Ridgewood NJ, On Thursday, June 2, the RHS Symphonic Band, Concert Band and Wind Ensemble will officially open the Kasschau Memorial Shell’s 2016 Summer Season with “Tunes in June,” a concert of light and popular music. The concert will begin at 8 p.m. and will also feature a ceremony to honor graduating seniors from the band program. Click here for full details.
Enjoy music under the stars on Tuesdays and Thursdays throughout the summer. No fee. June 2nd 8pm all other programs start at 8:30 pm.
Ridgewood NJ, 10 crews earned the opportunity to row in the Scholastic Rowing Association of America (SRAA) National Championship in Dillon, Ohio over Memorial Day Weekend.
2 Crews, the Boys and Girls JV Doubles, brought home Bronze Medals.
Bronze Medalists:
Girls JV Double Georgia Hefferon and Chloe Young
Bronze Medalists:
Boys JV Double Ed Hida and Charlie Koontz
The Learn to Row Program begins June 4 and the summer rowing program begins June 6. For more information please contact: https://www.ridgewoodcrew.com
Tue, June 07, 2016
Time: 11:00 AM
Location: Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce, 27 Chestnut St., Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Ridgewood NJ, Meetings of the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce’s Brown Bag Lunch Bunch — a woman’s networking event — are held on Tuesdays. This networking is designed to place real value on the advice and wisdom of today’s business women organizers note.
The meetings have alternating times of 9 a.m. and 11 a.m., in the Chamber Office, at 27 Chestnut St.
For more information, call the Chamber office at 201-445-2600. For more info about the Chamber generally, visit its website or Facebook page.
Ed says , “High rents are an issue from the past. Commercial rents have declined precipitioulsy since the last recession. Rents and house prices are not determined solely by landlords or home sellers they are determined by prevailing market conditions at the time a transaction is contemplated. The entire process is driven solely by supply and demand. If demand for a particular real estate product is high then the cost of that product will be priced to reflect the current market demand. Conversely when demand is weak prices will fall …..and .sometimes they will fall rather quickly …..and dramatically. Generally speaking at any given time rents are a fairly accurate reflection of either current or anticipated conditions in the specific market to which the property relates. The problem is if a business cannot attract enough customers ANY RENT THEY PAY IS TOO HIGH TO SUSTAIN THEIR BUSINESS. The problem in Ridgewood is a dearth of customers. On the retail side people increasingly prefer to buy goods online at incredibly good prices and they enjoy the added benefir of having the goods delivered right to their door.. A conventional retailer can’t beat that type of competitor.”
Ridgewood NJ, Stage I will be in effect starting today June 1st and will continue through August 31st. If conditions warrant, irrigation will be prohibited on additional days of the week up to and including a total ban on irrigation.
Compliance with the initial restrictions will reduce the likelihood that more severe controls will be needed. Your cooperation is appreciated.
Stage I (Moderate) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses. Irrigation using a hand-held hose shall be allowed at any time. No irrigation shall be allowed on Mondays except for the use of a hand held hose.
Stage II (Severe) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to Tuesdays and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses. No irrigation shall be allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays except for the use of a hand held hose. Irrigation using a hand held hose shall be allowed at any time.
Stage III (Pending/Critical) – Mandatory restriction of irrigation to the use of a hand held hose on Tuesdays and Saturdays for properties with odd-numbered addresses and Wednesdays and Sundays for properties with even-numbered addresses. No irrigation of any kind shall be allowed on Mondays, Thursdays, or Fridays.
Stage IV (Critical) – Irrigation is prohibited at any time. Exceptions for irrigation using a hand held hose may be allowed under conditions prescribed by the Village Manager of the Village of Ridgewood.
Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood Police, FBI, and Bergen County Sheriff’s Office personnel working on the scene of a reported Tuesday afternoon, 05/31, bank robbery at the 133 Franklin Avenue, Ridgewood branch of TD Bank. The robbery was reported via a silent alarm at approximately 4:30 PM. A lone, adult male perpetrator reportedly fled the scene on foot.
RIDGEWOOD, N.J. , The Ridgewood High School Boys and Girls track teams each won state sectional titles this Saturday.
This was the first sectional title for the RHS Girls since 2006, ending a seven-year run for Randolph; the RHS Boys win puts the squad back on top of the group after losing to Randolph last year. Before that loss, they had won five consecutive sectional titles.The RHS Boys team ended the season posting a perfect record.
Outstanding efforts were made ; senior Sam Halvorsen won the girls 1,600 meters in 5:03.12 and placed third in the 3,200 in 11:09.04 behind teammate Olympia Martin (10:58.62) and Bergen Tech’s Abigail McLaughlin.
Halvorsen was also part of the 4×800 relay team along with Leah Rosenfeld,Meghan Adams, and Evelyn Kotch, which set the meet record with a winning time of 9:32.84.
Olympia Martin won the 3,200 meters in 10:58.62 coming from behind to do it. Never leading until the final lap when she passed McLaughlin.
Michael Thurston won the 800 for the boys with a time of 1:54.45. He also anchored the victorious 4×400 relay team (3:20.97) which held off Paterson Eastside by about a mere half a second .
Kobi Grant won an exciting 100 in 11.09 for Ridgewood in which the top four sprinters were all separated by a half-second. Grant finished fourth in the 200-meter run with a time of 22.43, and anchored the 4×100 relay team to victory in a season-best 43.90 ,finishing second behind Mount Olive (43.32).
Ridgewood NJ, Every year, we hear from Parks & Rec that lifeguards trained to work at a sand-bottom facility are in short supply. Lifeguarding at Graydon requires a higher level of skill than is required at a concrete pool.
This summer, young people ages 15 and up may take the requisite course right at Graydon and become eligible to apply to be a lifeguard there. (Recertification for current lifeguards is offered separately.)This is an excellent and unusual opportunity.
All classes will be held at Graydon in July. A prerequisite fitness and endurance test will be held on Thursday, June 30. Details are in the yellow section of the flier reproduced below.
Please pass this information to any young person you know who may be interested. Ridgewood residency is NOT required. The prerequisite test is on June 30.
Questions? Contact the Village Department of Parks & Recreation at 201-670-5560 (8:30am–4:30pmMonday–Friday).
Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood kids keeping the entrepreneurial spirit alive . Patrolman Anthony Mormino keeping cool on a hot day with a refreshing glass of lemonade from some young entrepreneurs on Van Buren Street.
Problem solving, creative thinking , learning from failure and hard work will build there confidence pretty much taking them anywhere in life and are skills sorely lacking in today environment .
While agree with your point about making clearer distinctions between opinions and actual quotes, (Shakespearean tragedy in Ridgewood ) in this case the quoted item seems to represent Ms. Price’s general attitude in the Valley meetings.
If you do not support Valley’s expansion and you’ve been to one or more meetings you have witnessed this firsthand. Ms. Price’s mishandling of the Valley matter goes back years now and this isn’t even the first time the CRR has filed suit based on her procedural mis-steps. She has shown a certain hubris over the years that seems to be getting worse and not better. Remember she is paid by the tax payers to represent the best interests of the Village.
During the campaign, she removed any doubt that she’s a Valley supporter. Valley’s suit against the Village claims that the adverse impact of their expansion on the surrounding neighborhood is outweighed by the benefit to surrounding towns. Given that, there has been a conflict of interest with her from the start and any rulings to this point in favor of Valley should be thrown out.
I think that the grass roots effort to elect an independent council and to petition a new garage vote have confused some people.
The annual “I want a cement pool” has begun. A woman posted on Facebook about the “filthy” water and the chorus joined in. They are demanding a cement pool. (And full day K)
They are unaware that the water is tested and their opinion is not fact. They think that clear pools are always sanitary. When they use words like disgusting and filthy they forget that other people actually swim there. They are insulting the Graydon swimmers knowingly or unknowingly. Lots of kide enjoy the swim team and summer camp.
Coxsackie disease is very contagious and spread from person to person. WASH YOUR HANDS. Cover your cough! Swimmers ear is not caused by Graydon, it occurs when water remains in the ear canal. I come from a family of competitive swimmers, many have had ear infections, none ever swam at Graydon. Anecdotal evidence does not point to cause. My peditrician thought that it was silly to blame Graydon for these illnesses
I brought my three children to Graydon for years. They loved it. Al of their friends were there and they made new friends every day.
Just because you want something different does not mean that the village must provide it. You can join another pool, go to a neighbors pool or even build your own. The options are there.
We do not need to turf and pave every green space in town.
photo by Melanie McWilliams A little Rain and Overcast Skies Can’t Stop the 41st Annual Fred D’Elia Ridgewood Run
May 30th 2016
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, the rain holds , it was wet but the 41st Annual Fred D’Elia Ridgewood Run .The first race of the day starts at 8:15 with the wheelchair racers and the 10k at 8:20 am.
The top finishers for the 10k were : First place finisher of the 10k was Tadesse Yae Dabi at an unofficial time of 29:49. And at 34:58 our first women finishes the race, Bose Gemeda Asseta.
The top Garden State finisher was Rob Albano.
The rain continued to hold and at 10:15 am the 5k got under weigh.
This years the Run also Honored Toshiko “Toshi” d’Elia (1/2/30 – 2/19/14 )the Co-founder of The Ridgewood Run, and legend in the running community, as well as an inspiration to all.
All the volunteers did a great organizing and hosting the event.
Dominick Nizza passed away at the age of 94. A long time resident of Ridgewood the self-proclaimed “Mayor of Robert Street,” had quite a life even before landing in Ridgewood where he purchased his home in the “Lawns” back in 1948.
Born in Jersey City in 1922 to Italian immigrants some of Dominick’s earliest memories revolve around music, a lifetime passion he has carried throughout his many careers. His father was a shoemaker who once traded shoe repairs to a customer in exchange for singing and violin lessons for Dominick at the age of 10.
He graduated from Union City High School where he played in the marching band. During WWII Dominick entered into service with the U.S. Army as a mechanical engineer and worked for Bell Laboratories in New York.
Dominick learned to dance before entering the service, which would come in handy later in life when he opened up three Arthur Murray dance studios in New York City and then three of his own studios in New Jersey.
Dom became an “unofficial matchmaker” for his fellow servicemen while in Texas. When they left the base to unwind in local taverns he would dance with women and then introduce them to his friends. He would dance with a gal, and say “’Well, I want you to meet Joe and so it went. Then back in the barracks he would start to teach the guys some simple steps, the Lindy Hop and various basic dance moves. That’s when he came home one day and figured, “Gee, I could make money in the dance business”. Dominick opened up Antoine Studios, which then changed to Dale Studios when he began teaching dance instructors.
As a dance instructor he met his wife of 56 years, Mary, and six months later they were married and lived in North Bergen for a short period. They moved to “The Lawns” section of Ridgewood. He bought one of the 450 homes built for $10,250, a price far less than what the average village homeowner now pays in Ridgewood’s annual taxes.
Tapping into his background as a dancer and tumbler, Dominick Nizza and Tony Napier started a gymnastics program at Ridgewood High School. He helped to raise money in 1969 to purchase the school’s basic gymnastic equipment, and arranged to hold a gymnastics open house with professional gymnasts.
Dominick was involved with the Frank Thorne Chapter of barbershop singers, and would regularly put out a newsletter for barbershop news well before computers became widespread. He worked with the Public Relations Officers Bulletin Editors (PROBE) to send out information on barbershop groups and activities.
After working in a machine shop and owning his own personnel agency Dom began another career as a clerk in the County Courthouse in Hackensack. He would serve there for 25 years and became president of the Bergen County Superior Court Clerks Association.
He raised four sons with his wife Mary who passed away in 2001. Dominick was active in local politics and was an avid gardener who loved to giveaway tomato plants and flowers to everyone.
He is survived by four sons: Phil. Tom, John and Chris and four grandsons.
Funeral service will be held Friday, June 3 2016 at 8:00 PM at the C C Van Emburgh Funeral Home, 306 E Ridgewood Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. Visitation will be from 2 to 4 & 6 to 8 PM
Council Elect Ramon M Hache , Today we honor the brave men and women who have proudly served this great nation and made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom. We should honor them everyday, as well as their families, by loving and respecting the greatest nation in the world. As I do every Memorial Day, I like to read, reflect upon, and share the letter of condolences from President Abraham Lincoln to Mrs. Lydia Bixby who was believed to have lost five sons during the Civil War:
Executive Mansion Washington, Nov. 21, 1864.
Dear Madam,–
I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle.
I feel how weak and fruitless must be any word of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save.
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.