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Wall Street’s Pain Felt By North Jersey Retailers

>By Hugh R. Morley, The Record, Hackensack, N.J.

Jun. 8–Rick Breitstein has a small businessman’s eye for the economy and figures it curdled about a month ago.

That’s about the time his store, the Cheese Shop of Ridgewood, a purveyor of up-market dairy products to the village’s affluent, suffered a double-digit drop in business, he said.

Part of the problem, he said, is the economic woes of Ridgewood’s sizable pool of financial-services workers.

“I have customers that don’t come here anymore,” said Breitstein, surrounded by slabs of English Stilton and French Epoisse and Brillat-Savarin cheeses that sell for as much as $60 a pound.

“They are bond traders,” he said. “They are all suffering — They are not making the money.”

Breitstein is one of several Ridgewood storeowners who say they have felt the impact of the plummeting fortunes of the state’s financial industry on their own bottom line.

Experts say the industry’s loss of 4 percent of its workforce in the last 30 months is just the start as Wall Street firms carry out thousands of layoffs announced in recent months.

Financial job cuts in New York also hurt North Jersey because of the high volume of commuters. That’s especially true in Ridgewood, where the 2000 Census found one in six of the village’s employed residents worked in the financial-services sector.

Other North Jersey communities with sizable numbers of financial-services employees included Wyckoff, Wayne, Paterson, Clifton, Fort Lee and Edgewater, the Census reported.

The impact on Ridgewood offers a snapshot of the variety of ways that these communities are affected by the industry’s hard times.

A few blocks from Breitstein’s store, bagel maker Elliot Cohen said he has been seeing far fewer customers from the Morgan Stanley and Smith Barney offices on Ridgewood Avenue than in the past.

“We used to get breakfast and lunch deliveries there, and we’ve seen a lot less,” he said. “One guy used to buy breakfast for the whole group on Friday. He doesn’t come anymore.”

At Re/Max Properties of Ridgewood, Sal Poliandro said the changing fortunes of the financial sector are evident among his clientele. He sold a house for a man employed at UBS’s Weehawken office after that office downsized and he was moved to Charlotte, N.C. The company said in March it would lay off 14 employees at the office.

Another UBS employee, who recently moved from Virginia to work in the same UBS office, bought a $900,000 house with Poliandro’s help but is getting jittery about her job security, he said.

“I spoke to her and she is a little concerned,” he said. “But she is still working.”

Gary Sparker, a system designer at Sound View Electronics, which sells high-end video and sound equipment, said concern about the future among financial brokers is one reason the store’s business has been slow for about six months.

“I’ve had a few people say, ‘Let’s see what my bonus is like this year, and I’ll be back,’ ” he said. “People are more cautious with the decision-making.”

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To see more of The Record, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to https://www.NorthJersey.com.

Copyright (c) 2008, The Record, Hackensack, N.J.

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>More parents question innovative math

>Sunday, June 8, 2008

BY ANDREA ALEXANDERSTAFF WRITER

What good is an innovative math program designed to raise national standards if it leaves some students unable to figure out a grocery bill?

That’s the question Wayne parents have raised as their school district struggles with an issue — the best way to teach students math — that has sparked nationwide controversy.

The debate, dubbed “math wars,’’ pits supporters of traditional math, which stresses the basics, against educators favoring reform programs that aim to make students better analytical thinkers and problem solvers.

Reform methods stress revisiting all aspects of math — for example, how to do fractions, subtraction and multiplication — over and over in a continuous “spiraling.” It includes such tools as lattice graphs, physical models and games as opposed to the old pen-and-paper approach.

Advocates say the new methods force pupils to tap into long-term memory, rather than learning a topic by rote memorization, only to quickly forget it. But critics say reform math doesn’t allow children enough time on any one aspect to master it.

Schools in Wayne and Ridgewood have joined the debate in the past year.

Wayne has been using a reform program, Everyday Math, for more than 15 years. It’s one of the top-selling elementary school math programs — used in 185,000 classrooms by about 3 million students, according to Andy Isaacs at the University of Chicago, a director for the latest edition of the program.

But Karen Stack of Wayne says, “I have a son who is an A-plus student, but in a store he can’t figure out how much money he needs if he buys three of something.’’

And during a family game of Monopoly her third-grader “has to use a sheet of paper to do calculations,’’ Stack said. “He doesn’t have the drilling to just know.’’

Illustrating the perplexing nature of the debate, however, not all Wayne parents fault the program.

“I think it gives them a variety of ways to look at a problem rather than being locked into one method of doing things,’’ said Joyce Duncan, a parent of three Wayne students.

When she asked her fourth-grade son to solve a multiplication problem, “he showed me three different ways to do it,’’ Duncan said. “If my children can show me three different ways to do multiplication, I think that is a plus.’’

Nevertheless, so many Wayne parents are alarmed that this spring they put more than 800 signatures on a petition — representing about 20 percent of elementary school families. They expressed concern that the program did not teach basics, and they asked for a more balanced approach toward math education.

The issue flared in Wayne a year after doing so in Ridgewood. There, nearly 200 parents last year signed a petition demanding that the district adopt a traditional curriculum. A newly hired superintendent backed out of the job amid the controversy two weeks before he was to begin work. The Ridgewood schools use two different reform programs and a traditional program in elementary schools.

Both districts have formed committees and hired consultants to seek solutions. Ridgewood hired a conflict-resolution specialist to lead community meetings and wants to seek advice from a university on the next steps, said interim schools Superintendent Timothy Brennan.

Wayne has hired a consultant to oversee a review of its program. It also has surveyed elementary parents and teachers and has hired facilitators to run math committee meetings. The committee is working up a report.

Wayne’s interim schools Superintendent Cindy Randina expects the findings will include the need to emphasize basic skills.

“Our goal is to improve instruction,’’ Randina said.

Everyday Math, one of four or five reform programs available, started 25 years ago at the University of Chicago in a project funded by industries.

“There were concerns that the American worker was not being educated to compete in the international marketplace,’’ Isaacs said.

Jessica Garofalo, a second-grade teacher at Wayne’s Packanack Elementary School, said the program is geared toward a new generation of learners who are used to constant stimulation.

Instead of presenting an equation such as 10÷2=5 and expecting children to remember, Garofalo said, she hands pupils 10 blocks and ask them to divide them into two groups.

“The way we are teaching gives them a solid understanding of what they are doing,’’ she said.

The program also is geared to accommodate the way kids learn, she said — “That is how the brain works: You do it and you form your own meaning; as opposed to: We tell them and they forget.’’

It’s the difference between telling someone how to change a tire, and making them change the tire, Garofalo said.

But parents critical of the program say its not teaching students the basics, including automatic recall of the multiplication tables.

And some are skeptical that reform math is succeeding in making American workers more competitive in the global marketplace.

“I see my children not mastering skills, and I am reading reports that children are not as successful as they should be,’’ said Robyn Kingston, a parent who wrote the petition that circulated in Wayne.

She doesn’t want to see the program’s critical-thinking aspect eliminated, but says, “We need to make sure we get back to basics, and we need to make sure they are mastering skills.’’

Educators predict that future math programs will meld elements of both styles.

Brennan, Ridgewood’s interim superintendent, said it’s an “illusion” that districts can go “back to basics.’’

“ÿ‘Back’ means when you used to sort out kids and give some of them advanced math knowing that some of them would be able to go down the street to the factory or the mill and get a good job and work 40 years without ever having to master advanced math,’’ Brennan said.

“Those places are gone. They are replaced by the global distribution of the workforce,’’ he said. “Now we have to figure out a way for every student to learn advanced math.’’

E-mail: alexandera@northjersey.com

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>School board elections may move to November

>Monday, May 12, 2008

THE RECORD

BY ELISE YOUNG

STAFF WRITER

New Jerseyans would elect school-board members in November rather than in the spring, under a bill approved by an Assembly committee Monday. But voters also would lose the power to decide multimillion-dollar district spending plans, which account for at least 50 percent of their property taxes.

The two-pronged bill drew a curious mix of testimony before the Assembly Education Committee. Representatives of the 200,000-member New Jersey Education Association and other lobbyists were displeased about the change in balloting date, but championed the decision to remove voters from the decision on spending.

Some committee remembers referred to a dismal voter participation rate, an average of less than 15 percent statewide.

“We need to have much more participation,” said Assemblywoman Joan Voss, D-Fort Lee. “This is disgraceful. We have to do something to get more public input into how money is spent.”

This year 14.3 percent of eligible voters voted in school elections, and they defeated 26 percent of the budgets, according to the state Department of Education. Last year 13.9 percent voted and rejected 22 percent of the budgets.

Critics acknowledged the low turnout, but argued that a move to November would politicize what is — officially, anyway — a nonpartisan event.

Ginger Gold, representing the teachers union, went so far as to suggest that the change in voting dates could be likened to a trap, forcing people to cast ballots when they rather would not.

“Just because people go into the booth doesn’t mean people will vote. You may not increase voter turnout as much as one might think,” Gold told the Assembly Education Committee. “We don’t force people to vote.”

Gregg M. Edwards, president the Center for Policy Research of New Jersey, a nonprofit public-issues group, testified that opponents to the November balloting feared a loss of power.

“It comes down to this: They don’t want more people voting,” Edwards said. He referred to his longer written testimony, which read: “The fewer the voters, the easier it is to affect election contests. The largely invisible and inaccessible April election magnifies the influence of certain special-interest groups.”

The bill was sponsored in part by Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts, D-Camden, an indication that it has significant support among the majority party.

Some committee members — including Assemblyman Scott T. Rumana, R-Wayne, who voted against the measure — said they were uneasy about excluding voters from the budget process.

“Taking the vote away from the public is a big concern for me,” he said. And as a practical issue, he said, a ballot with multiple contests may not be able to accommodate only so many names.

Some who testified pointed out that even if voters reject a local spending plan, state officials have the power to restore it. Even Edwards, so in favor of a November election, called the budget vote “a sham” and “largely symbolic.”

New Jersey’s Board of Education elections are a perennially odd rite of April: Historically low numbers of voters decide how the majority of property owners’ tax money is spent. Statewide, just 15 percent of eligible voters turn out for the contests, which take place apart from races for any other elective office. By comparison, 77 percent of eligible Bergen County voters cast ballots in the 2004 General Election.

Would-be trustees often are longtime Parent-Teacher Association activists or educators employed outside their hometowns. Their campaign budgets rarely reach four figures, a fund so limited that many candidates try to reach voters via a Web site or in interviews with weekly newspapers.

Rosemary Bernardi, a trustee in Evesham, Burlington County, told the committee that if school elections were in November — particularly in a presidential year — voters would be too preoccupied learning about candidates for more visible office.

“How much press time would you have for a school election candidate? None,” she said.

Richard Snyder, a Ramsey trustee, testified that a November election date would expose would-be candidates to machine politics, in which well-funded organizations could back a slate. Candidates who resist the machine’s overtures, he said, would be outspent and unseen.

Edwards, however, said a change to November — when voters are more aware about politics in general — could raise awareness about trustees’ role, possibly drawing more people to run.

“This could dramatically change the way school districts work,” Edwards said.

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>Why corruption thrives in N.J.

>Why corruption thrives in N.J.
By BRAD HAYNES
Associated Press Writer
April 26, 2008

You’d think a six-year streak of corruption convictions by federal prosecutors would be a powerful deterrent to New Jersey officials who consider abusing their power for personal gain.

But the Garden State outpaced its neighbors in federal corruption arrests last year, and the state’s top prosecutor expects just as many officials collared this year.

Since 2002, 128 public employees in New Jersey have been convicted on federal corruption charges. About a third of those were elected officials, including state lawmakers, mayors and town council members.

Those numbers back up New Jersey’s reputation as a corruption hotbed, fueled by TV shows like “The Sopranos.” Experts say the state’s labyrinth of local boards, commissions and councils has created fiefdoms where fraud and abuse flourish.

Even high-profile corruption cases like this month’s conviction of former Newark Mayor Sharpe James won’t end the culture of corruption rooted in many levels of New Jersey government, according to U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Christie.

“In parts of the state, there have been decades and decades of corruption through generations of public leaders,” Christie told The Associated Press. “I don’t think you’re ever going to end it.”

Since taking office as the state’s top federal prosecutor in 2002, Christie hasn’t lost a corruption case. But he said putting corrupt politicians behind bars is only part of the solution _ to make a measurable dent in the political culture, citizens must hold their elected officials accountable.

“What we’ve been able to do over the past six and a half years is shine a really bright light on the problem,” he said.

Making his task tougher is the shape of New Jersey government itself. Political experts say political power is scattered among the state’s 21 counties, 566 municipalities and 616 school districts, giving corruption more pockets in which to hide.

“There’s an inordinate number of boards, commissions and regulatory authorities,” said Peter Woolley, a political scientist at Fairleigh Dickinson University. “The sheer complexity of New Jersey’s municipal government makes for an atmosphere where it’s much more difficult to identify corruption.”

In 2007, corruption arrests in New Jersey’s single federal district outpaced New York’s four combined districts and Pennsylvania’s three. Compared to 44 federal corruption charges in New Jersey last year, federal prosecutors charged 23 public officials in Pennsylvania and 36 in New York.

U.S. attorney’s offices in Delaware, Maryland and Connecticut each reported a dozen or fewer public employees facing corruption charges last year.

Jay Stewart, executive director of the Better Government Association, a Chicago-based public watchdog organization, said three states, New Jersey, Illinois, and Louisiana, stand out as the nation’s corruption capitals.

“It’s always the same trifecta,” Stewart said. “It’s become part of the political culture _ part of the flavor of the state.”

New Jersey’s federal corruption arrests in 2007 included:

_ Six former mayors, including James, who was convicted of steering cut-rate city land to a one-time mistress.

_ Assemblymen Alfred Steele and Mims Hackett, Jr., charged with trading public influence for bribes. Steele pleaded guilty in October. Hackett has pleaded not guilty.

_ State Sen. Wayne Bryant, charged with steering millions to a medical school in exchange for a no-work job worth tens of thousands of dollars every year. He has pleaded not guilty.

_ Five Pleasantville school board members convicted of steering public contracts in return for bribes.

Of New Jersey’s 150 public employees facing federal corruption charges since 2002, 49 held elected office, including 18 mayors, 15 councilmen and six state lawmakers. All but 20 defendants pending trial were convicted by plea or by jury. Two officials charged in 2005 died before they were tried, according to an AP analysis of U.S. attorney arrest announcements.

The corruption cases ranged from Motor Vehicle Commission employees selling fraudulent licenses to politicians peddling their influence for kickbacks.

The elected officials included 28 Democrats and 16 Republicans, but Christie _ a former top Republican fundraiser appointed by President Bush _ insists his prosecutions are not influenced by his political affiliation.

“If we were just going after people based on their political party, then where is the line of innocent people who were acquitted?” Christie asked. He said the bigger share of Democratic defendants results naturally from prosecuting in a state with a Democratic majority.

Democrats control both houses of the New Jersey Legislature, the governor’s office and both of the state’s U.S. Senate seats. Registered Democrats in the state outnumber registered Republicans by a 3-to-2 margin.

Few of Christie’s critics question his record, but some point to a lucrative contract awarded to his former boss as a sign that the U.S. attorney isn’t above the backroom politics he prosecutes.

Last fall Christie picked former Attorney General John Ashcroft’s legal firm to monitor an orthopedics manufacturer that settled a federal lawsuit. Democrats say Ashcroft’s firm wasn’t qualified for the job, which was worth an estimated $27 million.

“I applaud the work Christie does as prosecutor, but the bottom line is: He doesn’t get a free pass,” said Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J. “Contracts like this invite favoritism and backroom politics _ the very thing he is fighting against.”

Christie has denied any conflict of interest in the decision and said the former attorney general and his firm were qualified for the monitoring work.

Last month, the Justice Department began requiring that contracts for federal monitoring of corporations

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>The State of Lacrosse in North Jersey

>April 25, 2008

The State of Lacrosse in North Jersey

I have heard some clamoring about my most recent boys lacrosse rankings. There has been talk that I am a novice. That I don’t know what I’m taking about. That I have no credibility. That my picks were made without thought or reason.

I’m here to tell you that you’re right. And wrong. Here’s why. Plus a few other things.

OK, you got me. I havent followed NJ high school lacrosse intently for my whole life. But I do know the sport (played for ten years, followed closely throughout and some in-between) and I do love it. What other sport requires so many different skills of a player, girl or boy. Hand-eye coordination, athleticism, strength, smarts, knowledge of the game all play a critical role. Not to mention technique, coaching and game execution. I know the intricacies of the sport and I notice them during games, which I have seen plenty of this year.

With that in mind here are my thoughts on the State of North Jersey Lacrosse.

Everything starts and ends with Ridgewood. It is by far and away the best team in North Jersey. Kevin Vaughan is the truth. Fast, intelligent, great shot, great sight. Chris Pedersen may be slightly overshadowed by Vaughan, but he is a great lacrosse player too. Great knowledge of the game. Superb passer and great vision from midfield. Their role offensive players are strong too. The big question for them is how goalie Colin Gable and the defense play. Gable made a few spectacular saves in that Bergen Catholic game but also made a few mental errors – the biggest being the intercepted pass turned into a goal. Mike Pounds is a great coach too.

By the way Ridgewood hosts West Islip (NY), which was the #1 team in the nation last year and is tops in NY this year, May 10.

Bergen Catholic is a tough team with a good bit of talent. Zander Walters is a tough match up for any team at midfield. Dan Semon has a hard shot but didnt make a dodge (other than bull dodge) against Ridgewood. The biggest problem for BC against Wood was Wood’s ability to break down the BC defense one-on-one. When that happens any defense is completely beat. The BC goalie – like Ridgewood’s – makes great saves but also mental mistakes. He threw the ball over the head of a teammate three times in the fourth quarter. I think Bergen Catholic has the talent to win, but with a schedule this tough it will be tough for them to best .500 by much. THEY MUST WIN AGAINST MONTCLAIR THIS WEEKEND! Chip Casto (former Montclair assistant) should have something to say about that

In the two games I saw Don Bosco play this year they have been smoked – Ridgewood – and lost a heartbreaker to Northern Highlands. Bosco needs to score more. They have too much talent to be 5-5 (yes, they beat MKA) and should be scoring more goals. They are in position to score, but bad shots have been their downfall. They had the ball with the Highlands goalie at midfield and the shooter (I forget who) missed the net. You cant miss the net when the goalies not in it. I think Bosco is a good team and that once everything is clicking they can been good. Mike Springer has a great offensive mind.

Northern Highlands is a team no one seems to talk about. They have issues, some of the kids can be easliy bodied off the ball, but they also have some really quality players. Routh is legit. He took control of that game against Bosco after Mike Colaruuso went down. But Northern Highlands also didn’t score for over 24 minutes in that game, and won some how. It all depends on their goalie and defense. The defense was constantly switching styles during the Bosco game. Zone, man, box, shutoff. Everything. If they play with that energy and passion they can complete with the big boys.

Indian Hills is led by Zac Smith who is a solid lax player. He has some nice moves and a strong shot. The biggest problem for Hills is it has little depth. Indian Hills has to play a perfect game to compete with the upper echelon teams. But I ranked them #2 in North Jersey for a reason. THEYRE 8-2. That is a great record and they have beat some decent teams. Glen Rock comes to mind but that win against Fair Lawn was impressive too. You can only play the teams scheduled for you and they have done that well.

Fair Lawn is a weird team for me because I saw them great for one half and bad in another. I dont know which is the real Fair Lawn. They scored so fast against Hills I think they got over confident and let up a bit. They shouldn’t have lost that game but did. Still they have to play like the team I saw in the first half of that game. Confidence, good movement by the players away from the ball, smart passing, few unforced errors. If they play like the second half team I saw they can lose to anyone.

Wayne Valley has won five games in a row and is also 8-2. That warrants respect no matter who they
played. It takes skill to win five games in a row, not luck. MKA was a victim during the stretch and Valley had to play four games in six days. That’s tough, so for them to win those games is very impressive.

As you can see I made the rankings for a reason. I will not make my rankings strictly based on what Lax Power says. I use that as one of many tools in making my decisions.

If any of you havent seen my story about Alex Orlando you should.
https://www.northjersey.com/hssports/boyslacrosse/A_true_Crusader.html
It will make you appreciate life more. It did that for me. Orlando and his family are incredibly nice and I really enjoyed writing the story.

Also there is a great event this Saturday at Madison Square Garden. It is an Army Navy alumni game followed by a Titans Knighthawks box game. 25 percent of the proceeds go to wounded vets, some of which are playing in the alumni game. Should be fun.

I know I promised new rankings today but decided to hold off until Wednesday. That way a full week will have passed between rankings and a clearer picture will be visible.

This is an open discussion and I invite you share your thoughts with me. If you have an insightful comment or observation I will respond. Please no, you’re and idiot. While I may not know everything I know the sport, I know the area and I know the teams.

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Kids being rushed past childhood.

>Ready, Set, Relax! is one town’s effort to stop hyper-parenting, in this exclusive excerpt.

Apr 05, 2008 04:30 AM
Carl Honoré

Ridgewood is the sort of place that comes to mind when people talk about the American dream. Nestled in the woodlands of northern New Jersey, this quiet, verdant town of 25,000 souls breathes affluence and well-being. The locals work hard at high-powered jobs in Manhattan, but they enjoy the fruits of their labour. Large, handsome houses sit on spacious lots dotted with swing sets and trampolines. Luxury sedans and shiny SUVs glide along wide streets lined with oak, dogwood and maple trees.

Move in a little closer, though, and this happy portrait starts to fray round the edges. At the school gates, around the tables in the local diner, and in the supermarket parking lot, you hear the people of Ridgewood voicing the same complaint: we may live inside a 21st-century Garden of Eden, but we are too damn busy to enjoy it.

Many families here are scheduled up to the eyeballs. Caught between work and home, parents struggle to find time for friends, romance, or even a decent night’s sleep. Their children are in the same boat, filling the hours not already occupied by school work with organized extracurricular activities. Some 10-year-olds in Ridgewood are so busy they carry Palm Pilots to keep track of their appointments. Eating dinner or doing homework in the car while travelling to swimming or the riding club is common here. One local mother emails an updated family schedule to her husband and two sons every evening. Another keeps her timetable pinned to the front door and the underside of the sun visor in her people carrier. With so many schedules to mesh, with so much going on, even getting toddlers together for a playdate can be a logistical nightmare. One of my favorite New Yorker cartoons was penned with places like Ridgewood in mind. It depicts two little girls waiting for the school bus, each holding a personal planner. One tells the other, “Okay, I’ll move ballet back an hour, reschedule gymnastics, and cancel piano. … You shift your violin lessons to Thursday and skip soccer practice. … That gives us from 3:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday the 16th to play.”

Unlike other towns, though, Ridgewood has taken a stand against overstuffed schedules. What started with a few moms grumbling over coffee at the kitchen table has blossomed into a mini-movement. In 2002, Ridgewood pioneered an annual event called Ready, Set, Relax! The idea is that one day a year this alpha town takes a breather: teachers assign no homework, extracurricular activities are cancelled, and parents make a point of coming home early from the office. The aim is to cast off the tyranny of the timetable, to let children rest, play, or just daydream, and to give families time together that is not built around driving to the next volleyball practice or band rehearsal.

Hundreds of households put down their planners to take part in Ready, Set, Relax! and the event has inspired towns across North America, not all of them as well-heeled as Ridgewood, to follow suit. To help out frazzled families, the school board in Sidney, N.Y., a blue-collar hamlet 210 kilometres northwest of here, no longer schedules any extracurricular activities or meetings after 4:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. In 2007, Amos, a small forest and mining town in northwestern Quebec, held its first activity-free day based on the Ridgewood model. Marcia Marra, a mother of three who helped set up Ready, Set, Relax! in tandem with a local mental health agency, hopes the tide is turning. “People are starting to see that when their lives and their children’s lives are scheduled to the hilt, everyone suffers,” she says. “Structured activities can be great for kids, but things are just out of control now.”

This is not a new panic. Warnings about children being overscheduled, racing from one enriching activity to the next, first surfaced in the early 20th century. Dorothy Canfield Fisher, a popular novelist-cum-parenting guru, warned in 1914 that American parents were stripping childhood of its “blessed spontaneity” by placing “a constricting pressure upon the children to use even the chinks and fragments of their time to acquire accomplishments which seem to us profitable.” In 1931, Ruth Frankel, a pioneering cancer specialist in Canada, described how “the modern child, with his days set into a patterned program, goes docilely from one prescribed class to another, takes up art and music and French and dancing … until there is hardly a minute left.” Her fear was that overscheduled children would grow so jaded that they would turn “desperately to the corner movie in an effort to escape ennui.”

That same worry has reached fever pitch over the last generation. Books with titles like The Hurried Child and The Overscheduled Child have carved out shelf space in the library of modern parenting. Even the kids’ section has tackled the topic. In The Berenstain Bears and Too Much Pressure, the famous ursine family goes into stress meltdown because Sister and Brother Bear are enrolled in too many after-school activities.

Why are so many children so busy today? One reason is the rise of the working mother. When moms stayed home, it was easier just to let the kids play around the house. But as women entered the workplace and the extended family dissolved, someone else had to pick up the slack on the child-care front. Extracurricular activities fit the bill perfectly, promising not only supervision but also enrichment. Yet putting children on a tight schedule is not always a response to the child-care gap. Many stay-at-home moms also sign their children up for endless activities. Part of this is self-defence: when every other kid in the neighbourhood is booked solid, who is going to indulge in free play with your unscheduled child? In our atomized, bowling-alone society, organized activities are also a good way – sometimes the only way – to meet other parents. Nor does it help that many extracurricular activities are designed like a slippery slope: you sign up your 4-year-old daughter for a weekly dance lesson, and then, before you know it, she has a class every other night and is travelling across the country to compete. Rather than rock the boat, though, we persuade ourselves that lots of scheduled activities are just what children need and want, even when they tell us otherwise. The other day I watched a mother drag her 3-year-old daughter from a nursery school near our house. The child was weeping. “I don’t want to go to ballet,” she howled. “I want to go home and play.”

No one is saying that extracurricular activities are bad. On the contrary, they are an integral part of a rich and happy childhood. Many kids, particularly in lower-income families, would actually benefit from more structured activities. Plenty of children, especially teenagers, thrive on a busy schedule. But just as other trappings of modern childhood, from homework to technology, are subject to the law of diminishing returns, there is a danger of overscheduling the young. When it comes to extracurricular activities, many children are getting too much of a good thing.

Wayne Yankus, a pediatrician in Ridgewood since the early 1980s, reckons that 65 per cent of his patients are now victims of overscheduling. He says the symptoms include headaches, sleep disorders, gastric problems caused by stress or by eating too late at night, and fatigue. “Fifteen years ago it was unusual to see a tired 10-year-old,” says Yankus. “Now it’s common.” Recently he hired a therapist to spend one day a week in his office to talk to families about the need to prune their planners.

The extracurricular merry-go-round can also ensnare the family in a vicious cycle. Parents resent children for taking up so much time and costing so much money – Britons spend £12 billion a year on their children’s hobbies, half of which are abandoned within five weeks – while children resent their parents’ resentment. Activities overload also squeezes out time for the unscheduled, simple stuff that brings families together – relaxed conversation, cuddling, shared meals or just hanging out together in companionable silence. Yankus sees this disconnect in many Ridgewood households. “When the snow comes and the activities get cancelled, everyone is horrified because they’re suddenly stuck at home and have to deal with each other,” he says. “They don’t know how to get along without a schedule.”

Ridgewood does not shut down completely on Ready, Set, Relax! day. Some residents regard the event as silly or patronizing. Sporting matches arranged with neighbouring districts are not cancelled, and the homework ban is not always as strictly enforced as it could be, especially in high school. Yet the town does feel different on the big day. With fewer soccer moms running red lights, the traffic is less frantic. People are more likely to stop and chat than exchange a brief nod before pointing to their watch and rushing off to the next appointment. To many families, Ready, Set, Relax! has been an epiphany. More than a third of those who took part in 2006 trimmed their schedules afterward. Consider the Givens. The three children used to be enrolled in so many after-school activities that there was barely time to eat, sleep or talk. Even though she felt overwhelmed and often found herself jogging round the supermarket to save a few seconds, Jenny, the mother, somehow felt that it was her duty to keep the family maxed out on extracurricular pursuits. “Every activity that comes up you want your kids to try, and you fear that you are failing them if they are not busy every second,” she says. “You want the best for them, but always at the back of your mind, even if you don’t admit it, you have the fantasy that they might turn out to be brilliant at something, that by signing them up for an activity you might uncover some latent genius.”

In the Given household, that translated into an eye-watering barrage of art classes, Spanish lessons, soccer, lacrosse, softball, volleyball, basketball, baseball, tennis, scouts and book club. Every weekend, the parents would split up to ferry the children to their various activities. At home, time and tempers were short. Ready, Set, Relax! came as a wake-up call. On the first night, the Givens made Mexican food and chocolate chip cookies together. Then they got down Cadoo, a board game that had been sitting unopened on the shelf since Christmas. The evening rolled along in a riot of laughter and cuddles. “It was an amazing revelation for all of us,” says Jenny. “It was just such a relief not to be rushing off to the next thing on the to-do list.”

After the Ready, Set, Relax! night, the Givens cut back, keeping only activities the children are passionate about. Today Kathryn, 16, does an art class, Spanish lessons, and a book club. Chris, 14, plays on basketball and baseball teams while Rosie, 12, concentrates on soccer, tennis and lacrosse. The whole family is more relaxed, and the children are all doing better at school since the cutback. The spirit of Ready, Set, Relax! has rippled out into other initiatives in Ridgewood. Every Wednesday, weather permitting, about 80 children aged 4 to 7 are now let loose in the playground of the local primary school. This is Free Play Day and parents are confined to the sidelines. Left to their own devices, the children skip, play hide-and-seek and tag, make up stories, throw balls around, sing and wrestle. The noise is exhilarating, the child equivalent of a Wall of Sound. To many parents it is a revelation. “It never occurred to me to do this, to just let them play like this,” says one mother. “You always feel like you have to be organizing something for them, but actually you don’t.”

There is, of course, something absurd – even a little tragic – about having to schedule unscheduled time, yet given the world we live in, that is probably the first step for many families. And clearly the Ready, Set, Relax! movement reflects a wider rethink.

Harvard urges incoming freshmen to check their overscheduling ways at the door. Posted on the university website, an open letter by Harry Lewis, a former dean of the undergraduate school, warns students that they will get more out of college, and indeed life, if they do less and concentrate on the things that really fire their passion. Lewis also takes aim at the notion that everything young people do must have a measurable payoff or contribute toward crafting the perfect resumé. “You may balance your life better if you participate in some activities purely for fun, rather than to achieve a leadership role that you hope might be a distinctive credential for postgraduate employment. The human relationships you form in unstructured time with your roommates and friends may have a stronger influence on your later life than the content of some of the courses you are taking.”

Most families that ease the load end up spending more time eating together. In a hurry-up, hyper-scheduled culture, where dining al desko, in front of the TV or computer, in the street or in the car is commonplace, the family meal often falls by the wayside. One study found that a fifth of British families never eat together. The irony is that many of the benefits extracurricular activities, including homework, purport to deliver may actually by achieved through the simple act of breaking bread en famille. Studies in many countries show that children who have regular family meals are more likely to do well at school, enjoy good mental health, and eat nutritious food; they are also less likely to engage in underage sex or use drugs and alcohol.

A Harvard study concluded that family meals promote language development even more than does family story reading. Another survey found that the only common denominator among National Merit Scholars in the United States, regardless of race or social class, was having a regular family dinner. Of course, we’re talking here about meals where both parents and children ask questions, discuss ideas at length and tell anecdotes rather than just watch TV and grunt “pass the salt.”

Why does a proper family meal pay such handsome dividends? When it comes to diet, the answer is obvious. A 9-year-old boy is more likely to finish his greens, or to eat any vegetables at all, in front of his mom and dad than when he is dining alone at the computer in his bedroom. Sitting around the dinner table, taking part in conversation, also teaches children that they are loved and cherished for who they are, rather than for what they do. They learn to talk, listen, reason, and compromise – all those essential ingredients of a high EQ. Of course, no one is saying that family meals are always a bed of roses. Sometimes they are sheer hell. Gathering tired toddlers, sullen teenagers and stressed parents around the table can be a recipe for open warfare. But then, dealing with conflict is part of life, too.

Excerpted from Under Pressure: Rescuing Childhood from the Culture of Hyper-Parenting. Copyright 2008 Carl Honoré. Published by Knopf Canada. Reproduced by arrangement with the publisher. All rights reserved.

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>Beef sent to Ridgewood Public Schools Ordered Destroyed

>8 school districts added to beef recall

THE RECORD, Wednesday, February 27, 2008
BY WILLIAM LAMB

Eight North Jersey school districts were added Wednesday to a list of districts that must destroy meat as part of the nation’s largest beef recall.

The state Agriculture Department expanded its list of schools and school districts affected by the recall after officials identified two additional food processors that shipped meat for consumption by Garden State students enrolled in the national school lunch program.

The school districts added to the recall list Wednesday are:

• Bergen County Technical Schools
• Englewood
• Fort Lee
• Leonia
• North Bergen
• Passaic
• Ridgewood
• Wayne

Nationwide, federal officials have recalled more than 143 million pounds of meat that originated at the Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Co., of Chino, Calif. The company is accused of slaughtering sick cows.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has ruled it a “class two” recall, meaning the meat poses only a “remote possibility” of sickening those who eat it.

The North Jersey schools and districts identified on Monday as part of the recall were:

• Bergenfield

• Fair Lawn

• Hackensack

• Lodi

• Midland Park

• Palisades Park

• North Haledon

• West Milford

• Paterson Catholic

• Passaic County Vocational-Technical

• St. Gerard School

• St. Mary Elementary

• St. Mary Paterson

• St. Philip the Apostle

• St. Therese School

• Boonton

• Riverdale

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>…A WINTER STORM TO AFFECT THE AREA TODAY THROUGH TONIGHT…

>URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BINGHAMTON NY
1037 AM EST FRI FEB 22 2008

NYZ062-PAZ043-044-047-048-072-222345-
/O.CON.KBGM.WS.W.0003.000000T0000Z-080223T0600Z/
SULLIVAN-WYOMING-LACKAWANNA-LUZERNE-PIKE-SOUTHERN WAYNE-
1037 AM EST FRI FEB 22 2008

…WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 1 AM EST
SATURDAY…

A WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 1 AM EST SATURDAY.

SNOW WILL INCREASE THIS MORNING… AND BECOME HEAVY AT TIMES
DURING THE LATE MORNING AND AFTERNOON. SLEET WILL LIKELY MIX WITH
SNOW DURING THE AFTERNOON…ESPECIALLY OVER SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF
THE WARNING AREA. THE SNOW AND SLEET WILL TAPER OFF TO SNOW
SHOWERS THIS EVENING. TOTAL SNOW AND SLEET ACCUMULATIONS OF 5 TO 8
INCHES IS EXPECTED.

A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW AND SLEET
ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS
OR IMPOSSIBLE.

STAY TUNED TO NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL-HAZARDS OR YOUR FAVORITE
LOCAL MEDIA OUTLETS FOR FURTHER DETAILS OR UPDATES FROM THE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE…OR VISIT OUR INTERNET WEB SITE AT
HTTP://WEATHER.GOV/BINGHAMTON.

PLEASE REPORT SNOW OR ICE AMOUNTS TO THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
BY CALLING TOLL FREE AT 1-877-633-6772…OR BY EMAIL AT
BGM.STORMREPORT@NOAA.GOV.

$

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2007 – The year of embattled Superintendents

>It’s only June and four public school superintendents in our area have already gone down for the count. What’s the rest of 2007 likely to bring?

Here’s the scorecard thus far:

Brooks, Marty – Ridgewood; parental dissatisfaction with TERC – declined to accept position

Calabro, Joanne – Fort Lee; plagiarized speech to National Honor Society students – contract not renewed

Dime, Janis – Paramus; tainted soil cover up – out on paid administrative leave

Nuccetelli, Maria – Wayne; clash over management style with BOE – contract not renewed

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>Assembly Challenger Calls on Rumana to Protect Marriage

>Caliguire for State Senate
Schweighardt and Ginty for State Assembly

Press Release

Assembly Challenger Calls on Rumana to Protect Marriage

Ginty Demands that Rumana Refuse to Conduct Bogus and Misguided
“Civil Union” Ceremonies

(Ridgewood, March 26, 2007) – John P. Ginty, a conservative candidate for the Republican nomination for the State Assembly in District 40, today called on Wayne Mayor Scott Rumana to stand tall in the face of judicial and legislative assaults on the institution of marriage in New Jersey.

Ginty noted that Rumana indicated in last Friday’s edition of The Record newspaper that he will officiate as mayor at gay “civil union” ceremonies, for a fee of $100 per event.

In the article (“Civil Unions, Marriages are Free”, page L-3, The Record, March 23, 2007), Rumana criticized several Wayne councilmen, including Ginty’s running mate in the state assembly primary campaign, Wayne Councilman Joseph G. Schweighardt, for voting against the fast tracking of the imposition of fees for both civil marriages and “civil unions”. Rumana said, “The state law is the state law. This is not our battle.”

Ginty disagreed and said, “Scott Rumana is wrong. This is our battle, and if Rumana wants to be a Republican Assemblyman from District 40 he had better figure out what his real position is on the protection of marriage in New Jersey. Any mayor who agrees to officiate at these bogus ‘civil union’ ceremonies is complicit in the campaign to wreck marriage and the family in this state.”

“It looks like Rumana is primarily concerned with how much money the town can collect when he conducts these nonsensical ‘civil union’ ceremonies”, Ginty continued. “Rumana and his running mates, Kevin O’Toole and David Russo, will be held to account by the Republican voters in this district based upon their campaign’s commitment to protect traditional marriage and the family in the state legislature.”

The following municipalities are included in state legislative district #40: Cedar Grove Township, Franklin Lake Borough, Little Falls Township, Mahwah Township, Midland Park Borough, Oakland Borough, the Village of Ridgewood, Ringwood Borough, Verona Township, Wanaque Borough, Wayne Township, Wyckoff Township.

###

Paid for by The Election Fund of Caliguire, Schweighardt, and Ginty

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>Super Science Saturday on March 3, 2007

>The 19th annual Super Science Saturday will take place on Saturday, March 3, 2007 from 9 AM to 1 PM at Ridgewood High School. Admission is free. The more than 1,000 expected attendees will experience everything from indoor rain clouds and soccer-playing robots to model rocket launches and the science of chocolate. Appropriate for all age groups, Super Science Saturday has something for everyone.

Exhibits include over 100 informative, hands-on and interactive exhibits, such as a real hang glider and how it works, the colorful world of paper chromatography, live animals, a wheel chair maze and making flubber.

During a new show on “Weather,” scientists from the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia will actually make a cloud and rain indoors. Another highlight is “The Good, the Bad and the Bugly,” an interactive show from Horizon pest control experts. Other demonstrations include BotBall, a soccer game played by prototype robots constructed by a team of RHS students, and how cocoa beans are made into chocolate by a Wayne Hills High School student. Visitors are also invited to bring rocks of unknown origin for the resident mineralogist to identify.Super Science Saturday again will feature such traditional favorites as the Great Paper Airplane Contest, making your own creations at the “tinker table” and live model rock launches on the high school football field. Students from any school system, as well as adult hobbyists and professional scientists, are invited to share their love of science with the community.

Super Science Saturday is a non-competitive event designed for fun, learning and the appreciation of science and technology in our daily lives.For more information on Super Science Saturday, including ideas for science presentations or to sign up to exhibit, please contact www.supersciencesaturday.org.