hospital Among the First in the Nation to Use Miniature Implantable Heart Monitor Expected to be a Game Changer for Patients, Doctors

February 25, 2014 — The Valley Hospital is among a handful of hospitals in the nation and the first in New Jersey to implant a newly approved tiny wireless heart monitor that is expected to have a very real impact for patients and doctors.

Indicated for use as a diagnostic tool for people suffering from unexplained fainting, dizziness, palpitations or shortness of breath, the device can also help doctors determine if a patient has atrial fibrillation, the most common form of heart rhythm abnormality.

Nick Rotonda, of Upper Saddle River, was the first patient to receive the device at Valley and is counting on it to monitor whether he has any signs of atrial fibrillation or flutter, which could increase his risk for a stroke.  Rotonda underwent a procedure at Valley last December to correct his abnormal heart rhythm, and his doctors want to monitor him to make sure he is maintaining normal rhythm.

About one-third the size of a AAA battery and almost 90 percent smaller than similar devices on the market, the device, the LINQ Reveal implantable cardiac monitor, is slipped just beneath the skin with a syringe-like device through an incision that is less than ½ an inch in length.  It continuously and wirelessly monitors the heart for up to three years and notifies physicians if patients have significant cardiac events between regular medical appointments.  It is also MRI-compatible, allowing patients to undergo magnetic resonance imaging if needed.

“It takes about 5 minutes to implant the device using a local anesthetic,” said Cardiac Electrophysiologist Dan L. Musat, M.D., attending physician at Valley’s Arrhythmia Institute, part of the Valley Heart and Vascular Institute.  “There is no need for general anesthetic, the device is not visible in most patients, and patients go home after about an hour,” said Dr. Musat, who performed Valley’s first procedure on Mr. Rotonda.

The device has the ability to communicate wirelessly via a small tabletop remote monitoring station while patients sleep, allowing them to continue living their lives normally, even away from home.

“This is one of the most innovative new technologies to emerge in cardiology in the last decade,” said Suneet Mittal, M.D., and Director of the Electrophysiology Lab at Valley.  “It is so discreet that most patients will not even know it is there and can go about their lives without interruption or discomfort from the device,” Dr. Mittal said.  “It truly is a game changer.”
“I know that atrial fibrillation can increase my risk for a stroke, and this monitor gives me peace of mind because I know that if I have an episode the monitor will alert my doctor so he can address it,” Mr. Rotonda said.

The LINQ Reveal is made by Medtronic and was approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this month (February 2014).

Microsoft Store

Posted on Leave a comment

RHS BOYS’ LACROSSE SCOOP ICE CREAM ON MARCH 4

1796701_624104240996414_248021482_n

RHS BOYS’ LACROSSE SCOOP ICE CREAM ON MARCH 4

Ridgewood NJ, The Ridgewood High School Boys’ Lacrosse teams invite the Ridgewood community to its Mardi Gras Scoops Night on Tuesday, March 4 from 5-9:30 p.m. at the Ben & Jerry’s shop, located at 104-106 Franklin Avenue in Ridgewood. This event will feature delicious Ben & Jerry’s ice cream and treats, served by RHS lacrosse players, and special Ridgewood lacrosse shirts for sale. The shirts, just in time for St. Patrick’s Day, will be carried in adult sizes XL, L, M and S, and cost $20 each. They can be purchased at Scoops Night, or you can order a shirt by emailing Cristy Sippel at [email protected].

Funds raised at Scoops Night will help to support the RHS Boys’ Lacrosse teams in their upcoming season, with the opening game against Kinnelon on April 1. Please contact Mary Wynn Seiter at 201-251-6469 or [email protected] with questions or to support the teams as they work towards another state championship this year. Come out and enjoy some great ice cream and support lacrosse!

Posted on 3 Comments

Coffee with the BOE March 12th at the Ed Center

Dan-Fishbein-10.08
Coffee with the BOE March 12th at the Ed Center 
 

COFFEE, ANYONE? 

Ridgewood NJ, Residents are invited to drop by the Ed Center, 49 Cottage Place, for Coffee and Conversation with Dan Fishbein and the Board members on Wednesday, March 12, anytime from 7-8:30 p.m.

Maybe you’re interested in learning about school security and safety. Perhaps you have concerns about iPads in the classroom. Possibly state testing results or the budget is on your mind. Superintendent Dan Fishbein and Board members Sheila Brogan, Christina Kraus, Michele Lenhard, Jim Morgan and Vince Loncto want to hear from you. It’s an evening designed for you to ask your questions, make suggestions and share concerns in a casual setting. Anything goes! Please come!
Posted on 3 Comments

NJBIZ Honors Valley’s Audrey Meyers as One of NJ’s Best 50 Women in Business

Meyers,-Audrey-2012

NJBIZ Honors Valley’s Audrey Meyers as One of NJ’s Best 50 Women in Business
February 19, 2014

Ridgewood NJ,  Audrey Meyers, President and CEO of The Valley Hospital and Valley Health System, has been named one of New Jersey’s 2014 Best 50 Women in Business by business publication NJBIZ. Meyers will be recognized on Monday, March 24, at an awards ceremony at The Palace at Somerset Park.

The Best 50 Women in Business awards program honors New Jersey’s most dynamic women in business who have been making headlines in their field.  To qualify, a nominee had to meet selection criteria that included living or working in New Jersey and holding significant authority for decision making in her company.  An independent panel of judges selected the top 50 winners based on their dedication to business growth, professional and personal accomplishments, community involvement, and advocacy for women.

“I am very honored and proud to be chosen for this prestigious recognition and to be included among this impressive group of women business leaders in New Jersey,” Meyers said.

Meyers, a resident of Ridgewood, has dedicated her 34-year career to serving northern New Jersey patients and their families by ensuring that the organization she leads — one of the busiest hospitals in the state — offers both the highest quality patient care and the most compassionate service.

As President and CEO of The Valley Hospital, Meyers is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the 451-bed hospital, which serves approximately 440,000 residents in northern New Jersey.  Hospital services include a free-standing Ambulatory Surgery Center and Cancer Center, the Fertility Center, the Kireker Center for Child Development, the Center for Sleep Medicine, and many additional outpatient facilities.

In 2003 Audrey was named President and Chief Executive Officer of Valley Health System.  As head of the System she oversees Valley Home Care, an award-winning home care and hospice agency, and Valley Medical Group, a multispecialty group practice comprising more than 200 doctors and advanced practice professionals representing more than 30 medical and surgical specialties who practice at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, Valley’s Blumenthal Cancer Center in Paramus, eight urgent and primary care centers in New Jersey and New York, and community-based physician practices throughout the region.

“We are truly fortunate to have the opportunity to recognize this outstanding group of women,” said Thomas Curtin, publisher of NJBIZ.  “As business and community leaders, they are constantly redefining success within and outside the business arena.  On behalf of NJBIZ, we would like to thank and congratulate these 50 outstanding women for their dedication to New Jersey’s future.”

Microsoft Store

Posted on 5 Comments

Ridgewood residents can report potholes

unnamed-7

Ridgewood residents can report potholes
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 27, 2014, 3:57 PM
BY  DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Motorists can do more than just hold their breath or silently swear at the pothole they just struck. Beginning Monday, residents can now go online or use their smartphones and tablet computers to report those fissures in the earth, and those notifications will go directly to the village..

The village website will re-launch on March 3 with a Ridgewood Service Request (RSR) feature that allows residents to use an interactive map to send pothole reports to municipal officials. Residents hoping to report a pothole must register to use the service.

“The resident can then go on the map and pinpoint where the pothole is located. The other option is to take a picture of the pothole and upload the picture on the report,” acting Village Manager Heather Mailander said. She further explained that the reporting service also includes a section where users can leave appropriate comments.

Once the pothole is reported to the streets department staff, Mailander said the village will begin work on it as soon as possible. The resident reporting the road hazard will ultimately receive emailed acknowledgements when the pothole is filled.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/247619091_Ridgewood_residents_can_report_potholes.html#sthash.FmaHcN3W.dpu

Posted on 2 Comments

Fishbein: Why do I follow proposed legislation?

Dan-Fishbein-10.08

Fishbein: Why do I follow proposed legislation?
Friday, February 28, 2014
By DANIEL FISHBEIN
COLUMNIST

Each week I monitor proposed, new and pending legislation. Why?

Generally, I do this because I find a significant amount of legislation interferes with the operation and efficiency of our district. When I determine legislation that is or will be problematic to the district, I both inform the Ridgewood Board of Education of the issue and I write a letter to the state officials explaining how this legislation will negatively impact our mission of excellence.

At times my letters result in formal Ridgewood Board of Education (BOE) resolutions — either supporting or opposing — that are officially passed by the BOE after public discussion. In addition, many resolutions come from individual BOE members themselves, who also monitor legislation on their own or through their active involvement in various school issue-based organizations such as the New Jersey School Boards Association and the Garden State Coalition of Schools.

Since our legislators are busy people who receive thousands of pieces of legislation, interact with other constituents and must deal with other distractions from within their own organization, my letters and BOE resolutions help keep our representatives informed as to our stance on the education bills that cross their desks on a regular basis.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/247718541_Fishbein__Why_do_I_follow_proposed_legislation_.html#sthash.wpxxr65d.dpuf

Posted on 26 Comments

“Jaws of Life” needed to free driver in late night Ridgewood crash

unnamed-6

Photo credit:  Boyd A. Loving
“Jaws of Life” needed to free driver in late night Ridgewood crash
March 1,2014
Boyd A. Loving
12:26 AM

Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood FD firefighters needed the “Jaws of Life” to free the female driver of an Acura TL after she was pinned in her car following a late night, two-vehicle crash at the intersection of Linwood and Walthery Avenues.  After being removed from her vehicle, the driver was transported by ambulance to Hackensack University Medical Center with what were described by police on the scene as non life threatening injuries.

A black Audi involved in the crash sustained very heavy front end damage, but its driver refused medical aid, as did two other vehicle occupants.  Both vehicles were removed by flatbed tow truck.  Responding were Ridgewood PD, FD, and EMS, Bergen County PD, and a paramedic unit from The Valley Hospital.  Ridgewood PD issued four (4) summonses in connection with the crash; details of their nature and to whom the summonses were issued were not made available at the scene.

unnamed-4

unnamed-9

unnamed-3

unnamed-8
Photo credit:  Boyd A. Loving

Microsoft Store

Posted on 5 Comments

Ukraine latest – The invasion begins: armed Russian-speaking gunmen with Crimea in their grip as Barack Obama warns Moscow

_73179624_021282371-1

Ukraine latest – The invasion begins: armed Russian-speaking gunmen with Crimea in their grip as Barack Obama warns Moscow

Russian troops were on the move inside Ukrainian territory on Friday, prompting US President Barack Obama to warn Moscow that “there will be costs for any military intervention”.

It was unclear exactly what the Russian forces were doing but two airports in Crimea was taken over by armed men in combat fatigues, barricades shut off road links to the region, military helicopters were seen flying in across the border and armoured personnel carriers were on the roads. The Crimean peninsula’s main port, Sevastopol, where Russia’s Black Sea fleet is based, was also blocked off.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry confirmed in a statement that armoured units were operating inside Ukraine, but insisted they were acting in accordance with an agreement with Kiev. Their mission was to protect its naval base, the ministry said in a statement.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/ukraine-latest–the-invasion-begins-armed-russianspeaking-gunmen-with-crimea-in-their-grip-as-barack-obama-warns-moscow-9161476.html

Posted on Leave a comment

New School Chief Returns at Tumultuous Time for Education in NJ

2054

David Hespe

New School Chief Returns at Tumultuous Time for Education in NJ

State-aid crunch, strife in Newark and debate over Christie’s policies greet former education commissioner upon return to Trenton.

Gov. Chris Christie picked quite a day yesterday to announce David Hespe would be returning as his next education commissioner, a post he held more than a decade ago.

The governor’s school-aid numbers for next year were released yesterday afternoon to a less-than-enthusiastic reception. Earlier in the day, legislators argued over how to deal with the growing turmoil over the state’s ongoing control of Newark schools. And, throughout the day, advocates were gearing up for protests over the administration’s overall education policies. (Mooney/NJSpotlight)

https://www.njspotlight.com/stories/14/02/28/new-schools-chief-returns-at-tumultuous-time-for-education-in-nj/

Posted on 1 Comment

Ridgewood school board to vote on calendar changes

05cd1116-717e-4478-969b-b3751bc087a3_ChevyChase_Vacation_100813

Ridgewood school board to vote on calendar changes
Friday, February 28, 2014
BY  LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER
The Ridgewood News

Changes to the 2014-2015 school calendar should be finalized after next week’s BOE meeting.

The district has engaged in a discussion about possible ways to end the next school year earlier, resulting in a longer-than-usual delay in publishing the 2014-2015 calendar.

Ending earlier in June would accommodate vacations and camps that start before the close of the Ridgewood school year, district officials have said.

BOE President Sheila Brogan noted at Monday’s meeting that she hopes the board makes “a decision on [the calendar] next week.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/247717681_Ridgewood_school_board_to_vote_on_calendar_changes_calendar_changes.html#sthash.u4cs1dDQ.dpuf

Posted on 2 Comments

Declan Power Band tonight at Park West Tavern

1904045_10152290033428993_526449951_n

Declan Power Band tonight at Park West Tavern

30 Oak St
Ridgewood, NJ 07450

To make reservations for any of these events, please call the Park West Tavern at 201 445-5400

Declan Power: Vocals, Acoustic Guitar
Joe Oriente: Bass, Vocals, Guitar
George Dobbs: Keyboards, Vocals
Sandi Bushnell: Vocals
Jay Baney: Guitars
Murat Aktar: Drums
Dana Watson: Trumpet
Dave Fox: Sax, Harmonica

Description

Funk Rock RnB Cover Band

Posted on 4 Comments

N.J. Legislative panel urged to look into other allegations of corruption

CORRUPTION

N.J. Legislative panel urged to look into other allegations of corruption 

Now this is starting to get interesting

The subpoena power bestowed on the Legislature’s joint investigative committee, which is currently focused on the George Washington Bridge scandal, has prompted requests that the panel look into unrelated allegations of corruption.

On Thursday, two state senators, Republican Samuel Thompson from Middlesex and Democrat Ron Rice of Essex, asked the joint investigative committee to look into a comptroller’s findings that some public officials in Newark had used taxpayer money for personal expenditures.

The comptroller investigation found that between 2008 and 2011 the Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation, a non-profit charged with administering Newark’s water assets “improperly spent millions of dollars of public funds with little to no oversight by either its Board of Trustees or the City.”

Specifically the report said the non-profit’s executive director, Linda Watkins-Brashear, wrote $200,000 worth of checks from public accounts to herself, awarded no-bid contracts to friends, used petty cash recklessly and was involved in conflicts of interest. The agency as a whole was also severely mismanaged, the report said. (Phillis/The Record)

https://www.northjersey.com/news/NJ_Legislatures_investigative_panel_urged_to_look_into_other_allegations_of_corruption.html#sthash.9jQ1Seem.dpuf

Posted on 2 Comments

RHS TEEN LEADS CONDUCTS SURVEY

RHS_BEST_theridgewoodblog.net_1

RHS TEEN LEADS CONDUCTS SURVEY

Ridgewood NJ, The Ridgewood High School Teen LEADS organization is conducting a survey as part of a community research project. The students would be grateful if you could take five minutes to answer the questions found in the survey below. Just click on the link. Your participation is anonymous and very much appreciated.

https://www.esurveyspro.com/Survey.aspx?id=8f9db9ca-6c0b-4e8d-ba4a-30ca285b76ef

Posted on 6 Comments

Ridgewood replaces tarp covering roof of Schedler house

zabriskieschedler_theridgewoodblog.net_

Ridgewood replaces tarp covering roof of Schedler house

THURSDAY FEBRUARY 27, 2014, 4:18 PM
BY  DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The house on the former Schedler property has stood for nearly 200 years, but several Ridgewood preservationists believe this season’s snow and ice storms have put the building’s structural integrity at risk. And adding to the dilemma, those residents have claimed, is the fact that the village, for a few weeks this winter, was unable to effectively care for the home because of Mother Nature.

Acting Village Manager Heather Mailander, however, notified the public during Wednesday night’s council meeting that a new protective tarpaulin was finally placed atop the historic house on Tuesday. She also personally thanked members of Ridgewood’s signal and fire departments for their efforts, which required employees to physically work on top of the roof and assistance from a ladder truck.

The work completed this week seemingly calmed what had been a winter of worry for many residents in the Schedler neighborhood who are hoping to preserve the house. On Wednesday, Mailander said she spoke with some of the neighbors, who expressed their gratitude to the village.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/247624521_Ridgewood_replaces_tarp_covering_roof_of_Schedler_house.html#sthash.pbBxf6nF.dpuf